Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the revolutionary collision between post-punk and dub through the work of New Age Steppers, a fluid collective that transformed rhythm, space, and political atmosphere into a radically hybrid sound. Emerging from the experimental networks surrounding On-U Sound Records, the project became a crucial meeting point between punk’s fractured energy and dub’s spatial consciousness. We trace the role of producer Adrian Sherwood, whose studio techniques—echo, delay, bass manipulation, and tape experimentation—redefined recording itself as compositional process. Rather than treating songs as fixed structures, New Age Steppers approached music as unstable environment: rhythms dissolve into reverb, vocals emerge and disappear, and silence becomes active element. Historically, the group reflects the cultural intersections of late 1970s and early 1980s Britain, where Caribbean sound system culture and post-punk experimentation converged within politically charged urban environments. Collaboration and fluid membership reinforced the collective’s open-ended identity. Technologically, dub production methods transformed the mixing desk into instrument, while post-punk minimalism introduced tension, fragmentation, and emotional ambiguity. Together, these approaches generated a sound both physical and atmospheric. This episode analyzes New Age Steppers as architecture of collision—where bass, space, and disruption create new forms of sonic resistance. Through history, production techniques, and cultural context, we explore how post-punk and dub reshaped each other into a lasting experimental language. 【Related Column】New Age Steppers: The revolution of an action label that reconnected the strata of post-punk and dub https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-new-age-steppers/
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