Tisch wrote:Lop-sided, you seem to know very little about the uk scene.
Can you explain by what you mean by "nobody" and "everybody." you mean of your friends? dont know how you can speak for your entire nation.
Most of my friends have come up to me and told me about how great dubstep is, but it isn't just them who know about it. There have been several times where I have heard cars pass by that were blasting out dubstep music, or where I've seen random people with shirts that say "Listen To Dubstep" or shirts that have something to do with dubstep in general. In addition, in clubs around here, djs are adding dubstep tracks to their tracklist. Big name pop producers (e.g. Flo-Rida) have thrown dubstep influences in their tracks, and these tracks have been getting praised by people around me and on the Internet. Speaking of the Internet, if you look at the YouTube stats for videos like Skrillex's "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites", you'll see that a good portion of people who watched the video are from the USA. In addition, I've seen a couple articles in American magazines about this American "dubstep fad" and I've even watched a preview of an American movie that used a track with dubstep wubs.
Anyway, I think I can speak for a good portion of my nation when I say that dubstep is a pretty well-known fad at the moment. Seeing that I've never witnessed or experienced any of this stuff for hardstyle, I can say that, at the moment, it's definitely more underground than dubstep. I'm not sure whether it will remain that way or not, but at the moment, it's not commercial.
And btw, I did mention that I probably didn't know much about the UK Scene. I was completely wrong, so just ignore what I said about you guys.

Lop-Sided wrote:I may be completely wrong about this, but as far as I know, the UK hardstyle scene is still somewhat underground.