The first superstar produced by the breakbeat jungle movement, Goldie popularized drum 'n' bass as a form of musical expression just as relevant for living-room contemplation as techno had become by the early Nineties.

Though he hardly developed the style, and his later reliance on engineers like Rob Playford and Optical to capture his sound puts into question his true musical importance, Goldie became one of the first personalities in British dance music, his gold teeth and b-boy attitude placing him leagues away from the faceless bedroom boffins who had become the norm in intelligent dance music.

For the first time, England had a beat maestro and tough guy who could match the scores of larger-than-life hip-hop stars America had produced. The high profile of drum 'n' bass as the first indigenously British dance music made Goldie a figure of prime importance.

After spending several years working on his production skills at Reinforced Records (the home of 4 Hero), he founded Metalheadz Records, which released seminal dark-yet-intelligent singles.

In 1995, Goldie released Timeless, one of jungle's first and best full-length works of art. The album put him squarely at the top of the drum 'n' bass heap, where he has remained ever since.

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