Ed Rush
Ben Settle, professionally known as Ed Rush, is a British drum and bass producer and DJ originating from West London.[1][2] Renowned for pioneering the dark, techstep, and neurofunk subgenres of drum and bass, he began his career in the early 1990s, initially influenced by the underground rave scene and breakdancing culture before transitioning to production.[1][3] Ed Rush's early releases, such as the 1993 track "Bludclot Artattack" produced with Nico Sykes and the 1995 collaboration "The Mutant" with DJ Trace, helped establish his reputation for intense, atmospheric sound design.[1] In 1998, he partnered with Optical to found Virus Recordings, a label dedicated to advancing neurofunk and techstep music, which became a cornerstone for innovative drum and bass acts.[1] Key achievements include the critically acclaimed Wormhole album and "Creeps" EP with Optical, the latter earning them the Knowledge Magazine Drum and Bass Producers of the Year award, solidifying their influence in reshaping the genre toward darker, more complex territories.[1][3] Over three decades, Ed Rush has sustained an active role through solo productions, label curation, and high-profile performances, consistently pushing the boundaries of drum and bass without notable public controversies.[4][1]Early Life and Background
Upbringing in West London
Ben Settle, known professionally as Ed Rush, was born in Hammersmith, West London, during the 1970s. He spent his formative years in the Hammersmith and Shepherd's Bush areas, locales situated amid the evolving urban cultural landscape of west London, which included access to nascent underground music gatherings and sound systems in nearby venues and markets.[5][1] His family's environment provided early tactile encounters with music technology. Settle's father operated a hair salon on King's Road in Chelsea and maintained an enthusiasm for audio equipment, owning a Rock-Ola jukebox equipped with valve amplifiers that emitted the distinctive odor of acetate records. This setup exposed Settle to the sensory aspects of analog playback during childhood, fostering an affinity for mechanical sound reproduction predating digital production tools.[5] These domestic elements, reported by Settle himself in biographical accounts, aligned with the analog-centric ethos of London's pre-rave music culture, where physical media like vinyl and acetates dominated playback in homes and clubs. While broader genre influences emerged later, the immediate proximity to west London's infrastructural hubs—such as recording presses and informal DJ setups in Shepherd's Bush—offered incidental pathways for auditory experimentation without formal training.[5]Initial Musical Influences
Ed Rush, born Ben Settle in West London, began his musical journey immersed in the hip hop and electro scenes of the 1980s, participating actively as a b-boy in the breakdancing culture that emphasized intricate breakbeats and synthetic rhythms.[1][6] These foundational influences fostered an affinity for rhythmic complexity and percussive drive, elements that would later inform his pivot toward harder electronic forms rather than prevailing softer or melodic variants.[6] By the early 1990s, exposure to London's burgeoning underground rave environment—characterized by high-energy, illicit gatherings and proto-jungle sounds—propelled his exploration of aggressive, boundary-pushing beats, diverging from mainstream pop's accessibility in favor of raw intensity.[4][1] This scene's unpolished ethos, including pirate radio broadcasts and warehouse parties, provided a direct catalyst for prioritizing darker, experimental sonic palettes over commercial electronic trends.[4]Entry into Music Production
First Productions and Releases (1992–1995)
Ed Rush, under the alias The Psychic Ed Rush, released his debut single "Look What They've Done / What If My Heart Stops?" in 1992 on a self-released white label (PSY001), featuring breakbeat hardcore elements with rapid breaks and proto-jungle rhythms derived from hip hop and electro influences.[7] Later that year, he issued the EP I Wanna Stay in the Jungle (ER007), incorporating samples from The Winstons' "Amen, Brother" and Prince Jammy's "Round 2," which showcased an early fusion of intense breakbeats and jungle book vocal snippets, marking a shift toward faster, more aggressive percussion patterns typical of the emerging UK hardcore-to-jungle transition.[8] [9] These initial outputs, produced with assistance from neighbor and collaborator Nico, circulated primarily in London's underground pirate radio and rave scenes, reflecting self-taught production techniques honed on basic equipment.[6] In 1993, Rush's "Bludclot Artattack," co-produced with Nico and released on Sean Sykes' nascent No U-Turn label (NUT002), introduced darker, more rigid drum programming layered over distorted Reese basslines, diverging from lighter ragga-jungle trends toward introspective, atmospheric hardcore sounds.