Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites
Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites is the second extended play (EP) by American electronic music producer Skrillex, initially released through mau5trap and Big Beat Records on October 22, 2010, via Beatport, and more widely through Atlantic Records on December 20, 2010. The EP consists of seven tracks, blending dubstep, electro house, and drum and bass elements, with its aggressive drops and heavy basslines marking a pivotal shift in electronic dance music (EDM).[1] The title track, "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites," served as the lead single and became Skrillex's breakthrough hit, peaking at number 69 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and popularizing the "brostep" subgenre characterized by its wobbling synths and high-energy builds.[2] Recorded primarily in 2010 at Skrillex's home studio in Los Angeles, the project showcased his transition from post-hardcore roots in From First to Last to solo electronic production.[1] Critically, it received mixed initial reviews for its abrasive sound but gained widespread acclaim for innovating dubstep, influencing the EDM explosion of the early 2010s and winning two Grammy Awards at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in 2012.[3] Commercially, the EP topped the Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums chart and has been certified gold by the RIAA, with over 500,000 units sold in the United States. Beyond its musical contributions, Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites played a key role in mainstreaming dubstep in North America, bridging underground rave culture with festival circuits like Ultra Music Festival.[2] The EP's success propelled Skrillex to global stardom, leading to collaborations with artists like Deadmau5 and Korn, and setting the stage for his follow-up EP Bangarang in 2011.[4] Its enduring legacy is evident in its frequent remixes, samples in popular media, and recognition as a cornerstone of modern EDM.[5]Background
Development
Following the free digital release of his debut EP My Name Is Skrillex in June 2010 via MySpace, Skrillex (Sonny Moore) transitioned from post-hardcore vocalist to electronic producer, building a local following through DJ sets at small Los Angeles venues like the Echo and Cinespace, where dubstep nights drew crowds of around 100 people.[6] This grassroots scene, including monthly events like Dubstep Patio at the Smell, provided the foundation for his evolving sound, which drew from UK bass music traditions such as jungle, drum and bass, and early dubstep.[6] In mid-2010, Moore received a call from the manager of Deadmau5 (Joel Zimmerman), leading to an opportunity to release new material on Zimmerman's nascent label, mau5trap, marking Skrillex's first official commercial output.[7] The Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites EP was developed rapidly in the two weeks leading up to early October 2010, with Moore working 18-hour days to complete the project.[7] He described the process as spontaneous and non-commercial, stating, "Scary Monsters was not a commercial release... I was just making music that sounded like—whatever," emphasizing an instinct-driven approach without intent to chase trends or popularity.[8] Influenced by European producers like the Dutch trio Noisia, whose aggressive, technical drum and bass and dubstep tracks shaped his aggressive synth design, Moore focused on creating "growly" bass sounds and dynamic drops characteristic of the EP's title track.[8] This period aligned with his immersion in the LA electronic underground, where he refined his production style amid a dubstep scene still niche in the U.S., predating the genre's mainstream explosion.[6] Moore produced the EP primarily on a MacBook Pro using Ableton Live as his digital audio workstation, incorporating soft synths like Native Instruments FM8 for the signature distorted, metallic basslines and growls.[8] For mastering, he relied on iZotope Ozone, utilizing its Multiband Stereo Imaging, Dynamics, Harmonic Exciter, and Maximizer modules to enhance width and punch while mitigating phase issues in his high-energy mixes.[8] Additional experimentation involved iZotope Trash for sound mangling, allowing rapid iteration on effects-heavy elements like the EP's wobbling synths and half-time rhythms.[8] The project captured Moore's self-taught, guitar-influenced background—stemming from his From First to Last days—blended with electronic experimentation, resulting in a seven-track EP that solidified his "brostep" aesthetic of heavy drops and vocal samples.[6] Released exclusively on Beatport on October 22, 2010, via mau5trap in partnership with Big Beat Records, it quickly entered the platform's Top 10, propelling Skrillex from underground performer to emerging electronic figurehead.[7]Recording
The Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites EP was recorded and mixed entirely by Skrillex (Sonny Moore) in 2010, with him credited as the recording engineer and mixer across all tracks.[9] The project marked a pivotal shift in Skrillex's career, as he produced the material following his departure from the post-hardcore band From First to Last, embracing electronic music through self-contained digital production in Los Angeles, where he was actively DJing in local clubs at the time.[6] Skrillex handled primary production responsibilities for the EP's core tracks, utilizing a laptop-based setup typical of early 2010s electronic producers to craft the dense, aggressive soundscapes.[10] The title track, "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites," exemplifies this solo approach, built around manipulated vocal samples—including "Oh my gosh!" from sport stacker Rachael Nedrow's 2009 YouTube video—layered with distorted bass drops and glitchy effects, all composed and arranged by Skrillex.[9]) Similarly, "Kill Everybody" was fully produced by him, emphasizing raw energy and experimental sound design without external co-producers.[9] Collaborations added variety to select originals, such as "Rock 'n' Roll (Will Take You to the Mountain)" featuring vocals by Captain Ahab. "All I Ask of You" features ethereal vocals from Pennybirdrabbit (Claire Boucher, later known as Grimes), integrated into Skrillex's production framework to create a more atmospheric contrast to the EP's heavier elements.[9] These sessions reflected Skrillex's emerging style of blending live vocal recordings with heavy synthesis and processing, often completed in isolation to maintain creative control. The EP's remixes—by Noisia and Zomboy—were produced independently by those artists post-originals, expanding the release without involving Skrillex in their recording.[9] This DIY ethos in recording and production underscored the EP's underground origins, positioning it as a breakthrough in dubstep's evolution toward broader accessibility.Composition and style
Musical elements
"Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" is characterized by a fusion of dubstep and electro house, drawing from Skrillex's background in hardcore screamo to infuse the EP with violent, aggressive energy influenced by drum and bass and UK dubstep traditions.[11] The tracks exhibit a twisted interpretation of these genres, incorporating bloghouse-inspired electro elements and blistering metal sonic aesthetics, which contribute to the EP's unbridled and bold sound.[12] This blend results in a high-energy style marked by abrupt shifts between heavy drops and lighter, melodic sections, often contrasting light and dark timbres to create dynamic tension.[4] Central to the EP's musical identity are its prominent basslines, featuring overwhelming midrange "wobble" effects and distorted growls that dominate the mix with guttural, deranged synth tones.[11] For instance, the title track "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" employs trancey hooks paired with onomatopoeic bass growls, building from soothing strings and electronic leads to explosive drops with face-melting bass intensity and sharply detailed production.[11][13] These bass elements are often layered with abrasive, industrial noise and metalcore-style drum lines, emphasizing rhythmic complexity through distorted 4×4 kick drums and tempo shifts—such as in "Rock N' Roll," where the track transitions from glitchy house to dubstep half-time before returning to house pacing.[4] Synthesizers and melodic components further define the EP's sound, with screaming leads, trancy chords, and melodic static creating a tactile, immersive experience.[11] Tracks like "Kill Everybody" incorporate funk guitar samples, 8-bit video game sounds, and anthemic rave lasers, evoking a stadium-filling aesthetic, while "Scatta" highlights distorted midrange basslines for a raw, aggressive drive.[4][11] Autotuned vocals, internet meme samples, and ambient piano resolutions— as heard in the title track's outro—add quirky, contrasting textures, blending progressive house softness in pieces like "All I Ask of You" with the EP's overall heaviness.[4] Harmonically, the title track is composed in G minor, utilizing chords built on the tonic (G minor), subdominant (C minor), and dominant (D minor) scale degrees, which contribute to its melodic complexity and emotional jumps.[14] This structure supports the EP's genre-bending approach, where influences from Justice-inspired electro riffs and chopped, processed vocals enhance the innovative, high-impact electronic sound that propelled dubstep into mainstream awareness.[11][12]Production techniques
Skrillex produced the Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites EP primarily using Ableton Live as his digital audio workstation (DAW), supplemented by soft synths such as Native Instruments' Massive, Reaktor, and FM8 for generating the characteristic aggressive basslines and growling leads.[15] He crafted sounds through extensive automation and manipulation of virtual synthesizers, often starting with MIDI-triggered synths and layering them with audio samples to create dynamic, organic textures that mimicked human-like elements, such as detailed vowel sound curves in vocal effects.[6] This approach emphasized instinctive sound design over rigid structures, drawing from UK dubstep influences to build tension through contrasting builds and explosive drops. The EP was assembled in a compact, mobile setup consisting of a MacBook Pro laptop, a Focusrite Saffire Pro 14 audio interface, and KRK studio monitors, allowing Skrillex to work efficiently while touring.[15] Vocals, including his own processed shouts, were recorded using an SM58 microphone directly into the interface and then treated with Melodyne for pitch correction and additional plug-ins to achieve distorted, ethereal qualities.