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Description

Corrosion is a contemporary, industrial‑leaning strain of techno defined by heavily overdriven sound design, metallic percussion, and a dystopian, machine‑shop atmosphere. Producers foreground saturated kick drums, gritty bass lines, and corroded textures created through clipping, bit‑crushing, and re‑amping.

A typical track runs at club tempos and emphasizes relentless propulsion over harmonic development, drawing on EBM’s body‑music pulse and noise/industrial’s timbral abrasion. The aesthetic prizes tactile, harsh sonics that feel physically worn—sonically “oxidized”—yet engineered for large sound systems.


Sources: Spotify, Wikipedia, Discogs, RYM, MB, user feedback and other online sources

History

Roots (1980s–2000s)
•   Corrosion’s DNA reaches back to industrial and EBM (e.g., factory‑floor rhythms and aggressive timbres) and the tougher edges of 1990s UK/European techno. Artists and labels around Birmingham (Downwards, Surgeon, Regis) and Canadian duo Orphx helped normalize metallic textures, distortion, and mechanical minimalism in a club context.
Re‑industrialization of Techno (2010s)
•   The 2010s saw a marked return to harsher palettes in techno. Labels such as Perc Trax, Stroboscopic Artefacts, and Aufnahme + Wiedergabe pushed abrasive, noise‑kissed tracks geared to cavernous rooms. Affordable analog/DIY pedals, modular synth revival, and outboard saturation chains shaped a recognizable “corroded” timbre. •   Streaming era micro‑tagging consolidated this sound under names like “corrosion,” grouping artists who favored saturated kicks, EBM‑like bass drives, and scrapyard percussion.
Global diffusion and hybridization (late 2010s–2020s)
•   The sound spread from Berlin and the UK across Europe and beyond, intersecting with hard techno, industrial club, and modern EBM. Younger artists folded in rave stabs, broken beats, and trance‑adjacent drama while maintaining the signature distressed sonics. The result is a durable club form balancing brutal pressure with DJ‑friendly architecture.

How to make a track in this genre

Tempo, groove, and form
•   Tempo: typically 128–140 BPM in 4/4, with a relentless, stomping grid. Use long 16–32‑bar phrases for DJ‑friendly structure. •   Groove: drive the downbeat with a saturated kick; off‑beat/open hats provide locomotion. Layer metallic accents (rides, sheets, anvils) sparsely for impact.
Sound design and timbre
•   Core tools: analog/distortion pedals, bit‑crushers, wavefolders, tape/emulation, and parallel saturation. Re‑amp drum buses through guitar amps or spring reverbs to achieve “rusted” edges. •   Kicks/bass: build a wide‑band, clipped kick. Pair with an EBM‑style, single‑note bassline (often on the root or fifth), side‑chained to the kick for pump. •   Percussion: sample industrial sources (presses, chains, vents) and process with transient shaping and short, gritty convolution impulses.
Harmony, melody, and texture
•   Keep harmony minimal or modal; focus on drones, dissonant intervals (minor 2nds, tritones), and noisy risers. Short, stern motifs (two–four notes) work best. •   Use filtered noise beds and bleak pads to “fill the walls” without masking the kick/bass.
Arrangement and dynamics
•   Start with kick+hat chassis; introduce bass pulse; add one or two signature noises. Use tension ramps (noise swells, filter drives) into drops that reassert the kick. •   Automate distortion amount and filter cutoff to create motion without clutter.
Mixing and mastering
•   Leave headroom pre‑limiter; sculpt the low end mono to ~120 Hz. Parallel distort the mids/highs for bite while keeping sub clean. •   Employ multiband saturation and gentle clipping on the master for density; check translation on large systems.
Performance tips
•   Live rigs favor drum machines (TR‑8S, Rytm), Digitakt/ modular clocks, and a distortion/spring‑reverb pedal chain. •   Map performance filters (HP/LP) and drive to macros for club‑scale gestures.
Riff Lords: Pepper Keenan of Corrosion of Conformity and Down
Riff Lords: Pepper Keenan of Corrosion of Conformity and Down
Gibson TV
Storm Corrosion - Song Structure
Storm Corrosion - Song Structure
Roadrunner Records UK

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