Skream
Skream is the stage name of Oliver Jones (born 1 June 1986), a British electronic music producer and DJ based in London, best known as a pioneering figure in the dubstep genre during the mid-2000s.[1][2] Emerging from the UK's underground rave scene, Jones began producing at a young age and gained prominence through his work at Big Apple Records, where he honed his skills in deep, bass-heavy sound design.[3] His breakthrough came with the 2005 single "Midnight Request Line", which exemplified dubstep's signature low-end throb and melodic elements, helping to define the genre's early blueprint.[1] Jones released his debut album, Skream!, in 2006 on Tempa, featuring tracks that blended dubstep with garage and breakbeat influences, solidifying his role alongside contemporaries like Benga in shaping the sound at venues such as Plastic People and on Rinse FM. He co-founded the influential supergroup Magnetic Man with Benga and Artwork, releasing a self-titled album in 2010.[1] By the late 2000s, he expanded into house and techno, with his 2010 album Outside the Box on Tempa showcasing a shift toward brighter, more dancefloor-oriented productions while retaining dubstep's emotional depth.[1] Over the years, Skream has maintained a prolific output through his own label, Skreamizm, including the 2023 compilation Skreamizm Vol. 8, which revisited his roots with remixes and originals.[4] In recent years, Skream has continued to evolve, collaborating on euphoric house tracks like "The Boy / Moon" with Krystal Klear and "Lost Without You" with Fletch in 2025, while working on a long-awaited joint album with Benga, including the June 2025 single "Good Things Come To Those Who Wait", that promises to revisit their dubstep legacy.[1][5][6] His DJ sets, known for their genre-spanning energy from dubstep to disco, have headlined festivals like Shambhala and events such as Boiler Room, underscoring his enduring influence on electronic music.[7][2]Early life
Childhood and family background
Oliver Dene Jones, known professionally as Skream, was born on 1 June 1986 in West Wickham, a suburb in the London Borough of Bromley. He was raised in nearby Croydon, where his family relocated during his early years, immersing him in an urban environment that would later influence his musical path.[8] Jones grew up in a family with strong ties to music, particularly through his older brother, known as DJ Hijak, a prominent figure in London's jungle scene as part of the Internatty crew alongside artists like Grooverider.[9] At the age of 11, Jones developed an early fascination with DJing by sneaking into his brother's room to experiment with his turntables, sparking his initial creative curiosity.[10][11] During his school years in Croydon, Jones expressed a strong disinterest in formal education, often skipping classes and describing the experience as mutually unappealing, which freed up time for personal exploration and laid the groundwork for his artistic development.[12] Croydon itself served as a vibrant hub for the burgeoning UK electronic music scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with local spots like Big Apple Records fostering garage and bass innovations that permeated the area's youth culture.[13]Introduction to music and production
Skream, born Oliver Dene Jones, began experimenting with music production in his mid-teens, initially setting up a modest bedroom studio equipped with a personal computer and the digital audio workstation software Fruity Loops (now known as FL Studio).[14] At around age 15, he immersed himself in creating beats, drawing from the burgeoning UK garage and bassline scenes, and quickly amassed hundreds of unfinished tracks through self-directed learning without formal training.[15] This hands-on approach allowed him to develop a distinctive sound characterized by deep sub-basses and atmospheric elements, honed entirely through trial and error on limited hardware.[16] In his mid-teens, Jones secured a job at Big Apple Records, a pivotal Croydon-based record shop that served as a hub for the emerging dubstep and bass music communities from the late 1990s onward.[14] Working there exposed him to exclusive dubplates, influential tracks, and key figures in the scene, including producers and DJs who frequented the store for imports and previews.[17] The environment fostered his understanding of the underground music ecosystem, where white-label vinyl and custom dubs were traded, bridging his home productions with real-world application.[18] A significant early connection formed at Big Apple around 2002, when Jones met DJ Hatcha, a resident selector and early dubstep advocate who worked at the shop.