Future bass

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Future bass is a music genre[1] that arose near the year of 2006 in the United Kingdom, United States, Japan, and Australia. It is a broad genre of music, offering a wide variety of sounds and rhythms normally produced by a synthesizer.

Characteristics

Future bass is described as having a focus on a hard baseline with detuned synthesizers mostly including sawtooth waves and square waves. The sound waves are often modulated using automation or Low-frequency oscillation controlling the cutoff of an audio filter (typically a low pass or high pass) making the waveform sound louder or quieter. In addition, it is common to find the utilization of a sort of "twinkly" sounding rise (gradual rise in pitch), including arpeggio chords, and vocoders. Future bass is often described as being "happy trap", since many tracks under this genre have a trap-style beat, but with higher-pitched synths and major chord progressions.

The future bass genre stems from trap, juke and UK garage, having noticeable similarities with each other. It also has origins in the post-dubstep movement in the United Kingdom. It is comparable to chiptune and glitch hop as well as trap music off of which many, but not all, future bass artists base their music.

Artists and producers

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References

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