Drum and bass was born in the early 1990s in London, emerging from the explosive UK rave scene. Its roots lie in the jungle and hardcore breakbeat movements that swept through warehouse parties and pirate radio stations across the capital. DJs and producers began experimenting with sped-up breakbeats — particularly the legendary "Amen break" — layering them over deep, rolling sub-bass lines influenced by Jamaican sound system culture. The result was a sound unlike anything else: fast, furious, and undeniably British.
By the mid-1990s, jungle had evolved. Producers like Goldie, with his groundbreaking 1995 album Timeless, brought a new level of sophistication to the sound, incorporating lush strings, ambient textures, and complex arrangements over the signature breakbeats. LTJ Bukem pioneered the atmospheric, jazzy side of the genre through his legendary Speed nights and Good Looking Records label. Meanwhile, artists like Roni Size and his Reprazent collective in Bristol created a live performance approach to DnB, winning the prestigious Mercury Music Prize in 1997 with New Forms — a watershed moment that brought drum and bass to mainstream cultural attention.
The late 1990s and 2000s saw drum and bass splinter into a rich ecosystem of subgenres. Andy C, through his RAM Records label and legendary DJ sets, became the genre's most iconic figure, selling out arenas and headlining festivals with a relentless, double-drop mixing style. The rise of neurofunk, pioneered by acts like Noisia, Ed Rush & Optical, and Bad Company, pushed DnB into darker, more technical territory. Hospital Records championed the liquid and soulful side, nurturing artists like High Contrast, Netsky, and London Elektricity.
Today, drum and bass is experiencing its greatest global moment. Artists like Sub Focus, Chase & Status, and Dimension have taken DnB to arena-level audiences, while Pendulum's explosive return continues to prove that drum and bass can command the biggest stages in the world. The genre's influence extends far beyond its own boundaries, shaping the sound of pop, grime, and electronic music at large. From the intimate sweat-box energy of fabric's Room 2 to 30,000-strong festival crowds at Let It Roll, drum and bass remains one of the most vital and exciting forces in global music culture.