User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
From חבֿר.Noun
References
- Definition derived from information on an archived Wikipedia page, Gabber (disambiguation)
Extensive Definition
sound sample box align right hardcore, is a style of electronic
music and a subgenre of hardcore
techno. "Gabber" literally means buddy or friend. In Russia it
is known as "krassava" which means "cool." Although in the late
1980s a house variant from Detroit first
reached Amsterdam (the
Netherlands) it
was the producers and DJs from Rotterdam who
evolved it to a harder house variant which we today know as
"Gabber" style or "Hardcore". The specific sound of Rotterdam was
also created as a sort of reaction to the more pretentious and
snobby house scene of Amsterdam. And with Rotterdam being a gritty
working class city this type of house music fit well. Though
house-productions from Frankfurt's
Marc
Acardipane were quite alike to the Rotterdam style it was the
popularity of this music in the Netherlands which made Rotterdam
the cradle of Hardcore Gabber. The essence of the gabber sound is a
distorted
kick
sound, overdriven
to the point where it becomes a square wave
and makes a recognizably melodic tone. Often the Roland Alpha
Juno or
the kick from a Roland
TR-909 was used to create this sound. Gabber tracks typically
include samples
and synthesised melodies with the typical tempo ranging from 150 to
220 bpm.
Violence, drugs and profanity are common themes in gabber,
perceptible through its samples and lyrics, often screamed,
pitch
shifted or distorted.
Origins
The origins of the gabber sound
In general the track We Have Arrived (1990) by Mescalinum United is considered to be the first gabber track. Hardcore/gabber music is a fusion of techno and industrial with a dark, aggressive atmosphere. In the early to mid nineties a clear gabber fashion took form. Between 1993 and 1998 loads of gabber fans dressed in (multiple, layered) Australian and Cavello tracksuits, Nike Air Max sport shoes (with punctured air chambers), bomber jackets, and the majority of the male gabbers had shaven heads. Female fans often shaved the sides and back of their head and wore their hair in a pony tail.The style began in the late 1980s, but some claim
that it was diluted in 1995 by happy
hardcore and, for hardcore fans, by commercialisation which
resulted in a younger crowd being attracted to the scene. The
commercial organisation ID&T helped a
lot in making the music popular by organising parties (most notable
are the
Thunderdome parties) and selling merchandise. The name gabber
is somewhat less used these days to describe this music style,
specially due to this stigma created in the mid 1990s. Many would
now prefer to call the style 'hardcore'. After surviving
underground for a number of years, in 2002 the style
regained some popularity in the Netherlands,
although the sound is more mature, darker and industrial. Around
the world, it never lost its original grip, and music was evolving
and creating new subgenres and approaches, from Digital
Hardcore to Breakcore, from
Noisecore
to Speedcore.
Nu style gabber
There was a somewhat decisive split in the hardcore scene starting in the late 1990s. Some producers started embracing a slower style characterized by a deeper, harder bass drum that typically had a longer envelope than was possible in the traditional, faster style. This newer sound was referred to as "Main stream" or "New Style" (or "Nu Style") and "New Skool" and as the tempo got slower and slower it began to become similar to hard house. Many hardcore enthusiasts hated hard house and the club scene it typified, and frequently DJs would be booed by one group of fans and cheered for by another at the same party, depending on the tempo and style of music they were playing. This is similar to the rivalry and mutual dislike that surfaced earlier between fans of "regular" hardcore and happy hardcore. Eventually the two styles met in the middle, and most gabber today is produced in a bpm range of 160-170. This is typically a little bit slower than the Rotterdam style of the mid-1990s and somewhat faster than the slowest New Style tracks that emerged.Style
Gabber is characterised by its bassdrum sound. Essentially, it comes from taking a normal synthesized bassdrum and overdriving it heavily. The approximately sinusoidal sample starts to clip into a squarewave with a falling pitch. This results in a number of effects: the frequency spectrum spreads out, thus achieving a louder, more aggressive sound. It also changes the amplitude envelope of the sound by increasing the sustain. Due to the distortion, the drum also develops a melodic tone. It is not uncommon for the bassdrum pattern to change pitch throughout the song to follow the bassline.The second frequently used component of gabber
tracks is the "hoover", a
patch of the Roland
Alpha Juno synthesizer. A "hoover" is typically a distorted,
grainy, sweeping sound which, when played on a low key, can create
a dark and brooding bassline. Alternatively, when played at higher
pitches, the hoover becomes an aggressive, shrieking lead. Faster
gabba tracks often apply extremely fast hoover-patterns.
The aforementioned two subgenres of gabber differ
in essentially one thing: the tempo.
- Oldskool gabber, staying true to its mentality, defines "hardness" in speed; tracks rarely go under 160 BPM, and bassdrum rolls often go up to a speed where the beats themselves are hardly distinguishable from each other.
- Nuskool gabber, however, slows the speed down to 150 BPM, but extends the length of the bassdrum so the bass-frequency resonance keeps on longer. (In this aspect, "nugabber" obviously cannot be considered less powerful than its precursor, although slower hardcore is often less energetic.) A typical style is one best made known by Rotterdam Terror Corps: the beats are divided into triplets and all hoover notes are played in a short, staccato-like fashion, giving the song a march-like feel.
Misconceptions
The gabber scene is often associated with the use of amphetamines, ecstasy, ketamine and other drugs.In the early 1990s, gabber gained a following in
the neo-fascist
rave scenes of Germany and the
American
Midwest. However, most gabber fans do not belong to the
aforementioned groups, and many producers have released tracks that
vocally speak out against racism.
See also
Record labels
Notes
External links
- Gabber Planet Gabber Planet, the biggest italian hardcore community by Dj 3-mor
- Portuguese Hardcore Gabber Portal Info on Hardcore and Thunderdome
- Geordie Gabba Mafia (Newcastle, UK) Artists and DJs from Newcastle (UK) Gabber scene. Run by DJ Smurf
- CyberRave European Gabber site Germany, Holland, Italy and UK
gabber in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa): Габа
gabber in Czech: Gabber
gabber in German: Gabber
gabber in Spanish: Gabber (Hardcore)
gabber in Esperanto: Ĥabrohaŭzo
gabber in French: Gabber (musique)
gabber in Italian: Gabber
gabber in Hungarian: Hardcore
techno#Szubkult.C3.BAra
gabber in Dutch: Hardcore house
gabber in Japanese: ガバ (音楽)
gabber in Polish: Gabber (muzyka)
gabber in Russian: Габбер
gabber in Slovenian: Gabber
gabber in Finnish: Gabber
gabber in Swedish: Gabber