[10] The track's emphasis on mechanical breaks and eerie synth pads gained traction in underground circles, influencing early darkcore experiments by prioritizing sonic tension over melodic uplift, though it remained a niche pressing limited to vinyl formats.[11] Reception in pirate stations like Don FM, where Rush began broadcasting, highlighted its raw production as a precursor to harder-edged breakbeat styles, with limited distribution underscoring the era's DIY ethos in pre-digital drum and bass.[12] By 1994, operating under the alias DJ Ed Rush, he dropped the white-label single "Selecta" on reggae/dancehall imprint Jet Star Records (xct 001), blending jungle breaks with selective hip hop-infused selections and stamped artwork, which became a rare collector's item due to its scarcity and appeal in specialist shops.[13] This release exemplified the mid-period pivot to stricter, machine-like drum patterns amid the UK's fracturing rave landscape, where affiliations with labels like No U-Turn fostered connections in the pre-techstep underground, though commercial reception stayed confined to tape packs and import bins rather than mainstream charts.[6]Association with No U-Turn and Techstep Emergence
Ed Rush established a significant association with No U-Turn Records, a label founded by producer Nico in 1992, through a series of early releases that transitioned from darkcore to the emerging techstep sound. His debut single on the label, "Bludclot Artattack," released in 1993, exemplified darkcore's aggressive rhythms and atmospheric tension derived from the intensifying energy of the UK rave scene.[6] Over the following years, Rush issued approximately eight additional singles on No U-Turn and its sub-label Nu Black, incorporating increasingly complex drum patterns and dystopian synth elements that marked a shift toward structured, technological aggression.[6] In 1996, alongside DJ-producer Trace, Rush is credited with coining the term "techstep" to describe this evolving style, characterized by intricate, machine-like breakbeats and dark, futuristic textures engineered at No U-Turn studios.[14] Key releases that year, such as "Sector 3" co-produced with Nico, highlighted cutting-edge drum programming techniques, including rapid amen break manipulations and metallic percussion layers, which differentiated techstep from prior hardstep variants by emphasizing precision and sonic innovation over raw chaos. These tracks, distributed via No U-Turn's vinyl pressings, captured the subgenre's origination as a response to the limitations of earlier jungle forms, fostering a causal progression from rave-fueled intensity to engineered minimalism.[15] No U-Turn's role in techstep's emergence was further evidenced by subsequent 1997 singles like "Technology" and "Defect," which refined the genre's hallmarks of sparse arrangements and heavy sub-bass, solidifying Rush's contributions without reliance on hype-driven narratives. This period's output on the label laid foundational precedents for techstep's darker, more cerebral direction, rooted in empirical advancements in production hardware like the Akai MPC samplers prevalent in mid-1990s drum and bass studios.[16]Collaboration with Optical
Partnership Formation (Mid-1990s)
Ed Rush and Optical (Matt Quinn) first encountered each other in early 1996 within the burgeoning drum and bass scene, having previously admired one another's productions centered on aggressive, dark-edged sounds emerging from jungle and early techstep influences. Their meeting occurred at Music House, a key dubplate cutting studio near Holloway Road in London, where Optical frequently delivered DAT tapes for mastering and Ed Rush, already active as a DJ and producer, intersected through shared production workflows. Both hailing from West London backgrounds shaped by electro, hip-hop, and hardcore, they bonded over pursuits of harder, more experimental drum patterns and ominous atmospheres, contrasting the smoother rolling styles then dominating the genre.[17][18] The partnership coalesced rapidly from these encounters, facilitated by overlapping circles including Ed Rush's ties to No U-Turn Records—a label pivotal in techstep's development—and broader networks like those around Virus Recordings, which they would later co-found. Initial joint experiments highlighted complementary strengths: Ed Rush's energetic, rhythm-focused approach from his DJing and No U-Turn collaborations paired with Optical's precise engineering and melodic layering skills honed in studio environments. Interviews from the era reflect this synergy, with the duo citing mutual respect for each other's technical prowess as a catalyst, enabling them to push boundaries in sound design without the constraints of solo limitations.[18][17] These early alliances yielded collaborative singles by mid-1996 that codified templates for aggressive drum and bass, emphasizing distorted basslines, rapid breaks, and dystopian synths as hallmarks of their output. Such tracks, tested in club dubs and initial releases on labels like Prototype, demonstrated causal links between their combined methods and the evolution toward neurofunk precursors, setting a foundation for sustained innovation while diverging from mainstream jungle's lighter variants.[17][18]Key Joint Releases and Albums (1996–2015)