[14] Hatcha became the first DJ to spin Jones's nascent dubplates in sets, providing crucial validation and introducing his productions to audiences at influential nights like those at Plastic People in London.[15] This encounter marked Jones's formal entry into the dubstep collective, transforming his bedroom experiments into viable contributions to the genre's foundational years.[19] Parallel to his production efforts, Jones taught himself DJing starting at age 11, practicing basic mixing techniques on a belt-drive turntable in his bedroom before gaining access to professional equipment through Big Apple.[15] His early mixes focused on blending garage, jungle, and emerging bass sounds, refining transitions and selections through repeated home sessions without mentorship.[14] This self-reliant foundation in DJing complemented his production skills, preparing him for the communal dubstep environment. Briefly, his older brother, DJ Hijak, influenced his initial interest by working at Big Apple and introducing him to the shop's vibrant scene.[20]Music career
Emergence in the dubstep scene
Skream (Oliver Jones), from Croydon, South London, emerged in the nascent dubstep scene during the early 2000s through his involvement with the local record shop Big Apple Records, where he worked as a shop assistant alongside his brother Hijak and other key figures like DJ Hatcha.[21] This hub for South London's bass music community provided Jones with direct access to influential producers and equipment, transitioning his early bedroom productions into professional opportunities on the shop's affiliated label.[22] His initial releases, co-produced with fellow Croydon producer Benga, captured the genre's raw, sub-heavy sound rooted in UK garage and 2-step influences, establishing him as a foundational voice in the underground.[23] Jones's debut EP, The Judgment (2003), released on Big Apple Records, featured stark, ominous tracks like the title cut, showcasing aggressive basslines and minimal percussion that resonated in early dubstep sets. This was followed by the Hydro / Elektro EP (2004), also on Big Apple, which included rumbling low-end explorations such as "Hydro" and "Elektro," further solidifying his reputation for innovative sound design amid the scene's evolution from garage roots. In 2005, he expanded affiliations with Tectonic Recordings via the collaborative single "28g / Fearless" with Loefah, blending tense atmospheres and percussive elements that highlighted dubstep's experimental edge. These outputs positioned Skream as a pioneer alongside Benga, contributing to the genre's distinct identity through frequent plays at Croydon's informal gatherings and London's burgeoning parties.[24] A pivotal moment came with the release of "Midnight Request Line" on Tempa in 2005, a solo track that introduced brighter, melodic synth arpeggios over deep sub-bass, marking a shift toward more accessible dubstep variants. Initially met with skepticism from Hatcha, the track quickly gained traction after plays at FWD>> nights at Plastic People, where Hatcha and others championed it as a crossover anthem, drawing crowds and influencing producers with its fusion of grime-like energy and euphoric hooks.[24] Skream's regular appearances at these seminal events, often back-to-back with Benga, helped cement dubstep's underground momentum, transforming Croydon's DIY ethos into a cohesive movement by 2005.[25] During this period, he relied on software like FruityLoops for his productions, enabling rapid experimentation that fueled his rapid rise.[15]Solo breakthroughs and albums
Skream's solo career gained significant momentum with his debut album, building on the foundation laid by earlier releases such as the influential 2005 EP Midnight Request Line / I on Tempa, which introduced his signature wobbling basslines and became the label's highest-selling 12-inch to date.[26] Released in October 2006 on Tempa, Skream! marked a pivotal breakthrough, compiling tracks that solidified his position as a core architect of dubstep. Featuring standout cuts like "Stagger" and "Tortured Soul," the album showcased a stark, sinister sound characterized by menacing sub-bass drops, echoing dub effects, and sparse, atmospheric percussion that evoked a sense of urban desolation.[27] Critics hailed it as a return to dubstep's roots, blending nostalgic garage and hardcore influences with forward-thinking production, earning praise for its raw energy and refusal to chase futuristic trends in favor of musical memory.