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==History==
Techstep developed from [[jungle music]] and [[hardstep]] around 1995.<ref>{{cite book | last = Venderosa | first = Tony | title = The Techno Primer: The Essential Reference for Loop-based Music | publisher = [[Hal Leonard Corporation]] | year = 2002 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=VT7_x7m-RWcC | isbn = 0-634-01788-8}}</ref> The name of the genre was coined by Ed Rush and Trace, who were both instrumental in shaping the sound of techstep.<ref>{{Cite book | first = Simon | last = Reynolds | author-link = Simon Reynolds | editor-last = Bennett | editor-first = Andy | editor2-last = Shank | editor2-first = Barry | contribution = War in the Jungle | title = The Popular Music Studies Reader | year = 2005 | publisher = [[Routledge]] | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=QQZNciX0OgEC | isbn = 978-0-415-30710-9 }}</ref> In this case, "tech" did not refer to the smoother style of [[Detroit techno]], but to the raver, more caustic hardcore sounds that were popular in [[Belgium]] in the earlier part of the decade, often known as [[Belgian techno]].<ref>{{Cite book|last = Reynolds|first = Simon|title = Energy Flash: A Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture|year = 2012|publisher = Picador|quote = The term (Techstep) was coined by DJ–producers Ed Rush and Trace, who shaped the sound in tandem with engineer Nico of the No U Turn label. The ‘tech’ stood not for Detroit techno, dreamy and elegant, but for the brutalist Belgian hardcore of the early nineties. Paying homage to R & S classics like ‘Dominator’ and ‘Mentasm’, to artists like T99 and Frank de Wulf (...).|ISBN = 978-1-59376-407-4}}, p. 357.</ref> Techstep was a reaction to the appearance of more pop and virtuosic musical elements on jungle and drum 'n' bass tracks, which were seen as an adulteration of "true" or "original" jungle.<ref>{{Cite book | last = Monroe | first = Alexei | contribution = Thinking about mutation: genres in 1990s electronica | year = 1999 | title = Living Through Pop | editor-last = Blake | editor-first = Andrew | publisher = [[Routledge]] | isbn = 0-415-16199-1 }}</ref> Instead the genre was infused with a simpler, colder sound that stripped away most [[Contemporary R&B|R&B]] elements, and replaced them with a more hardcore sound,<ref>{{cite book | last = Mitchell | first = Tony | title = Global Noise: Rap and Hip-hop Outside the USA | publisher = [[Wesleyan University Press]] | year = 2001 | ___location = Middletown | url = https://archive.org/details/globalnoiseraphi00mitc | url-access = registration | isbn = 0-8195-6502-4}}</ref> and ideological influences like
Some of the original techstep producers eventually developed the [[neurofunk]] style. These included early pioneers [[Ed Rush]] & [[Optical (artist)|Optical]]. Artists such as [[Teebee]] and [[Noisia]] further developed the Neurofunk sound. [[Moving Shadow]] and [[Metalheadz]] were important labels in the development of the style.
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