Ed Rush and Optical's collaborative output from 1996 to 2015 primarily emerged after their partnership solidified around 1997, with initial joint singles paving the way for full-length albums on their Virus Recordings imprint. One early milestone was the 1998 12" release "Cutslo (Lokuste Mix) / Alien Girl" featuring Fierce on Prototype Recordings, which introduced raw drum and bass with proto-techstep aggression and featured the track "Alien Girl" as a standout for its intense, futuristic basslines.[19] Their debut album, Wormhole, recorded between 1997 and 1998 and released on November 16, 1998, via Virus Recordings, marked a pivotal consolidation of techstep aesthetics through tracks like "Compound," "Dozer," and "Glass Eye," emphasizing relentless percussion and dystopian atmospheres.[20][21] The double-CD edition included a continuous mix with bonus tracks, expanding its reach in club and home listening formats.[22] Subsequent releases built on this foundation, transitioning toward neurofunk's layered complexities. The Creeps (Invisible and Deadly!) followed in 2000, incorporating sharper synth designs and vocal elements amid evolving production.[23] The Original Doctor Shade arrived in 2003, featuring collaborations like "Why?" with MC Darrison and Ryme Tyme, and tracks such as "Hacksaw" that deepened the duo's signature menace.[23] By 2006's Chameleon, the sound incorporated adaptive rhythms and modular structures, while 2009's Travel the Galaxy explored expansive, interstellar themes with interstellar synths and dynamic breaks.[23] The period culminated in No Cure, released on October 30, 2015, which refined their matured dark atmospheres through 11 tracks including "Automaton" and "Eternity," blending intricate bass manipulations with atmospheric depth on Virus Recordings.[24][25] These works collectively traced an arc from techstep's raw urgency—evident in Virus Recordings' early 1990s-influenced raw DnB with subtle funk undertones—to neurofunk's cerebral precision, without diverging into solo endeavors.[23]Musical Style and Innovations
Core Elements of Techstep and Neurofunk
Techstep emerged as a subgenre of drum and bass in 1996, characterized by its dark, mechanical beats and futuristic soundscapes that diverged from the melodic and soulful elements prevalent in earlier jungle styles.[15] The term was coined by producers Ed Rush and Trace to describe this shift toward minimalistic rhythms, deeper basslines, and industrial-inspired percussion, often evoking science fiction themes through distorted, aggressive textures rather than harmonious or vocal-driven arrangements.[26] This contrasted sharply with the softer, more accessible drum and bass variants that incorporated pop-influenced melodies and virtuosic breaks, positioning techstep as a raw, instrumental counterpoint emphasizing intensity and structural rigidity.[27] Neurofunk developed as an evolution of techstep between 1997 and 1998, incorporating complex, groove-oriented rhythms influenced by funk, jazz, and techno while retaining the dark, dystopian core.[28] Key sonic elements include intricate basslines with twisted, modulated designs; technical drum programming featuring glitchy, precise percussion patterns; and minimal melodic content overshadowed by atmospheric tension and futuristic effects.[29] Unlike vocal-heavy or liquid subgenres of drum and bass, neurofunk prioritizes instrumental depth, with layered, neurological-inspired rhythms that prioritize rhythmic complexity and sonic experimentation over emotional or melodic accessibility.[28] This subgenre's emphasis on flowing, enhanced polyrhythms and heavy, distorted low-end further distinguishes it from techstep's more straightforward mechanical drive, fostering a sense of controlled chaos through advanced sound manipulation.[27]Production Techniques and Sound Design
Ed Rush's drum programming emphasizes precision and rigidity, often layering synthetic hits with processed breakbeat samples to achieve a punchy, syncopated groove that diverges from traditional sliced Amen breaks prevalent in earlier jungle styles. He programs drums by selecting samples in looped beat sections, incorporating sidechain compression for rhythmic swing and weight, while blending classic breaks—sourced from funk-influenced drum libraries—with custom synth kicks and snares for added funk elements rooted in jazz-derived grooves.[30][6] This approach yields the meticulous, cutting-edge patterns characteristic of techstep and neurofunk, where drums are heavily processed via distortion and EQ on a drum bus to ensure clarity and impact in dense mixes.