[28] This release not only established Skream's production hallmarks—heavy, rumbling basslines layered over haunting, reverb-drenched atmospheres—but also helped propel dubstep from underground clubs into broader recognition, influencing a wave of producers to explore similar dark, immersive textures.[29] Four years later, Skream's second solo album, Outside the Box, released in August 2010 on Tempa, represented an ambitious evolution aimed at bridging dubstep's underground ethos with mainstream appeal. The record delved deeper into his thematic preoccupations with emotional duality, incorporating guest vocals from artists like La Roux's Elly Jackson and Murs to add pop-R&B inflections to tracks such as "Where You Should Be" and "8 Bit Baby." Production-wise, it retained core elements like pulsating heavy basslines and ethereal, spacey synths, but introduced more varied techniques, including Auto-Tuned vocal manipulations and nods to 1990s jungle breaks for a nostalgic yet expansive feel.[30] While it charted modestly at number 43 on the UK Albums Chart, the album received solid critical acclaim for its modular structure and crossover potential, with Pitchfork awarding it a 7.9 out of 10 and noting how it preserved dubstep's modular accessibility while pushing toward pop without compromising intensity.[31] This project underscored Skream's growing versatility, contributing to dubstep's mainstream crossover by demonstrating how atmospheric, bass-driven soundscapes could integrate with vocal-driven hooks and broader electronic influences.[32] Overall, these solo albums cemented Skream's breakthroughs by prioritizing conceptual depth over commercial formulas, with their emphasis on sinister, immersive production techniques fostering dubstep's expansion beyond niche audiences. The critical and cultural impact of Skream! and Outside the Box lies in their role as milestones that highlighted heavy bass as a vehicle for emotional and atmospheric storytelling, inspiring subsequent generations of bass music creators.[33]Collaborations and Magnetic Man
In 2007, Skream (Oliver Jones) formed the dubstep supergroup Magnetic Man alongside producers Benga and Artwork, initially as an anonymous collective to blend their individual styles into collaborative tracks.[34][35] The group signed to Columbia Records in early 2010, releasing their self-titled debut album later that year, which featured vocal contributions from artists including Angela Hunte on the single "I Need Air."[36][37] Skream's remix work during this period gained significant attention, particularly his 2009 dubstep reworking of La Roux's "In for the Kill," which propelled the track to number two on the UK Singles Chart and introduced dubstep elements to a broader pop audience.[38] He also delivered remixes for Chromeo's "Night by Night" in 2010 and Katy B's "Lights On" (featuring Ms. Dynamite) that same year, infusing house and dubstep influences into these tracks.[39] Beyond Magnetic Man, Skream expanded his collaborations to include features with John Legend on the group's "Getting Nowhere" from the 2010 album, and a remix of Miles Kane's "First of My Kind" in 2011, marking his shift toward crossover appeal outside pure dubstep.[40][23] Magnetic Man's formation fostered a dynamic interplay among the trio, with live performances emphasizing synchronized visuals and on-stage remixing of their solo material, which enhanced group cohesion and elevated dubstep's presence at major festivals like Glastonbury and Wireless.[41][42] Their joint sets, often featuring guest vocalists, helped solidify the genre's mainstream breakthrough through high-energy, collaborative energy.[43]Genre evolution and recent activities
Following his foundational contributions to dubstep in the late 2000s and early 2010s, Skream began transitioning toward house, techno, and disco influences around 2013, aligning with the broader evolution of electronic dance music toward more upbeat, groove-oriented sounds during extensive U.S. touring.[44] This shift was evident in his sets, which increasingly incorporated hour-long segments of house and techno, as well as releases exploring these genres on established imprints.[8] In 2021, Skream launched his own record label, IFEEL, through distribution partner The Orchard, with the inaugural release being the Chesters Groove EP, which featured remixes by Berlin techno artist Norman Nodge and emphasized experimental dance music styles.[45] The label has since issued subsequent EPs like Trees and tracks such as "Instakord," allowing Skream to curate and release forward-thinking electronic productions from himself and collaborators.