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PUT A DONK ON IT - PART 1

On the Road With Britain's Newest Insane Musical Trend

BY JAIMIE HODGSON, PHOTOS BY SCOTT KERSHAW, ANDY CAPPER, AND STU BENTLEY

The Blackout Crew. From left to right: MCs Dowie, Zak K, Viper, Cover, Rapid and DJs Siddy B and Jonezy at Harmony Youth Centre.
Blackout Crew fans.

Those looking to shatter their last, lingering hopes for the future of Britain should visit Burnley. What used to be a prosperous cotton-mill town is now decimated by the terminal decline of industry, with entire square miles of housing steel-boarded-up, repossessed and marked for demolition by the local council. Unemployment is all-consuming, violence is a popular pastime—as is the rampant theft of expensive copper pipes from condemned houses to sell as scrap to pay for heroin and crack. It’s practically a ghost town these days, but instead of headless cavaliers with chains clanging around their wrists and ankles, there are gaggles of toothless, skeletal smackheads waddling around in skid-mark-stained tracksuit bottoms. Actually, scratch that—it’s more zombie town than ghost town.

Burnley is also one of the focal points of the planet’s most terrifying and hilarious forms of dance music: donk. It’s pretty much the only thing kids live for there. But drive 40 minutes down the motorway, away from the cluster of northwest donk satellites (Bolton, Wigan, Burnley, Blackpool) and barely anyone’s heard of the genre.

There’s a bit of debate about donk’s origins, but generally people attribute early-90s Dutch producers like Ultrabeat for pioneering the sound. It’s a rave-based dance music created around no-budget 150 bpm bouncy beats, intrusive fog-horned synth stabs, cartoon-y samples, and unsettlingly saccharine highs. It’s basically happy hardcore on a crippling steroid comedown. The word “donk” comes from the relentless, maddening “donk” sound that’s overlaid on the beats. The fact that a whole subculture stems from a noise that originated from an old-school keyboard sound-effect that emulates an empty drainpipe being hit by a paddle tells you pretty much all you need to know. The genre has also been called “Scouse house”, which refers to its early proliferation in Liverpool, and “bounce”, which many locals still use today. Donk has come to represent the sound’s recent influx of MC culture. Inspired by Eminem-copying white-boy rabbiting and early-90s rave MCing, the real donk stars these days are its hype men, whose rhyming has become the focus for most young fans. To some, this sounds like a Daily Mail caricature of an ASBO northerner assaulting a crystal-meth-smoking oompah band.

People outside the northwest are finally starting to hear donk through its very own boy band, Blackout Crew. The Bolton outfit are the only donk MCs to have recorded actual proper songs with verses and choruses. Blackburn dance label All Around The World spied the group through homemade YouTube videos and quickly cashed in by commissioning a series of proper-budget promo videos and releases.

They became our entry into the world of donk after a bunch of their videos were sent in a circular email to Vice staff and friends a few months ago. One track really stood out. It was called “Put a Donk on It”. It’s based around the concept that any type of music can be improved by the simple addition of a “donk”. Go on YouTube now if you haven’t seen it.

In broad accents, Blackout rap about everyday stuff like tits, fighting, weed, shagging, knife crime, cars, ecstasy and their favourite brands of chocolate bar. It’s not your typical boy-band fare, but even so, their fan base is almost exclusively teenage girls and boys. Recently, VBS.TV spent a week travelling round the northwest with the band, soaking up every last drop of donk culture.

Blackout Crew was formed at a community centre in Bolton. The place is called Harmony, and it’s similar to many youth clubs: lots of shiny veneer, bright yellow lights, table-tennis tables, and a tuck shop selling Panda Pops and Space Raiders crisps. But Harmony just happens to have rehearsal rooms and recording studios down the corridor, and every Tuesday and Thursday the place is transformed into a cross between Shameless and 8 Mile. Swarms of kids in matching flammable ensembles with Nike logos shaved into their heads cram into any available space. Donk blares at deafening levels as the kids try to look mean, and occasionally launch into their own version of a “battle rap”. Maybe it’s because I’m a southern puff, but I could only understand every third line or so. Blackout were basically a dream-team of the best MCs who attended Harmony’s open-mic nights, put together by Tony and Charlie, who run the centre. They consist of MCs Cover, Viper, Zak K, Dowie, and Rapid, alongside DJs Jonezy and Siddy B.

After police shut down Harmony’s open mic night owing to aspiring rappers chuffing hash in the car park, we escorted Blackout (who had made a kind of special homecoming goodwill appearance for our benefit) to a gig at an under-18s club just out of the centre of town. There they were met by about a thousand sweaty, red-faced pubescents, all of whom were hyperventilating with excitement. As Blackout opened with “Put a Donk on It,” the venue erupted into surreal pandemonium. The hordes grabbed at them, screaming every syllable like it was donk scripture. After the show, anxious teens scrambled to get close to them and begged members to sign autographs, with one over-excited 12-year-old, who called himself MC Scott, reporting breathlessly that his favourite rappers are “Eminem and MC Dowie”.

All the members of Blackout Crew either live at home with their parents or in council houses. This is what gives them such strong local appeal. The tangibility of having their heroes scuff their heels round the same shopping centres seems to have given many kids a refreshing perspective on the concept of celebrity. “I’d love to be a famous MC when I grow up,” said Scott. “At the weekends, mind. I want a proper job too, like selling cars.”


