I Learned How To Make 2000´s JUNGLE

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Published 2023-06-27
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Chapters :

0:00 Introduction
0:25 Research
1:41 Beat 1
5:20 BabyAudio
5:55 Beat 2


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Amiga Tutorials By Bizzy B
   / @thebizzybscience  

➕ Second channel where i post beats : goo.gl/nuUwYw

All Comments (21)
  • @LLusion
    so happy this sound is back it’s so great
  • @TheCALMInstitute
    I feel like the thing to know about 2000s jungle(I was making jungle in the early 2000s) is that we were almost ALL terrible musicians. The process of making this stuff was so fiddly and technical, the opposite of spontaneous. If you were used to playing an instrument you would have no patience for this IMO. We couldn’t, and I think that’s the only thing that made us power through the annoyances. We were also extremely stoned, broke, and early computer music folks. For the most part that was because we were young and broke and had the huge amounts of time necessary to make this stuff. Very nerdy scene. By about 2000, music tech made HUGE jumps, and early versions of FLStudio were passed around on floppies. The “amiga guys” were so old to me (they were probably 5-10 yrs older lmao). Anyways don’t be a good musician for this, just have fun and glue sounds together.
  • ambient jungle is the most nostalgic sound to me as a 90s early 2000s kid 🙏 love the resurgence of the 2000 aesthetic
  • @ztrewqqwertz8997
    The old school jungle pioneers where truly very technical producers. But they where also very limited, so they knew everything in and out what they used. I love to see people with a more instrumentalist backgroud go and explore and experiment with different electronic genres! A nice next step would be to see you exploring breakcore. Shout out, *junglist massive!
  • @nostgeoffhi-fi
    if this vid taught me anything after countless hours researching jungle beatmaking, it’s just to (1) work with what ya got, (2) don’t fret about overthinking and trying to be a purist (ex: trying to make non-sampled drumbeats from scratch/on your own), (3) more important than copying the exact sounds you hear or having the same exact hardware is to understand the music theory and history behind the sounds, (4) know that the sounds are just a tool. The goal is to express yourself and to make something new. Of course, there is nothing wrong with staying within a particular genre, but we should not be trying to emulate the same musical idea note for note. And hopefully, this adds to the jungle movement and inspires creativity instead of “circling the drain” as they say.
  • @GordonBraicks
    Amiga trackers were a lot of fun. The limit of only 4 tracks made people extremely creative to push the computer to its limits.
  • @zhonie
    Love seeing Gami push his limits with his creativity. truly inspiring to see you do what you do.
  • @NicholasSeamans
    Early 2000's Jungle was Equinox, Dub One, Breakage, Fanu, and Paradox. This style is more 1993 - 1996, like LTJ Bukem, Trace, Blu Mar Ten, and T Power... By 2000 - 2005 the Jungle sound was called Drum Funk and the break patterns where more abstract and the BPM was around 170 - 172. Fracture and Neptune Ventura is an amazing track from 2005 that had prog rock influences and Paradox and Seba's Move On Feat Robert Manos on Vocals is one of the best DNB tracks ever.
  • @gabagool3502
    Bro just learned about a genre and immediately makes a banger
  • @thewizardtk
    bro your workspace looks so fresh and clean. Good energy in there
  • @zorrovian
    Absolutely nailed it. So glad this sound is making its comeback
  • @exi_sfx
    With the vocals on the first beat, I felt like the genre was going a bit more towards Electronica. It sounded like George Clanton, and I fucking love George Clanton. As a jungle producer myself, I found this very amusing and I'm glad I could be a part of this journey again. Great job man!
  • @Fog0st
    dancing yo your own music while cooking up was so fire. I bet every producer can relate
  • @Niaaal
    Shout out to Gami! An incredibly talented artist that is modest and inspired and excited to keep learning, that's rare amd precious!
  • @soniromanov
    Instant subscribe. Love that you invested time to research the genre. As someone who produces Jungle I appreciate this content.
  • @sakeondeez
    when you started playing the saxophone i couldn't stop smiling haha so soothing, i feel like you really put your own twist on it
  • @DustinXI
    As a huge fan of this genre, I'm so glad I came across this video by chance, keep it up!
  • @dntfwm1233
    this gives me soooo much. seeing you play all these instruments wow
  • @section23
    The 90’s was such a time to be alive ❤️ Big ups for all your hard work doing these videos