documentary Jungle reached the peak of its popularity between 1994 and 1995. At this stage, the genre was achieving a number of UK top 40 hits, including "
Incredible" by
M-Beat featuring
General Levy, and spawned a series of CD compilations such as
Jungle Mania and
Jungle Hits. Controversy raged over the success of "Incredible" when Levy reportedly made comments in the media that he was "running jungle at the moment". Although Levy always argued that his comments were misinterpreted, this did not fail to stop a boycott of the single amongst a group of DJs that were dubbed as the "Jungle Committee". Labels such as Ibiza, 3rd Party and Kemet were prolific in their releases. Having previously been confined to pirate radio, legal stations woke up to jungle from 1994. London's
Kiss 100 launched its ''Givin' It Up'' show in early 1994 and featured DJs on rotation including Kenny Ken, Jumpin Jack Frost, Fabio, Grooverider, LTJ Bukem, DJ Randall, DJ Rap and Mickey Finn. A year later, the UK's nationwide broadcaster
BBC Radio 1 finally gave jungle a platform on its
One in the Jungle weekly show. Major labels such as Sony and BMG were signing deals with artists including
A Guy Called Gerald, Kemet and
DJ Ron. Of these,
Roni Size and
4hero would achieve wider commercial success as
drum and bass artists, but continued to release more underground jungle tracks—the latter adopting the alias
Tom & Jerry to continue to release
rare groove sampling dancefloor-oriented jungle. The underground classic "Burial" by
Leviticus would see a major release on
FFRR Records. Jungle music, as a scene, was unable to decide whether it wanted to be recognised in the mainstream or if it wanted to avoid misrepresentation. This manifested in the cooperation of jungle artists and small record labels. Small record labels worked to provide more autonomy to the music artists in return for their business and jungle music was proliferated by pirate stations in underground networks and clubs. Whilst the media would in part feed off jungle music success, it also perpetuated negative stereotypes about the scene as being violent. The seminal 1994
documentary ''A London Some 'Ting Dis'', chronicled the growing jungle scene and interviewed producers, DJs and ravers to counter this perception. 1996 and 1997 saw a less reggae-influenced sound and a darker, grittier and more sinister soundscape. Hip-hop and
jazz-influenced tracks dominated the clubs in this period.
Dillinja,
Roni Size,
Die,
Hype,
Zinc,
Alex Reece and
Krust were instrumental in the transition of the jungle sound to drum and bass. By the end of 1998, the genre's sound had changed forms significantly from the sound heard earlier in the decade.
Popular subgenres Ragga jungle Ragga jungle is a fusion genre that combines jungle with a heavy
reggae influence. It would become a major subgenre during 1994 and 1995, with popular tracks such as "Incredible" by M-Beat featuring General Levy, "
Original Nuttah" by UK Apachi and
Shy FX, "Sound Murderer / RIP" by Remarc, "Limb by Limb" by
Hitman featuring
Cutty Ranks, and "Code Red / Champion DJ" by
Conquering Lion.
Jump-up In 1995,
jump-up would also become a popular subgenre that came out of
hardstep, with influences of various kinds of sound experiments, most importantly the
bass line. Popular tracks of this subgenre include "Dred Bass" by Dead Dred, "Super Sharp Shooter" by
DJ Zinc, "This Style" by
Shy FX, "R.I.P" (
DJ Hype Remix) by Remarc and DJ Zinc's remix of the
Fugees' "
Ready or Not". The genre would later regain popularity in the early 2000s with new productions by artists such as
Shimon &
Andy C,
Bad Company,
DJ Hazard and
Pendulum.
Ambient jungle Also known as
atmospheric drum and bass, intelligent jungle and
intelligent drum and bass, ambient jungle is categorized by a stronger emphasis on atmospheric, melodic elements than complex, re-sequenced breakbeats. Ambient jungle evolved out of the
breakbeat hardcore scene in the early 1990s in contrast to
darkside.
Hardcore's influence on ambient jungle can be heard in the B-side of
Dieselboy's 1994 mixtape,
Future Sound of Hardcore.
LTJ Bukem is generally considered the originator of this genre and his label
Good Looking Records put out many of its most celebrated releases in the 1990s. Iconic artists in this subgenre include
LTJ Bukem, Wax Doctor,
Peshay,
Blu Mar Ten and
Omni Trio. ==Sociocultural context==