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The Prototypes

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The Prototypes
OriginBrighton, England
GenresDrum and bass, electro, bass music
Years active2010 (2010)–present
LabelsViper Recordings, Shogun Audio, Never Say Die Records, Kurupt FM
MembersChris Garvey, Nick White, Fred V, MC GRINDAH
WebsiteThePrototypes.co.uk

The Prototypes is a British drum and bass duo consisting of Chris Garvey and Nick White.[1] Founded in Brighton, England in the late 2000s, by 2010 they had released their first singles on labels such as Formation Records and Viper Recordings, and from 2011 to 2013 were signed to Shogun Audio. They have released a number of EPs, and have received radio and live PA support from DJs such as Matrix & Futurebound.[2] Signing exclusively to Viper Recordings in 2014,[3] in the following months the duo released a number of promo singles for a debut album. Their resulting single, "Pale Blue Dot"[4] ranked as Beatport's second top selling drum and bass track of the year.[3] The track was also nominated for Best Track at the Drum & Bass Arena Awards,[5] with The Prototypes also nominated for Best Producer, Best Music Video, and Best DJ.[6]

UKF Music called their 2015 promo single "Pop It Off" "one of the most unanimously unifying cuts in D&B of the year so far,"[7] and they officially released their debut album City of Gold on 17 May 2015.[4] They supported the album with an international tour with performances at festivals such as Urban Art Forms and Tomorrowland,[8] and they have also performed at Nocturnal Festival in 2012. Featuring vocals from artists such as Ayah Marar and Amy Pearson,[8] the week of its release City of Gold reached No. 22 on the UK Dance Chart.[9] Robin Murray of UKF Music called it "a relentless, incendiary journey through a range of genres and tempos."[7] Beyond original production, as of 2015 the duo had released remixes for artists such as Avicii, Ed Sheeran, Bingo Players, Hadouken!, Modestep, AlunaGeorge, and others.[2][3]

History

Founding and first singles (2007–2010)

The drum and bass duo The Prototypes was first formed by Chris Garvey and Nick White,[3] both DJs who had been involved in the underground rave scene of Brighton, England.[10] After releasing a 2007 remix of Hadouken!'s track "Bad Signal" on Ice Records, in 2010 they released "Work It," on Formation Records, which was their first entirely original track they made together.[11] The Prototypes released the two-track single "Cascade" in September 2010[4] through Infrared Records. "Cascade" would be included on the album UKF Drum & Bass 2010, the first compilation album put out by UKF Music. It also received support from radio stations such as on BBC Radio 1 with plays by DJs Zane Lowe, Annie Mac, Annie Nightingale, and Fabio & Grooverider.[3] Sub Focus introduced his Radio 1 mix with the track, and the single was also remixed in clubs by artists such as Sub Focus, Andy C and Zane.[11] The Prototypes' first official release with Futurebound's Viper Recordings was in late 2010,[12] when their track "Evolution" was included on Viper Recordings' Summer Slammers compilation album.[3] Also in 2010 they had a track featured on an Essential Mix by Pendulum[3] and released their track "Breathless" on Formation Records.[2]

Releases with Shogun Audio (2011–2013)

In 2011 The Prototypes were signed by Shogun Audio, a record label operated by British drum and bass producer DJ Friction.[3] The duo released their Born to Rise EP through Shogun that September,[4] with the EP including tracks such as "Your Future" and "Taking Me Over."[11] Their Suffocate / Habitation – EP came out in November 2011, again through Shogun Audio.[4]

External videos
video icon The Prototypes – "Don't Let Me Go" (Ft. Amy Pearson) (Official Video) YouTube (20 June 2013)

Releasing singles on both Shogun and other labels into 2012, their single "What You Think" came out through Hard Hammer on 27 February 2012.[4] Later that June the duo released the single "Pandora" through Shogun Audio,[4] which was accompanied by the B-track "Abyss."[3] Near the end of 2012 The Prototypes released the dance track "Suffocate" on Shogun Audio.[8] Also included on an EP of the same name,[3] "Suffocate" received radio support from Zane Lowe, Annie Mac, Andy C, Roni Size, Friction, J Majik & Wickaman, Pendulum, and DJ Fresh.[8] A month later the duo released "Blackout," which featured the vocals of MC ID.[3]

They released their Rage Within / Insomniac – EP on Shogun Audio on 6 May 2013, which included both the two title tracks and several remixes.[4] "Rage Within" featured the vocals of Takura of Chase & Status.[3] The Prototypes started working on their debut album in early 2013, and over the next two years would release a number of the tracks from the ongoing project as singles.[13] By that point they had received radio and live PA support from DJs such as Matrix & Futurebound.[2]

