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Freestylers

 
Artist: Freestylers
Freestylers

Group Members:

Aston Harvey, Andrew Galea, Matt Cantor

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Freska Allstars, 2 Fat Buddhas, Cut N Paste
See Freestylers Lyrics
  • Formed: 1996, London, England
  • Genres: Electronica
  • Representative Albums: "Pressure Point," "We Rock Hard," "Fabriclive.19"
  • Representative Songs: "B-Boy Stance," "Now Is the Time," "We Rock Hard"

Biography

More old-school hip-hop, electro and ragga than big-beat techno (though they're often pigeon-holed that way), the Freestylers were formed by the trio of Matt Cantor, Aston Harvey and Andrew Galea. All three were British b-boys back in the day, and were heavily involved in Britain's dance scene by the late '80s, both as DJs and producers -- Cantor recording as Cut'n'Paste, 2 Fat Buddhas and Freska All Stars among others, Harvey as Blapps! Posse (author of the 1990 breakbeat classic "Don't Hold Back"). Harvey had also worked with Rebel MC and Definition of Sound, but after meeting Galea, the pair began recording together as Sol Brothers and soon brought Cantor into the fold as well.

Taking the name Freestylers from their first sample (Freestyle's "Don't Stop the Rock"), the trio released their first single, "Drop the Boom (AK-48)" and formed their own Scratch City Records to release it. The track was a prime slice of vocoderized electro, and became an underground club classic as far afield as bass-driven Miami. The Freestyle EP followed late in 1996, and Freestylers also released singles on Freskanova (home of Cantor's many solo projects). The group even managed a chart hit (and Top of the Pops appearance) with 1998's "B-Boy Stance," a collaboration with vocalist Tenor Fly. A spate of remixing followed, for Audioweb, Afrika Bambaataa and the Jungle Brothers (the latter a pair of the Freestylers' prime influences). The trio also helmed the big-beat compilation FSUK 2 and contributed a Radio One Essential Mix (where Beenie Man, Public Enemy, the Fall and Whodini all rubbed elbows). Live appearances at Glastonbury and around the European festival circuit met with much praise, and the Freestylers finally released their debut album We Rock Hard in 1999. The mix album Electro Science followed a year later. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Freestylers
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For other uses, see Freestyle.
Freestylers
Also known as Raw as F**k
Origin United Kingdom
Genres Breakbeat
Years active 1996–present
Website FreestylersMusic.co.uk

The Freestylers are a British electronic music group, generally fitting into the breakbeat genre.

Contents

Career

The Freestylers formed in 1996 when DJs and dance music producers Matt Cantor, Aston Harvey and (initially) Andrew Galea joined forces. All three of them had been involved in the British dance music scene since the 1980s. Cantor had recorded both as Cut n' Paste and Strike with Andy Gardner (Plump DJs). Aston Harvey recorded as Blapps! Posse best known for the 1990 breakbeat dance hit "Don't Hold Back" before working with Definition of Sound, Rebel MC and DJ Rap (as DJ Rap and Aston). Harvey joined with Galea under the name Sol Brothers before Cantor was recruited to form the Freestylers. The group took their name from their first sample "Don't Stop The Rock" by Freestyle Express. This single appeared in the Cadbury's advert in 2009.

The trio's first single "Drop The Bomb (AK-48)" on their own Scratch City Records in 1996 became a dancefloor hit in the UK and Miami. The band released the Freestyle EP in 1996 on Freskanova (Freskanova's parent label, Fresh, had released Cantor, Galea and Harvey's previous work). Galea left the Freestylers shortly after the release of the Freestyle EP, and Cantor and Harvey formed an 11-piece band (initially an idea of their record label, Freskanova). This consisted of the two producers (Cantor and Harvey), a scratch DJ Jason Tunbridge (Mad Doctor X), a guitarist (Tony Ayiotou), drummer (Clive Jenner), bass guitarist (Joe Henson), two MCs (MC Navigator and Tenor Fly) and three breakdancers (Coza, Marat, Tim).

The band released their first album, We Rock Hard, in 1998. The single "B-Boy Stance" became a hit in the UK in 1998 featuring the contributions of rapper Tenor Fly. In 1999, the Freestylers enjoyed success in the U.S. with track "Don't Stop" reached the top 40 of the Billboard dance charts and the video for "Here We Go" becoming hit on a MTV . We Rock Hard sold well in the US, selling over 150,000 and reaching the top 30 of the Billboard Heatseeker chart.

Following the success of B-Boy Stance, the band were asked to remix tracks by Audioweb, Afrika Bambaataa and the Jungle Brothers as well as a big beat compilation album FSUK 2 and a Radio 1 Essential Mix featuring Beenie Man, Public Enemy, Whodini and The Fall.

The Freestylers released a mix album, Electro Science, in 2000. Their second album, Pressure Point, was released in 2001 with the track "Get Down Massive" featuring Navigator reaching top 20 on the Billboard dance charts in 2002.

During 2002 and 2003 the group began releasing singles under the artist name Raw As F**k, which then became the title of their third album. Released in 2004, it featured the single "Push Up", which reached the top 30 in the UK and top 3 in Australia. Another single, which was previously released before "Push Up", called "Get A Life", was re-released and reached the top 20 in Australia.

The band used the alternative name Raw As F**k during 2002 and 2003, primarily for their vinyl releases. The band continued to use the alias in 2004, only this time for their album title rather than their group name.

Band members

Current

  • Matt Cantor
  • Aston Harvey
  • MC SirReal
  • Rich Budgen (guitar)
  • Dave Budgen (bass)
  • Clive Jenner (drums)

Past

  • Andrew Galea (producer)
  • MC Navigator (vocals)
  • Tenor Fly (vocals)
  • Mad Doctor X (scratch DJ)
  • Tony Ayiotou (guitar)
  • Joe Henson (bass guitar)
  • Coza (breakdancer)
  • Marat Khairoullin (breakdancer)
  • Tim (breakdancer)

Other collaborators

Discography

Albums

DJ mixes/compilations

  • A Different Story Vol. 1 (2007)
  • FabricLive.19 (2004)
  • Electro Science (2000)
  • Rough Technique Vol. 1 (1998)
  • FSUK2 (1998)

Singles

  • "Dynamite Love" (2007)
  • "Electrified" (2007)
  • "In Love With You" (2006) #40 Australia
  • "Painkiller" (featuring Pendulum & Sirreal) (2006)
  • "Boom Blast" (featuring Million Dan) (2005) #75 UK
  • "Fasten Your Seatbelts" (with Pendulum) (2005)
  • "Get A Life" (2004) #66 UK, #15 Australia
  • "Push Up" (featuring Theo) (2004) #22 UK, #2 Australia, #1 Belgium
  • "Told You So" (2002) #100 Australia
  • "Here We Go" (1999) #45 UK
  • "B-Boy Stance" (featuring Tenor Fly) (26 January 1998) #23 UK
  • "Ruffneck" (featuring MC Navigator) (1998) #23 UK
  • "Warning" (featuring MC Navigator) (1998) #68 UK
  • "Adventures in Freestyle EP" (1997)
  • "Uprock EP" (16 June 1997)
  • "Freestyle EP" (1996)
  • "Now Is The Time"
  • "Get Down Massive"

Interviews

Radio

References

External links


 
 
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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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