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Rumble In The Jungle: The Invisible History of Drum’n’Bass

Everywhere you go Always take the weather with you Crowded House

Abstract

Drum’n’bass is a musical form that expresses the antagonisms of British identity in the 1990s and it also situates itself outside of the dominant terms of African-American expressions of black identity. It speaks of a more productive possibility in the traditional relationship between national and global polarities or public and private histories. Being at once an expression of the crucial significance of place in any characterisation of identity, it also recognises the influence of circumstances that exist outside of the narrow terms of national affiliation. Drum’n’bass represents a metonymic formulation of the long history of race and migration and its (often invisible) effects on the nature of British cultural identity in particular and popular music in general.

Keywords

Drum’n’Bass, British cultural identity, Black cultural identity, rave, Harry Beck, London Underground Map

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Author Biography

Steven Quinn

Steven Quinn worked in the School of Media, Communication and Culture at Murdoch University.