Bass house is a strain of house music that pairs a four-on-the-floor groove with aggressive, highly designed basslines drawn from UK bass, bassline, and electro house.
It typically runs around 124–130 BPM, emphasizing tight drum programming, swung garage-influenced shuffles, and drops centered on modulated mid-bass riffs and weighty subs.
Producers favor gritty synth timbres, call-and-response bass phrases, minimal vocals (often chopped one-shots or rap ad-libs), and DJ-friendly intros/outros. The result is club-focused, high-impact music that bridges UK underground sensibilities with North American festival energy.
Bass house crystallized in the early 2010s, primarily in the United Kingdom, from the convergence of several existing house-adjacent styles. Its rhythmic DNA comes from house and UK garage/speed garage, while its sound-design ethos borrows heavily from bassline and the post-dubstep approach to mid-bass modulation. Fidget house’s quirky, chopped bass stabs and electro house’s big-room punch further shaped the palette.
Around 2014–2016, the style coalesced publicly via a wave of releases and club nights. AC Slater championed the sound through his Night Bass events and label (initially LA-based but culturally indebted to the UK scene). Producers such as Chris Lorenzo, Jauz, JOYRYDE, Habstrakt, and others popularized the hallmarks: swung drums, clipped vocal hits, and heavy, talky bass riffs. Tracks like Jauz & Ephwurd’s "Rock The Party" (2015) and Habstrakt & Skrillex’s "Chicken Soup" (2017) signaled a festival-scale moment, spreading the sound across Europe and North America.
By the late 2010s, labels such as Night Bass and Confession (Tchami) provided consistent outlets, while Dutch and US artists (e.g., Moksi, Valentino Khan, Wax Motif, Matroda) added regional twists. The style became a staple of club and festival lineups, valued for its DJ-friendly structure and impact in large systems.
Bass house continues to evolve with hybridization—pulling ideas from tech house, UK bassline, and trap-informed sound design—while maintaining its core identity: rolling, four-on-the-floor rhythms paired with bold, modulated bass motifs designed to move dancefloors.