[46] Skream's recent activities have included high-profile reunions and tours, such as his October 2023 back-to-back DJ set with longtime collaborator Benga—marking their first joint performance in over a decade—alongside MC SGT Pokes at London's fabric nightclub during the Skreamizm Weekender.[47] Building on this momentum, he joined Benga and SGT Pokes for a four-night residency of open-to-close sets at The Black Box in Denver, Colorado, in April 2024, highlighting Denver's role as a dubstep hub while incorporating his evolved house-leaning sound.[48] In 2025, Skream continued his genre-spanning collaborations with the release of "Lost Without You" alongside Fletch on CircoLoco Records in August, followed by the euphoric two-track EP The Boy / Moon with Krystal Klear in October, also on CircoLoco, blending Italo-disco influences with high-energy dancefloor vibes.[49][50] Additionally, Skream and Benga announced a long-awaited joint album in January 2025, kicking off the project with their first new single in over a decade, "Good Things Come To Those Who Wait," released in June, signaling a return to their dubstep roots while incorporating evolved production styles.[51] As of November 2025, Skream maintains an active schedule with ongoing DJ residencies and festival appearances, including performances at Circoloco and Solid Grooves in Ibiza, the Greenpeace stage at Glastonbury Festival, Shambhala Music Festival in Canada, and Bass Coast Festival, underscoring his enduring influence across global electronic scenes.[52][53][7]Musical style and influences
Core dubstep elements
Skream's early dubstep productions from the mid-2000s are characterized by a stark, sinister sound palette dominated by heavy sub-bass frequencies that provide a rumbling foundation, often paired with warped, modulated synths that create eerie, distorted textures. These elements contribute to minimalistic track structures, where sparse arrangements emphasize tension and depth over dense layering, evoking a sense of foreboding atmosphere. For instance, his use of filtered basslines and subtle percussive effects, such as click-like gunshots, underscores this approach, prioritizing low-end power and sonic restraint to immerse listeners in a dark, otherworldly space.[54][24][8] Drawing from UK garage and 2-step influences, Skream evolved these roots into a more melodic form of dubstep, incorporating syncopated rhythms and vocal samples that nod to garage's shuffled beats while amplifying the sub-bass aggression. Tracks like "Midnight Request Line" exemplify this shift, blending garage-derived grooves with hummable synth melodies and extended intros that build anticipation, marking a pivot toward accessible yet atmospheric dubstep that retained the genre's underground edge. This evolution highlighted his ability to fuse 2-step's rhythmic complexity with dubstep's bass-heavy minimalism, creating a hybrid that broadened the genre's emotional range without diluting its intensity.[24][8][54] Technically, Skream's dubstep features prominent half-time rhythms, where 140 BPM tempos are felt at a slower, 70 BPM pulse through dragged snares and kicks, fostering a hypnotic, lumbering momentum unique to his productions. Atmospheric builds are another hallmark, with gradual layering of warped synths and reverb-drenched effects that escalate tension before heavy drops, enhancing the genre's immersive quality. He achieved these sounds using accessible tools like FruityLoops in his early career, allowing for innovative manipulation of bass and synth elements on limited hardware.[24][54][14] Alongside Benga, Skream played a pivotal role in defining the "Croydon sound," a substyle of early dubstep originating from their South London base, characterized by dark, bass-centric minimalism and raw, garage-infused experimentation. As part of the Smooth Criminals crew, their collaborative tracks emphasized heavy sub-bass and sparse percussion, solidifying Croydon's reputation as a dubstep epicenter and influencing the genre's global spread through shared dubplates and club sessions. This sound's emphasis on atmospheric depth and rhythmic restraint set a template for dubstep's foundational aesthetic.[24][14][54]Shifts toward house and disco