[15] Despite the limitations, this bedroom-style production enabled rapid iteration; the entire EP was completed in approximately two weeks with 18-hour daily sessions, incorporating half-finished tracks and unreleased snippets prompted by a label deadline.[7] Mixing was handled entirely by Skrillex himself, focusing on balancing heavy low-end frequencies with high-energy mids to ensure club-ready punch, before sending the masters to Masterpiece in London for final polishing.[16] Techniques like bit-crushing and distortion on bass elements contributed to the "scary" timbres, particularly in the title track, where growls were synthesized by modulating oscillators in Massive with LFOs for wobbling effects.[15] This self-reliant workflow, relying on mouse and trackpad inputs rather than extensive hardware controllers, underscored Skrillex's unconventional, speed-driven process that prioritized raw energy over polished perfection.[15]Release and promotion
Release formats
The EP was initially released as a digital download on October 22, 2010, through Mau5trap Recordings and Big Beat Records, with an exclusive debut on Beatport featuring nine tracks in MP3 format at 320 kbps (catalog: MAU5CD004).[17] It became available on other digital platforms, including iTunes, on the same date, also as a nine-track MP3 release.[18] A deluxe digital edition with 11 tracks, including remixes, followed later in 2010 via Big Beat.[19] Physical formats emerged primarily in 2010 and 2011. The first CD edition was a digipak EP issued in the US in 2010 by Mau5trap (catalog: MAU5004/MAU5CD004), followed by a standard jewel case release in Europe the same year (catalog: 7567-88271-7), and releases in Canada (catalog: 2-526918), Russia (catalog: 4690355004820), Argentina, and Thailand (promo).[19] In the US, a promotional CD was issued in 2010 (Mau5trap/Big Beat), with an album-formatted CD in 2010 (catalog: 526918-2) and a commercial CD EP reissue in 2011 (catalog: 526918-2).[19] Additional CD variants included a 2011 Australian edition (catalog: 7567882717) and a 2012 Japanese release (catalog: WPCR-14409).[19] Vinyl editions were limited and collector-oriented. A glow-in-the-dark LP EP was produced in the US in 2011 by Mau5trap and Big Beat.[19] This was followed by a Record Store Day Black Friday exclusive in 2012: a 180-gram LP limited to 3,000 copies, released via Owsla, Big Beat, and Atlantic (catalog: 532747-1).[19] Promotional formats included CDRs in Denmark and Japan in 2010–2011.[19]| Format | Year | Country | Label(s) | Catalog | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Digital (9× MP3, 320 kbps) | 2010 | US | Mau5trap, Big Beat | MAU5CD004 | Beatport exclusive |
| Digital (11× MP3, Deluxe) | 2010 | US | Big Beat | None | Includes remixes |
| CD EP (Digipak) | 2010 | US | Mau5trap | MAU5004/MAU5CD004 | Initial physical |
| CD EP | 2010 | Europe | Big Beat, Atlantic | 7567-88271-7 | Standard jewel case |
| LP EP (Limited, Glow-in-the-Dark) | 2011 | US | Mau5trap, Big Beat | None | Special edition |
| CD EP (Reissue) | 2011 | US | Big Beat, Atlantic | 526918-2 | Widely distributed |
| LP EP (RSD, 180g, Limited to 3,000) | 2012 | US | Owsla, Big Beat, Atlantic | 532747-1 | Black Friday exclusive |
Singles and music videos
The lead single from Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites was the title track, released digitally on October 22, 2010, through Mau5trap and Big Beat Records alongside the EP.[2] The track, characterized by its aggressive dubstep drops and vocal samples, became a breakthrough for Skrillex, peaking at number 69 on the US Billboard Hot 100.) No other tracks from the EP were issued as official singles, though "Kill Everybody" and "All I Ask of You" (featuring Penny) received promotional play in electronic music circles.[18] No official music videos were produced for any singles from the EP. Promotion relied heavily on official audio releases and live performances, with the title track's audio uploaded to YouTube by Atlantic Records on October 23, 2010, amassing millions of views over time.[20] The track's visual impact was instead conveyed through fan-created visuals and VJ mixes shared online, amplifying its presence in the dubstep scene.[12]Reception
Critical reception
Upon its release in October 2010, Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites received mixed reviews from music critics, who were divided on its aggressive, genre-blending style and its role in popularizing a new strain of dubstep often dubbed "brostep." Alternative Press praised the EP for capturing Skrillex's emerging signature sound, awarding it 4 out of 5 stars and stating that Sonny Moore "has hit his mash-up groove, combining monster dance riffs with melodic ambience," highlighting the title track's balance of intensity and accessibility.[21] In contrast, Resident Advisor offered a more critical take, rating the production as "fun and well-produced rave fare" but lamenting its "one-dimensional aggression and appeal to the lowest common denominator," arguing that it misrepresented dubstep's garage and dub roots while appealing to a mainstream Beatport audience.