[30][29] In bass synthesis, Rush separates low-end elements into sub-bass (clean sine waves below the fundamental harmonics) and mid-range layers subjected to aggressive distortion using plugins like Camel Phat or Trash 2, crossed over around the first or second harmonic for separation and bite. Early works drew from sampled analogue synths such as Sequential Circuits Prophet 5 presets or Pro One monosynths, layered with filtered noise and vocal fragments to create complex, modulating lines—techniques evident in multi-sound constructions like the "switchblade" bass requiring at least three leads with velocity-modulated envelopes.[30][31] Contemporary production relies on software like Xfer Serum for these Reese-inspired basslines, enhanced by notch filtering and dynamic processing to evolve the raw techstep growl into neurofunk's intricate, futuristic timbres.[30] Sound design incorporates atmospheric layering through reverb-heavy voids—achieved by duplicating tracks for wet/dry balances and sidechaining reverbs (e.g., NI RC 48 on snares)—to craft expansive, tension-building spaces that contrast dense bass and drums. Rush records real-world ambients, such as airport noises, via mobile devices for intros and transitions, integrating them into DAW sessions like Studio One for a shift from hardware-era limitations to digital precision.[30][4] This evolution reflects a broader transition from analogue rave-era constraints to in-the-box workflows, enabling finer control over funk-infused atmospheres while maintaining causal fidelity to electronic engineering principles like signal separation and transient preservation.[4][30]Solo Career and Later Developments
Independent Work Post-Optical (2010s Onward)
Following the reduced pace of joint releases with Optical after their 2009 album Travel the Galaxy, Ed Rush issued limited solo material in the 2010s, prioritizing dark, aggressive drum and bass over the era's prevailing commercial and liquid subgenres.[32] A key example was the October 5, 2014, 12-inch vinyl single Scarabs / Boxcar on Piranha Pool Records, featuring rolling breaks, pulsating sub-bass, and layered synth stabs that echoed early techstep aggression while incorporating refined digital sound design for tighter production.[33] This release, limited to vinyl with digital follow-up, underscored Rush's commitment to neurofunk's intensity amid industry shifts toward melodic, festival-oriented tracks.[34] The single's tracks avoided dilution by commercial pressures, retaining distorted atmospheres and high-tension builds typical of Rush's Virus Recordings output, as evidenced by its premiere on BBC Radio 1's Drum & Bass show, where it was noted for its "infectious synth lines" and "crystal" percussion clarity.[35] Empirical data from release metrics show modest but dedicated reception within underground circles, with vinyl pressing emphasizing analog warmth in an increasingly digital ecosystem.[33] No full solo albums emerged in this period, reflecting a strategic focus on selective singles rather than prolific volume, preserving artistic edge without chasing broader appeal.[36]Recent Releases and Activity (2020–2025)
In 2024, Ed Rush released the album Light of the Void on Blackout Music, featuring 13 tracks including "Voidwalker," "Geiger Counter," and "Black Hoodies," which exemplify his ongoing commitment to dark, atmospheric drum and bass with intricate sound design and heavy sub-bass elements.[37][38] The album marked a significant output, building on neurofunk influences while prioritizing underground intensity over commercial trends.[39] Ed Rush also issued remastered editions of classic material that year, such as the November 22 release of "Selecta" (originally with Nico), enhancing its original techstep drive with updated audio clarity for modern playback.[40][41] Additional singles like "XO Clinical" appeared on Blackout Music, maintaining a focus on clinical, minimalistic rhythms and dystopian textures at around 86 BPM.[42] Live activity persisted into 2025, with notable performances including a full DJ set at Darkshire Festival In The Woods in the Czech Republic on June 19, blending his catalog with recent productions for crowds emphasizing raw, shadowy drum and bass vibes.[43][44] In discussions around these efforts, Ed Rush critiqued contemporary drum and bass dilutions, stating there is "far too much TikTok bullshit DnB" and advocating for authentic, uncompromised underground production over social media-driven accessibility.[45] This stance underscores his resistance to genre mainstreaming, favoring causal depth in basslines and breaks derived from first-wave techstep roots.[46]Reception and Legacy
Critical and Industry Recognition