Following the peak of dubstep's popularity in the early 2010s, Skream began incorporating upbeat house grooves and disco samples into his productions around 2013, evident in tracks featuring brighter tempos and vocal hooks, such as his collaboration "Rollercoaster" with Sam Frank on the compilation All Gone Pete Tong & Skream: Miami 2013. This shift was showcased in his DJ sets, including a 100-minute house and disco mix for Mixmag's The Lab LDN in late 2012 and a dedicated disco set in May 2013, where he explored funkier rhythms and soulful elements drawn from classic disco influences.[8][44][55] The motivations for this evolution stemmed from burnout after a decade immersed in dubstep's intense bass-heavy sound, prompting Skream to seek fresher, slower-paced genres that aligned with his longstanding interest in house and techno since his mid-teens. He cited frustration with the repetitive nature of dubstep sets and a desire to avoid stagnation, instead embracing the UK's broader electronic scene resurgence, including inspirations from disco artists and the success of acts like Disclosure. This personal reinvention allowed him to experiment during U.S. tours, gradually phasing out dubstep in favor of more versatile, groove-oriented music.[8][44][55] In his later releases, Skream developed hybrid elements that blended dubstep's signature sub-bass lines with house rhythms and disco's upbeat percussion, as heard in tracks like "Mercy" by Boddika & Joy Orbison, which he has praised as a masterpiece, and his own productions on the Miami 2013 mix, creating a darker, twisted fusion suitable for club environments. These hybrids maintained continuity with his dubstep roots while adapting to house's four-to-the-floor beats, resulting in a more accessible sound for diverse audiences.[8][55] The transition received mixed but generally positive critical reception, with praise for Skream's versatility in navigating electronic music's evolving landscape; Pete Tong lauded his "dark, twisted house" contributions on the Miami 2013 compilation, highlighting his ability to infuse personal flair into house and disco. While some fans initially resisted the departure from dubstep, outlets like Red Bull noted the shift as a natural progression that kept Skream relevant, cementing his reputation as an adaptable pioneer in the genre.[44][8][55] In the 2020s, Skream has continued this evolution, blending house and disco with dubstep roots in euphoric tracks like "The Boy / Moon" with Krystal Klear (2023) and "Lost Without You" with Fletch (2025), while teasing a joint album with Benga that revisits their early influences as of November 2025.[1][5][56]Discography
Solo albums
Skream's debut solo album, Skream!, was released on October 30, 2006, by the Tempa label, marking a pivotal moment in the early dubstep movement as one of the genre's first full-length statements from a core producer. Produced when Skream was just 20 years old, the album compiled and expanded on tracks from his preceding EPs, showcasing his rapid evolution from a teenage bedroom producer to a defining voice in London's underground scene. It featured 10 tracks, including standouts like "Midnight Request Line," a brooding anthem with warped basslines and haunting vocals that became a cornerstone of dubstep sets, and "Check It" featuring Warrior Queen, which infused dancehall energy into the sub-bass framework. Other highlights encompassed "Stagger," with its skittering percussion, and the extended dub exploration of "Rutten," demonstrating Skream's command of atmospheric tension and rhythmic innovation. Widely recognized as a landmark release, Skream! helped solidify dubstep's canon by blending garage roots with futuristic sound design, earning a spot at number 65 on Resident Advisor's list of the top 100 albums of the 2000s.[57] Its influence extended internationally, paving the way for dubstep's global spread through tracks that balanced accessibility with sonic depth.[23] Skream's second solo album, Outside the Box, arrived on August 9, 2010, also via Tempa, representing a maturation in his output after four years of singles, remixes, and the formation of Magnetic Man. This 12-track effort integrated vocal collaborations to broaden its appeal, with key singles like "Where You Should Be" featuring Sam Frank, which fused emotive house-inflected melodies over rumbling low-end, and "8 Bit Baby" with Murs, incorporating hip-hop elements into glitchy electronics. Additional highlights included the instrumental "CPU," evoking video game nostalgia through chiptune samples, and "Fields of Emotion," a sprawling closer that layered ethereal pads with subtle breaks. Produced amid dubstep's commercial ascent, the album drew from Skream's residency at Plastic People and collaborations with artists like La Roux, aiming to transcend club confines for radio play.[31] It peaked at number 21 on international iTunes charts upon release, signaling modest crossover success, though it received mixed reception for its eclectic scope.[58] Thematically, it captured Skream's push beyond pure genre boundaries. No further solo studio albums followed by 2025, as Skream shifted focus to EPs, mixes, and house-oriented projects.EPs and singles