Singles with Viper Recordings (2014–2015)

In 2014 The Prototypes signed[3] exclusively with Viper Recordings.[12] One of their first singles on Viper, "Pale Blue Dot," came out on 23 February 2014.[4] Released in tandem with the song "Lights" through outlets such as Beatport,[4] "Pale Blue Dot" stayed at No. 1 on the Beatport drum and bass chart for around a month.[14] It also proved to be Beatport's second top selling drum and bass track of the year, trailing "Nobody to Love" by Sigma.[3] "Pale Blue Dot" also earned DJ support from Netsky, Chase & Status, Pendulum, Sub Focus, Sigma, TC, and others.[8] Shortly afterwards, they released a second two-track single package on Viper which included the tracks "Don't Let Me Go" and "Humanoid."[4] On 10 August 2014 they released their Don't Let Me Go – EP through Viper,[4] and the track "Humanoid" charted quickly at No. 1 on the Beatport top selling drum and bass chart.[7]

In total, "Pale Blue Dot," "Lights", and "Abyss VIP" all spent around 6 weeks at the top of various Beatport charts.[14] Both "Humanoid" and "Abyss VIP" peaked in the Top 10 selling Beatport tracks of 2014,[3] and as a result, The Prototypes had more tracks in the Top 10 than any other drum and bass artist on Beatport that year.[3] They also had tracks peak high on the Beatport drum and bass chart,[1] and by the time 2014 ended they had four songs which had peaked in the Top 10.[14] After first being released through Viper on 6 July 2014, their track "Just Bounce" was included on Nightlife 6, an album by drum and bass DJ Andy C. The duo also signed to Primary Talent Agency, performing in tours across the US, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Japan, and also holding a summer residency on BBC Xtra Talent.[8] "Pale Blue Dot" went on to be nominated for Best Track at the Drum & Bass Arena Awards in 2014,[5] while "Don't Let Me Go" was nominated for Best Music Video. That year the duo was also nominated for Best Producer and Best DJ.[6]

video icon The Prototypes – "Pop It Off" (feat. Mad Hed City) (Official Video) 13 April 2015

By 2015 they had performed in countries such as Romania,[14] and in March they performed in Florida at The World of Drum and Bass Miami event, along with DJs such as Drumsound & Bassline Smith, DJ SS, Crissy Criss, and Rockman.[15] The duo released the third promo single "Pop It Off" on 3 May 2015,[16] with guest features by Trinidad musician Mad Hed City.[4] Drumsound & Bassline Smith named "Pop It Off" their UKF Music Tune of the Month for April 2015, with UKF also praising the music video.[17] Robin Murray of UKF Music called "Pop It Off" "one of the most unanimously unifying cuts in D&B of the year so far."[7]

City of Gold and recent projects (2015)

"The Prototypes' track 'Fallen,' featuring Donae'o, is an homage to this subtly-more-subtle era in UK bass [that incorporated more break-based drums]. Just after the minute mark, the track drops into a jungle-influenced breaks groove with 90s hardcore written all over it. It's moments like this, common on City of Gold, that elevate The Prototypes above many of their upfront-minded peers."[10]
— Jemayel Khawaja of THUMP (2015)[10]

Before releasing their debut album, as of early April 2015 The Prototypes had embarked on a City of Gold world tour, with stops in thirteen North American cities.[16] The tour also included album launches at Electric Brixton in London[16] and the club Coalition in Brighton in early March.[14] They officially released their debut album City of Gold on 17 May 2015 through Viper Recordings,[4] and afterwards continued their 50 date tour, playing at festivals such as Urban Art Forms and Tomorrowland.[8] The week of its release, City of Gold reached No. 22 on the UK Dance Chart.[9]

Featuring guest vocals from artists such as Ayah Marar and Amy Pearson,[8] City of Gold met with a largely positive reception in the press.[11][18] Robin Murray of UKF Music called the debut "a relentless, incendiary journey through a range of genres and tempos,"[7] while Break Beat Magazine opined that "there's a concept (without being too laboured or contrived), there's a journey and... evidence of them really pushing themselves in different, exciting directions."[13] A track from the album was also included on a list of the Top 10 Drum And Bass Tracks put out by Magnetic Magazine.[19]

As of 2015, the duo had released remixes for artists such as Avicii, Ed Sheeran, Bingo Players, Hadouken!, Modestep, AlunaGeorge, Fleur, Don Diablo, Ian Carey and Snoop Dogg, DJ Vadim, The Qemists, and others.[2][3] They have also received recent support in clubs and on radio shows from musicians such as Andy C, Knife Party, Zane Lowe, Afrojack, Annie Mac and Krewella.[2] They have been featured in live mixes at the BBC Radio 1 studio,[20] including for an hour-long Quest Mix.[21]

In 2016 the production duo set up their own record label "Get Hype Records" stating "The time feels right. Starting a record label and being in charge of our own music is something we've always wanted and now it just feels like we could go out on our own and actually make it happen, We also have an amazing team of people around us right now that all believe also. It's a special time."[22] The first release on 1 July being "Rockets Gunz Blazin'".