Ed Rush is widely regarded as a pioneering figure in drum and bass, with over three decades of contributions since his first releases in 1992. Resident Advisor characterizes him as "one of the current leaders of the new school drum and bass" and credits him with originating the revival of darker sounds within the genre.[1] Discussions on Dogs on Acid affirm his status as one of the pioneers who established an indelible mark on the scene by the mid-1990s, particularly through early innovations in techstep.[47] The 1998 collaborative album Wormhole with Optical played a pivotal role in propelling drum and bass toward more experimental and atmospheric territories, solidifying their influence on the era's sound evolution. Critics have described it as one of the most influential and forward-thinking drum and bass albums of the 1990s, emphasizing its crystallization of bubbling subgenre elements like neurofunk precursors.[48] Reviews praise its sci-fi-aligned dark grooves and textural focus, which maintained accessibility while pushing boundaries.[49] Ed Rush's industry standing is evidenced by his co-founding of Virus Recordings in 1998 with Optical, a label positioned as a premier outlet for neurofunk, techstep, and drum and bass innovation, which has hosted releases from leading artists in these styles.[1] His subsequent establishment of Blackout Music further demonstrates ongoing endorsement within the scene, as seen in dedicated events and podcast features highlighting his solo output.[4]Influence on Drum and Bass Genre
Ed Rush's early productions on the No U Turn label, co-founded in 1996, introduced techstep as a darker evolution of drum and bass, featuring mechanical rhythms, distorted Reese basslines, and sparse, industrial atmospheres that diverged from mid-1990s amen-break dominance and jazz influences.[6][50] This subgenre's emphasis on functional aggression provided a template for subsequent dark styles, with Rush's collaborations, such as the 1997 track "Torque" with Nico, exemplifying the shift toward minimalism and intensity.[50] Through his partnership with Optical, Rush propelled techstep into neurofunk by the late 1990s, incorporating layered sound design, rolling sub-basses, and sci-fi textures while retaining raw energy, as heard in their 1998 album Wormhole and singles like "Alien Girl."[51][29] These elements refined the genre's technical complexity, countering contemporaneous softening trends toward melodic liquid funk and jump-up by prioritizing sonic impact over accessibility.[6] The duo's innovations directly informed later techstep practitioners, including Bad Company UK, whose early 2000s releases echoed No U Turn's gritty frameworks in tracks emphasizing breakbeat manipulation and heavy low-end.[52] This adoption sustained dark drum and bass's edge, enabling persistence of neurofunk's hallmarks—such as modulated bass processing and atmospheric depth—into modern iterations by artists like Noisia and Black Sun Empire.[51][29] Without such foundational pushes, the trajectory of aggressive subgenres would likely have yielded to lighter commercial variants, per production histories tracing causal lineages back to Rush's era.[51]Discography
Solo Discography
Ed Rush's solo output has been limited compared to his collaborative work, featuring early singles that helped pioneer techstep sounds in the mid-1990s, followed by a significant gap until recent independent productions.[32] Notable early releases include the 1995 single "Guncheck / The Force Is Electric (Remix)" on No U-Turn, which showcased aggressive breakbeats and dark atmospheres characteristic of his pre-neurofunk style.[53] In March 2024, Ed Rush released his first solo full-length album, Light of the Void, on Blackout Music, marking a return to independent production after years focused on partnerships. The 13-track LP emphasizes neurofunk elements with tracks such as "Voidwalker," "Geiger Counter," and "Maasai Funk," blending intricate sound design and rhythmic complexity.[37][54]| Year | Title | Label | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Guncheck / The Force Is Electric (Remix) | No U-Turn | Vinyl 12" |
| 2024 | Light of the Void | Blackout Music | Digital album |
Collaborations with Optical
Ed Rush and Optical, co-founders of Virus Recordings, produced several full-length albums under their joint moniker, primarily within the neurofunk and techstep subgenres of drum and bass. Their debut collaborative album, Wormhole, released in 1998 on Virus Recordings, featured tracks emphasizing complex breakbeats and atmospheric synths, such as "The Navigator" and "Wormhole". Subsequent albums expanded on this foundation, incorporating evolving production techniques while maintaining a focus on intricate rhythms and dark, futuristic soundscapes.- The Creeps (2000, Virus Recordings), noted for tracks like "Bacteria" and "Gasmask".
- The Original Doctor Shade (2003, Virus Recordings), including "Innocence" and "Rehab".
- Chameleon (2006, Virus Recordings), with experimental elements in cuts like "Stranglers".
- Travel the Galaxy (2009, Virus Recordings), featuring "Crack Ball" and "Ride the Beast".
- No Cure (2015, Virus Recordings), their most recent joint full-length, comprising 11 tracks such as "Automaton" and "Eternity", released after a period of reduced duo activity.[24]