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How space, silence and performance shapes my bass music
Dub has inspired many genres I like and perform in: dubstep, deep dubstep, jungle, even dub techno and other forms of bass music.
Historically, dub was never meant to be a genre.
It was a way of thinking about sound.
In Jamaican soundsystem culture, dub emerged when producers and engineers started to treat the mixing desk itself as an instrument. Faders, EQs, filters, delays and reverbs weren’t just technical tools to get a good mix of a reggae tune — they were played in real time.
A dub version wasn’t a finished track.
It was a performance.
If you’ve ever watched someone like King Tubby or Lee “Scratch” Perry work a desk, you’ll notice something important:
They weren’t adding more.
They were taking things away.
Those gestures are musical. They have timing, tension and release — just like playing drums or keys.
This is why FX sends matter so much in dub:
Used this way, effects stop being decoration and start becoming another voice in the composition.
One of the biggest misunderstandings in modern production is the fear of silence.
Dub taught me the opposite:
Space is what gives weight to bass.
By cutting out stems — bass, drums, chords — you don’t lose energy.
You focus it.
In my live setup, I often work with just a few looped stems:
That’s enough. Having to control 8 stems at your fingertips is perfect without using your thumbs.
By muting, filtering, delaying and reintroducing elements, I’m not playing tracks — I’m arranging in real time.
A track doesn’t need 60 channels if you understand when not to play something.
One of the most powerful tools in dub is also one of the simplest: filtering.
High-cut and low-cut filters — famously used by Tubby — allow sounds to:
Instead of hard transitions, you get movement.
In jungle, dubstep or deep bass music, this becomes a way to:
A filtered-out break can be more dramatic than a new one dropping in.
I don’t tour with a 1970s mixing desk — but the philosophy remains.
My live setup is built around:
Faders control levels.
Knobs control filters, sends, feedback.
Buttons mute and trigger sounds and the siren.
The important part is muscle memory.
When my hands know where the delay send is, I stop thinking and start reacting — just like an engineer at a dub desk.
This is why digital tools don’t feel digital to me.
They can be played just like analog instruments, that’s the Arnology.
This is my first recording of me dubbing some stems I recorded:
And another live performance of from a gig in the Klub Witzenhausen
In my setup, FX live on dedicated return channels, just like on an analog desk.
Spring reverb is essential to dub. It’s unstable, metallic, imperfect — and that’s the point.
You don’t need expensive plugins, you can use any reverb effect that supports the loading of IR (Impulse Response) files, replicating the original behaviour of a given reverb or amp. Yeah, I use it instead of micing my guitar amp sometimes when I am touring on my own, just playing directly into the soundcard using Guitar Rig or some free software amp emulations (hit me up on that) and then finally through an IR of a matching cabinet.
So for the reverb send, I recommend:
Routing:
This keeps the reverb airy and mid-focused, never muddy.
Spring reverb isn’t about realism.
It’s about movement.
For delay, you really don’t need anything fancy.
Ableton’s stock Echo is more than enough. You can also get original Roland RE-201 Space Echo IR’s and use the IR method from above.
What matters is:
Routing:
The delay return becomes a rhythmic instrument.
A single hi-hat or snare hit can suddenly become the main groove — just by riding the send.
Magic happens when you play the feedback, not just on the delay, but also on the reverb! Activate Send 1 on the Send 1 to feedback the signal of the reverb into itself. Use with caution and use a limiter to stay safe.
Raising it slowly:
Cutting it suddenly:
This is dub arrangement in its purest form.
Dub doesn’t ask:
“What can I add?”
Dub asks:
“What happens if I take this away — right now?”
It’s not about plugins.
It’s not about nostalgia.
It’s not about genres.
Dub is the courage to leave space,
the confidence to let silence speak,
and the skill to turn a mixing desk into an instrument.
If you can play your mixer,
you can make any sound system move.
Dub reminds us that music can still be performed, not just exported.
It invites risk.
It invites imperfection.
It creates personality.
Whether you’re producing, DJing, or performing live:
Dub is not a genre you choose.
It’s a way you listen.
This mindset travels well.
What connects them is not tempo or sound design —
it’s how they breathe.
Dub teaches you to trust the room, the sound system, and the moment.
If this way of working resonates with you —
whether you’re curious about live setups, production mindset, or DIY soundsystem culture —
this is exactly the space I work in.
Let’s connect and see what we can build together.