CONTINUED
PUT A DONK ON IT | 1 | 2 | >

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Comments

Anonymous, on May 12, 2009 wrote:
you wouldn’t be fascinated with donk if you were an intelligent person growing up around it... middle class ’poor people’ voyerism... and yeah, its been around for 4 or 5 years in leigh/wigan
Anonymous, on Apr 2, 2009 wrote:
What the fuck????? chavs the fucking lot of ya!!
Anonymous, on Mar 4, 2009 wrote:
how fucking embarrassing have these guys actually watched their video? just proves the the uk has been shitting the bed for too long.
Anonymous, on Mar 4, 2009 wrote:
die!
Anonymous, on Mar 4, 2009 wrote:
DUTTY DONKERS
Anonymous, on Mar 3, 2009 wrote:
"Donk"? More like speed garage with an MC. Oh wait-most speed garage HAD an MC. Has the world’s ADD gotten so bad that it can’t remember 10 years ago???
Anonymous, on Mar 3, 2009 wrote:
This is what happens in Northern towns with nothing going for them. We used to have jobs, window cleaners and milkmen, thick ears, how’s your missus’ and old duffers in cloth caps walking up windy hills to the ’Hovis tune’. Since the 90’s this has all but faded leaving a lot of people with no prosperity and nothing to do. When anything comes along that is deemed popular, they fucking leap to it for a sense of community and purpose. Who can blame these poor sad bastards? SOMETHING HAS GOTSTA GIVE. This is the god damn finished package, tied and delivered by Thatcherism. Please don’t laugh, they just don’t know.
Anonymous, on Feb 28, 2009 wrote:
I’m guessing it isn’t complementary.
Anonymous, on Feb 28, 2009 wrote:
What does "m8 yer fuckin gay out yer nut, il stab you any mare yer cheek, ya fukin jew cunt" mean?
Anonymous, on Feb 27, 2009 wrote:
Wigan isn’t a ghost town but Wigan Pier is situation right near an industrial Area. Yeah there are suburbs, some council estates...some really affluent areas and a college which ranks second in the entire country...
This is a really interesting article - it’s a shame some morons seems to have read it as "all about Wigan" rather than a subculture which has thrived in those places...
Anonymous, on Feb 23, 2009 wrote:
did you actually go to burnley or wigan? a crowd of nearly 3000? the club holds 600. the only real club in wigan? there’s 5 clubs within spitting distance of the train station.
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
Enjoyed this article! Nice one Vice.
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
Aw look at the poor Donk kids...aw how poor they are...thats nice they got their music to do...HOLD ON! Can I see a cheeky nipple in that photo?! Result :D
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
’skeletal smackheads waddling around in skid-mark-stained tracksuit bottoms’

Exchange smack for ketamine and skidmark stained tracksuit bottoms for skinny jeans and you’ve described the average attendee of most fashionable club nights in the UK.

Also not everyone from Burnley is like that i grew up there and have never had a fight (i never need to i just mention i’m from Burnley and people generally just run away...)
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
look at the close up of the donk enthusiast, you can clearly see some lovely white powder round his nostril
epic =D
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
i can stand with my legs wide apart me
well ard init mate
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
i used to work at a club in wigan, before i realised how immensely shit it was, and every 3rd saturday of the month jst like period pains this bunch of bouncey pricks who like to be called black out crew would walk through our doors grab a mike and well, put a donk on it. my ears usually ring for a day or so after spending 8 hours in a club, but it jst isnt worth while when the "music" sounds like the DJ’s got epilepsy
Anonymous, on Feb 22, 2009 wrote:
Um wasn’t this article in the last issue?
Anonymous, on Feb 21, 2009 wrote:
We have donkeys here in america as well. They are called juggaloes and they smell just as bad.
Anonymous, on Feb 21, 2009 wrote:
It’s fascinating how VICE views anywhere without a Starbucks as a ghost town. Admittedly Burnley is a little behind the times, and yes, they are still waiting for the second coming (of the industrial revolution) so they can be great again, but seriously, it’s not nearly as big a wank-stain on the map as some parts of Auld Landan Tawn... Get some perspective you twunts.
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
That Wigan Pier donk night photo is fascinating. Look at his eyes and it seems as if he’s sticking his tongue out. Look down and it disappears into the chin.
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
come on vice, this stuff has been about for years and "put a donk on it" has been rolling round on ipods and mobiles all over the uk for a year now! i thought you guys are suposed to be upfront! whats next week DnB! maybe even Dubstep! intresting things do happen outside london you know...
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
vice uk has fallen in love with donk by the looks of all those twitter posts

i used to go to that record shop in burnley to get import cassettes of metal, how times have changed

plus i think i used to go to high school with viper, he was the year above me
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
Downs Syndrome
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
New trend? Scouse House has been around for about a decade. It’s in its death throes at the moment. Nice one Vice, on top of youth culture as always.
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
What? There are more places in England than Shoreditch? Nah, you’re making this up.
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
calls itself a cutting edge subculture mag, the fucking GUARDIAN covered donk nearly a year ago.
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
the lamest thing Vice ever covered, it’s like every single Don’t made into a musical movement...
facking horrible
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
donk and heroin seem like they compliment each other.
granted, donk is just exaggerated bad hip hop meeting techno in which any once good song can be appropriated and regurgitated post-remix so everyone loves it again, but doesn’t feel like their parents.
are there donk heads? nothing but donk?
all this shit is just another excuse for misogyny, anyway: "the girls won’t be wearing much". surprise surprise-- they won’t be fucking you, either
Anonymous, on Feb 20, 2009 wrote:
The donk shit is crazy (article and vids), but don’t you dare consider getting rid of Nieratko, at least not the Skinemas.
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