Skream's early solo releases in the mid-2000s established him as a pivotal figure in the burgeoning dubstep scene, with EPs and singles characterized by deep, rumbling basslines and sparse, atmospheric production. His debut solo single, "Midnight Request Line" b/w "I," released in 2005 on Tempa, featured the titular track's haunting vocal samples and sub-bass oscillations, which quickly became an anthem in London's underground clubs and exemplified the genre's shift toward emotional depth over garage roots. This release was followed by the "Tapped" b/w "Dutch Flowerz" single in 2006, also on Tempa, where "Tapped" showcased syncopated rhythms and metallic percussion, further honing Skream's signature sound of tension-building drops. Throughout the late 2000s, Skream issued a series of influential EPs under the Skreamizm banner on Tempa, blending original productions with dubstep's core elements of heavy low-end and minimalism. Skreamizm Vol. 1 (2006) included tracks like "Original Nuttah" remix and "Eschat," emphasizing warped synths and breakbeat influences, while Vol. 2 (2006) and Vol. 3 (2007) expanded on these with more experimental textures, such as the echoing delays in "Burning." Vol. 4 (2008) marked a slight evolution toward brighter melodies, featuring "Midnight" variants that built on his earlier hits. Other standalone EPs from this period, like "Acid People" (2006, Big Apple Records) and "Dark Side of Life" b/w "Tearful Dreams" (2007, Southside Dubstars), delved into acidic bass wobbles and melancholic pads, solidifying his role in defining dubstep's sonic palette. As Skream transitioned toward house and techno in the 2010s, his solo EPs and singles reflected this genre evolution, incorporating disco-infused grooves and four-on-the-floor beats while retaining bass-heavy foundations. The 2010 single "Listenin' to the Records on My Wall" on Tempa previewed this shift with its soulful samples and upbeat tempo, later appearing on his album Outside the Box. In 2014, "Rollercoaster" (feat. Sam Frank) on Manhattan Recordings blended vocal house elements with Skream's production flair. By the 2020s, releases like the Chesters Groove EP (2021, IFEEL), his debut on his own label, featured the title track's rolling bass and percussive drive, alongside remixes by Norman Nodge, signaling a mature house sound.[59] The Attention Deficit EP (2022, Circoloco Records) explored fidgety rhythms and melodic builds, while the single "Summoned" (2023, fabric Originals) delivered pulsating techno with intricate layering. The compilation Skreamizm Vol. 8 (2023, Skreamizm) revisited his roots with remixes and originals.[4] More recently, "Thinking of You" (2023 single) offered an emotive, piano-led house track, evoking introspection amid club energy. In 2025, Skream released "Pound Town" (feat. Partiboi69, March, Skreamizm), a high-energy collaboration; "Bass Tool" (with Alex Culross, May, IFEEL), a tech house track with driving bass; "Lost Without You" (with Fletch, August, CircoLoco Records), an Italo-inspired house single; and "The Boy / Moon" (with Krystal Klear, October, Skreamizm), a euphoric two-track release.[60][61][62][50] These later works highlight Skream's adaptation to broader electronic landscapes, with releases on imprints like Crosstown Rebels and his IFEEL and Skreamizm labels emphasizing groovy, dancefloor-ready compositions up to 2025.[63]Releases with Magnetic Man
Magnetic Man's debut album, titled Magnetic Man, was released on 11 October 2010 through Columbia Records in the UK and Startime International in the US, marking the group's primary full-length output.[64] The album peaked at number 5 on the UK Albums Chart and number 1 on the UK Dance Chart, achieving commercial success as one of the highest-charting dubstep releases at the time.[65][66] It features guest vocalists including Ms. Dynamite, Angela Hunte, P Money, and Katy B, blending dubstep with pop and R&B elements for broader appeal.[67] The standard tracklist comprises 12 songs, as follows:| No. | Title | Featured artist | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Flying into Tokyo" | 3:08 | |
| 2 | "Fire" | Ms. Dynamite | 4:39 |
| 3 | "I Need Air" | Angela Hunte | 4:16 |
| 4 | "Anthemic" | P Money | 6:08 |
| 5 | "The Bug" | 4:14 | |
| 6 | "Ping Pong" | 3:34 | |
| 7 | "Perfect Stranger" | Katy B | 3:52 |
| 8 | "Crossover" | Katy B | 4:15 |
| 9 | "Mad" | 4:53 | |
| 10 | "Boiling Water" | 3:58 | |
| 11 | "K Dance" | 4:59 | |
| 12 | "Box of Ghosts" | 4:26 |