Style and equipment

The Prototypes produce music largely influenced by drum and bass, as well as related genres such as breakbeat and jungle. When asked about incorporating other genres, the members stated in 2015 that "both of us have always had one common goal, and that's to smash it as hard as we can and be the best at what we love doing… Which is writing drum and bass. Sure, we will experiment with other tempos and genres, but our hearts bump at 174bpm and [we] don't see that changing very soon."[13] On 11 May 2015, Jemayel Khawaja of the publication THUMP wrote that "The Prototypes have been a fixture on the UK underground for a while now, particularly amongst the more aggressively ilked."[10] Early musical influences on the members were diverse, with Garvey citing the Fugees as influential, and White citing Nas. Both have also been influenced by releases from Guns N' Roses and Slash.[13] The duo uses programs such as Cubase for production VSTs such as SynthMaster.[14]

Members

  • Chris Garvey (2007–present) – production
  • Nick White (2007–present) – production

Awards and nominations

Year Award Nominated work Category Result
2014 Drum and Bass
Arena Awards
The Prototypes Best DJ[6] Nominated
Best Producer[6] Nominated
"Pale Blue Dot" by The Prototypes Best Track[6] Nominated
"Don't Let Me Go" by The Prototypes Best Music Video[6] Nominated

Discography

Albums

Albums by The Prototypes[4]
Year Album title Release details UK Charts[9]
Dance
2015 City of Gold
  • Released: 17 May 2015
  • Label: Viper Recordings (VPRL010)
  • Format: CD, digital download, vinyl
22
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Extended plays

EPs by The Prototypes[4]
Year Album title Release details
2011 Born to Rise EP
Suffocate / Habitation – EP
2013 Rage Within / Insomniac – EP
2014 Don't Let Me Go – EP
  • Released: 10 August 2014
  • Label: Viper Recordings
  • Format: Digital download

Singles

Incomplete list of songs by The Prototypes[4]
Year Title Album Release details
2010 "Work It" Single Formation (2010)[11]
"Cascade" Two track single Infrared RED001 (22 September 2010)[11]
"Need the Love" Infrared RED001 (22 September 2010)[11]
2011 "Born to Rise" Born to Rise EP Shogun Audio Ltd (5 September 2011)
"Suffocate" Suffocate / Habitation – EP
Clubland X-Treme Hardcore
Shogun Audio Ltd (11 November 2011)
"Habitation" Suffocate / Habitation – EP Shogun Audio Ltd (11 November 2011)
2012 "What You Think" Single Hard Hammer (27 February 2012)
"Pandora" Two track single Shogun Audio Ltd (3 June 2012)
"Abyss" Shogun Audio Ltd (3 June 2012)
2013 "Rage Within" Rage Within / Insomniac – EP Shogun Audio Ltd (6 May 2013)
"Insomniac" Shogun Audio Ltd (6 May 2013)
2014 "Pale Blue Dot" Two track single/FabricLive.76 Viper VPR058 (23 February 2014)
"Lights" Two track single w/"Pale Blue Dot" Viper VPR058 (23 February 2014)
"Don't Let Me Go"
(ft. Amy Pearson)
Two track single Viper VPR061 (10 August 2014)
"Humanoid" Viper VPR061 (10 August 2014)
"Just Bounce VIP" Drum & Bass Summer
Slammers 2014 Sampler
Viper (6 July 2014)
2015 "Pop It Off" (ft. Mad Hed City) Single/City of Gold Viper VPR071 (3 May 2015)
"Neurons" Single Viper (7 May 2015)
"Slip Away" City of Gold Viper (17 May 2015)
2016 "Hypercube" Two-track single Viper (March 2016)
"Pop It Off VIP" Viper (March 2016)
"Rocket Guns Blazin'" Rocket Guns Blazin' Get Hype Records (1 July 2016)
"Transmission" Transmission UKF Music (31 August 2016)