[11] Other outlets echoed this polarization, viewing the EP as either an exciting gateway into electronic music or an overly simplistic entry point. Sputnikmusic gave it a 3 out of 5 rating, describing it as "worth the hype" with "no bad tracks" but akin to "Fisher-Price My First Dubstep," suitable for newcomers yet lacking depth for genre veterans due to repetitive patterns and limited replay value.[22] The aggregate critic score on Album of the Year stood at 63 out of 100 based on four reviews, reflecting this ambivalence toward its bombastic energy and vocal chops.[23] In retrospect, the EP has been reevaluated as a pivotal and influential release in electronic dance music. Pitchfork included the title track in its list of the 200 Best Tracks of the 2010s So Far (2010-2014), crediting it with pushing dubstep into broader awareness through its "shove" of innovative, high-energy production.[24] Billboard later ranked Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites among the 40 Greatest Dance Albums of the 2010s, hailing it as a breakthrough that broadened the genre with an "impressive array of styles" and explosive introductions to abrasive offshoots of dubstep.[25] In 2025, for its 15th anniversary, publications like Spectrum Culture revisited the EP as a foundational work in EDM.[26]Commercial performance
Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites achieved moderate commercial success, particularly within the electronic dance music market, building momentum through digital sales and streaming in the years following its initial 2010 release. The EP entered the US Billboard 200 at number 49 in January 2012, reflecting its gradual rise driven by viral online popularity and festival performances, and it also topped the Heatseekers Albums chart.[12] By December 2011, the EP had sold 171,000 units in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan data.[27] Its lead single, "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites," further boosted visibility by peaking at number 69 on the Billboard Hot 100 and earning a double Platinum certification from the RIAA for two million units sold or streamed. As of November 2025, the lead single has amassed over 226 million streams on Spotify.[28] Internationally, the EP performed strongly on genre-specific charts. In the United Kingdom, it reached number 5 on the Official Dance Albums Chart and accumulated 79 weeks on the listing across multiple runs from 2011 to 2013.[29] It also peaked at number 15 on the New Zealand Albums Chart.[30]| Chart (2011–2012) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 49 |
| US Heatseekers Albums | 1 |
| UK Dance Albums (OCC) | 5 |
| New Zealand Albums (RMNZ) | 15 |
Accolades
At the 54th Annual Grammy Awards held on February 12, 2012, Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites won Best Dance/Electronica Album, marking Skrillex's first Grammy win in that category. The title track "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" also secured the Best Dance Recording award, beating nominees including David Guetta's "Nothing Tonight (Never Be the Same)" and Swedish House Mafia's "Save the World". These victories contributed to Skrillex sweeping three Grammys that evening during the pre-telecast ceremony, highlighting the EP's pivotal role in mainstreaming dubstep.[31] The EP's success led to five total nominations for Skrillex at the 54th Grammys, a record for an electronic artist at the time, including Best New Artist (lost to Bon Iver), Best Short Form Music Video for "Equinox", and Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical for "Cinema (Skrillex Remix)", which he also won. This recognition underscored the EP's influence on electronic music, with the wins announced live from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles.[32] In terms of commercial certifications, the title track "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" achieved double Platinum status from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 3, 2013, denoting 2 million units sold or streamed in the United States. The EP itself received Gold certification from the RIAA for 500,000 equivalent units, reflecting its enduring sales through Big Beat Records. Additionally, it was certified Gold in Canada by Music Canada in November 2011 for 40,000 units.[33][34]Track listing and credits
Track listing
The EP was initially released digitally through Beatport on October 22, 2010, featuring five original tracks. An expanded nine-track version was released on major digital platforms including iTunes and Amazon Music on December 27, 2010, incorporating additional collaborations and remixes. A physical CD edition was released in 2011 via Mau5trap and Big Beat Records. The following track listing reflects the standard digital edition available on platforms such as Apple Music and Amazon Music.[19]| No. | Title | Featured artist(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Rock 'n' Roll (Will Take You to the Mountain)" | 4:44 | |
| 2 | "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" | 4:03 | |
| 3 | "Kill Everybody" | 4:57 | |
| 4 | "All I Ask of You" | Penny, Foreign Beggars, Noisia | 4:33 |
| 5 | "Scatta" | Foreign Beggars, Bare Noize | 4:11 |
| 6 | "With You, Friends (Long Drive)" | 6:24 | |
| 7 | "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites (Noisia Remix)" | Noisia | 3:24 |
| 8 | "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites (Zedd Remix)" | 5:57 | |
| 9 | "Kill Everybody (Bare Noize Remix)" | 4:41 |