Ephwurd

Ephwurd is an electronic music project. Ephwurd is best known for tracks such as "Rock The Party" (with Jauz), "Vibrations", "Wildchild" (with The Bloody Beetroots) and "Just Us" (featuring Liinks). In addition Ephwurd has remixed some of the biggest names in dance music including The Chainsmokers, Major Lazer, DJ Snake and Oliver Heldens. Ephwurd has toured worldwide playing festivals such as Lollapalooza, Electric Daisy Carnival & Veld among many others.

Ephwurd
GenresHouse music
Bass House
Years active2015 (2015)–present
LabelsEph'd Up Records
Websitewww.ephwurd.com
MembersBais Haus
Past membersDatsik

History

Ephwurd went public with a remix of Major Lazer & DJ Snake's "Lean On", before revealing who was behind the duo in July 2015 as they released the single "Rock the Party" on the Spinnin' Records label.[1] The collaborative effort between Ephwurd and Jauz would often get played by DJs such as Tiësto, Axwell/Ingrosso, and Skrillex.[2] The music style would later be known as "bass house", which has been described as "having a lot of classic house drums and percussion to it but it has the wobbles of dubstep at the same time".[3]

Ephwurd later released a slew of singles on labels such as Spinnin Records and its sub label affiliates.[2]

On March 16, 2018, Bais Haus announced that "Ephwurd will now operate without Datsik.",[4][5] due in part to the recent controversy surrounding Datsik.

Since moving on as a solo act Ephwurd has released many singles and collaborations such as "Accelerator" and "Wildchild" (with The Bloody Beetroots).

In February of 2019 Ephwurd has developed his Eph'd Up Records label releasing emerging artists in the "Bass House" genre.

Music Style

Ephwurd was one the first acts to popularize the "bass house" genre of music to a wider audience.[3] Bass house has been described as an " all-encompassing melting pot is so broad it’s impossible to define what it is".[3] The origins of bass house has been traced back to the mid to late-1990s with the work of the group Basement Jaxx that was melded into UK garage over time. One reviewer labelled Ephwurd as a "high-flying collaboration of epic proportions", describing the music as "an exciting blend of dubstep and house music that has packed out venues around the world."[6] Ashley Marro of "Stoney Road" magazine described Ephwurd's Bring It Back as being an "old school combining a heavy dose of bass with elements of classic house music".[7]

gollark: There have been a bunch of instances of Google making it annoying or misleading to *actually* turn off location history on Android, for instance.
gollark: Okay? That doesn't actually mean Google aren't gathering data if you literally use their browser, OS and apps?
gollark: Do you just not care about privacy? All of those (I mean, except cloud storage) seem to be available in open source or more privacy-respecting forms which are *still* free.
gollark: <@209777632324091905> Firefox can do cross-browser syncing *too*, and the "just works" and "has all your data" thing means Google is also probably data-mining you to death.
gollark: What is WRONG™ with Brave Browser?

References

  1. Medved, Matt (July 16, 2015). "Ephwurd Reveals Identity, Premieres 'Rock the Party' With Jauz: Exclusive". Billboard. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
  2. Rahman, Neal (October 28, 2015). "Artist Focus Chart" Ephwurd curates a playlist for Escape". Magnetic Magazine. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
  3. "What the hell is Bass House anyway?". UKF. April 15, 2016. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
  4. https://www.instagram.com/p/BgY2xH7HOQD/
  5. https://www.magneticmag.com/2018/03/datsik-no-longer-in-ephwurd-rape-allegations-fallout-continues/
  6. Shaikh, Ahmed (March 7, 2016). "Ephwurd brought bass house to Beta in Denver. It was nuts". The Unz. Retrieved July 14, 2016.
  7. Marro, Ashley (December 31, 2015). "Ephwurd Bring it Back". Stoney Road. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
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