Remixes

Incomplete list of official remixes by The Prototypes, with date of remix release
Year Title Original artist Release details
2007 "Bad Signal (The Prototypes Remix)" Hadouken! Ice Records (2007)
2010 "Take It Back (The Prototypes Remix)" The Qemists feat. Enter Shikari Ninja Tune (2010)
"Better Than (The Prototypes Remix)" Jammer Big Dada (2010)
"My Feelings For You (The Prototypes Remix)" Avicii and Sebastian Drums All Around the World (2010)
"Animale (The Prototypes Remix)" Don Diablo feat. Dragonette Dirty Dutch Music (2010)
"The Terrorist (The Prototypes Remix)" DJ Vadim Ninja Tune (2010)
2011 "Feel Good (The Prototypes Remix)" Modestep UKF Music (2011)
"Someone (The Prototypes Remix)" Friction feat. McLean Shogun Audio (2011)
"Lego House (The Prototypes Remix)" Ed Sheeran Warner Music Denmark (2011)
"Last Night (The Prototypes Remix)" Ian Carey feat. Snoop Dogg Ministry of Sound (13 November 2011)
2012 "Your Drums, Your Love
(The Prototypes Remix Radio Edit)"
AlunaGeorge Island Records (2012)
"Bad Signal (The Prototypes Remix)" Hadouken! Ministry of Sound (2012)
2013 "Fire (The Prototypes Remix)" Donae'o Zephron (28 February 2013)
"Experts (The Prototypes Remix)" SKisM Never Say Die (Dec 2013)
"Get Up (Rattle) (Prototypes Dub Step Mix)" Bingo Players feat. Far East Movement Republic Records (2013)
"Turn the Lights On (The Prototypes Club Mix)" Fleur East Strictly Rhythm (2013)
"Make It There (The Prototypes Remix)" Koven feat. Folly Rae Viper (27 October 2013)
"Steve French (The Prototypes Remix)" Flux Pavilion Big Beat (11 November 2013)
2014 "Friday (The Prototypes Remix)" Shadow Child feat. Takura Ministry of Sound (7 April 2014)
2015 "Delirium (The Prototypes Remix)" Zomboy feat. Rykka Never Say Die (25 May 2015)
"Chunky (The Prototypes Remix)" Format:B Ministry of Sound (13 November 2015)
2016 "Fallen (The Prototypes vs. Teddy Killerz Remix)" The Prototypes feat. Donae'o Viper (10 June 2016)
"Harmony (The Prototypes Remix)" Adam F & Kokiri feat. Rae Sony Music Entertainment (5 August 2016)
"Higher (The Prototypes Remix)" Netsky & Jauz Sony Music Entertainment (26 August 2016)
2018 "Blood Sugar (The Prototypes Remix)" Pendulum

Further reading

Interviews and articles
  • "The Prototypes – Pop It Off (feat. Mad Hed City)". Drum and Bass HQ. 7 April 2015.
  • "DBHQ 031 The Prototypes Exclusive Interview & Music". Drum and Bass HQ. 15 May 2015.
  • "Brighton's Finest: Drum and Bass Act The Prototypes Drops Debut Album". THUMP. 11 May 2015.
  • "The Prototypes: Golden Era". Break Beat Magazine. 20 May 2015.
Discographies

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Prototypes – Redose". Fedgeno.com. 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "The Prototypes". Facebook. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "The Prototypes Profile". Viper Recordings. 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "The Prototypes". iTunes Store. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Drum & Bass Arena Awards Nominations". Viper Recordings. 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Drum & Bass Arena Awards Nominations". BreakBeat.com. 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d e Murray, Robin (18 May 2015). "The Prototypes: A Journey Through The City Of Gold". UKF Music. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "About". ThePrototypes.co.uk. 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  9. ^ a b c "Official Dance Albums Chart Top 40". Official Charts. 24 May 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d Khawaja, Jemayel (11 May 2015). "Brighton's Finest: Drum and Bass Act The Prototypes Drops Debut Album". THUMP. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Muniz, Chris (28 May 2015). "The Prototypes: Essential Cuts". Insomniac Events. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  12. ^ a b "The Prototypes Sign With Viper Recordings". Viper Recordings. 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d "The Prototypes: Golden Era". Break Beat Magazine. 20 May 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "The Prototypes". DNBMuzik. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  15. ^ "The World of Drum and Bass Miami". DJ Mag. 25 March 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  16. ^ a b c "The Prototypes – Pop It Off (feat. Mad Hed City)". drumandbasshq.com. 7 April 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  17. ^ "Tune of the Month: April 2015". UKF Music. 30 April 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  18. ^ Chapman, Matthew (3 July 2015). "Summer Drum & Bass: A Technical Guide". UKF Music. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  19. ^ "Top 10 Drum And Bass Tracks – 5.27.15 Chart". Magnetic Magazine. 27 May 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  20. ^ "#AAA Dance Marathon". BBC. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  21. ^ "The Prototypes Quest Mix". BBC. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  22. ^ https://ukf.com/news/prototypes-announce-get-hype-records/16391
Audio and video