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Sambass — Best Tracks and New Releases of the Genre | Minatrix.FM | Page: 3

Tracks: 46 Add Music
DJ Marky & XRS - Rotation

DJ Marky & XRS - Rotation

04:33 6.65Mb [202 kbps] 49 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - Terapia

DJ Marky & XRS - Terapia

04:33 6.38Mb [193 kbps] 50 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - I Know

DJ Marky & XRS - I Know

04:27 6.91Mb [214 kbps] 45 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - Highlights

DJ Marky & XRS - Highlights

07:12 11.58Mb [223 kbps] 41 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

Marky & XRS - Return To Paradise

Marky & XRS - Return To Paradise

07:11 9.94Mb [192 kbps] 45 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

Marky & XRS - Get Down

Marky & XRS - Get Down

07:01 9.72Mb [192 kbps] 184 1 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - The Wizard

DJ Marky & XRS - The Wizard

06:40 12.46Mb [259 kbps] 44 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - Butterfly

DJ Marky & XRS - Butterfly

06:39 11.40Mb [237 kbps] 39 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

Bungle - 25th Floor

Bungle - 25th Floor

06:58 11.70Mb [232 kbps] 42 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & XRS - Distant Lover

DJ Marky & XRS - Distant Lover

06:18 9.98Mb [219 kbps] 43 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & Total Science - Red Kooga

DJ Marky & Total Science - Red Kooga

05:37 9.93Mb [244 kbps] 44 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & Total Science - 2nd Date (feat. Ayah)

DJ Marky & Total Science - 2nd Date (feat. Ayah)

05:10 8.21Mb [219 kbps] 44 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

Electrosoul Sound System - Slice

Electrosoul Sound System - Slice

06:45 10.64Mb [218 kbps] 46 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & Bungle - Prime Time

DJ Marky & Bungle - Prime Time

04:55 11.36Mb [320 kbps] 40 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

DJ Marky & Bungle - Codename A.1

DJ Marky & Bungle - Codename A.1

06:39 10.45Mb [218 kbps] 48 0 0 02.06.2025 layden Drum&Bass, Sambass

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Sambass — when drum & bass started speaking Brazilian

Sambass (Samba & Bass) is a subgenre of drum & bass where broken British rhythms merge with Brazilian samba, Latin percussion, and carnival energy. It is music where high speed meets a lively, sunny groove and a sense of celebration.

Today, Sambass is actively listened to online as one of the most musical and “human” DnB substyles — working equally well on the dancefloor and as energetic background music.

What Sambass Really Is

Sambass is not just drum & bass with Latin samples. Its essence goes much deeper.

The genre is built on:

  • classic DnB tempo,
  • samba and bossa nova rhythms,
  • live or carefully recreated percussion,
  • melodicism and a positive mood,
  • a sense of movement rather than aggression.

If jungle represents the street and techstep represents industry, then Sambass is carnival and body rhythm.

Genre History: Bristol Meets Rio

1. Background (late 1990s)

In the late 1990s, drum & bass was going through a phase of intense experimentation. Producers began moving away from rigid rave aesthetics, searching for new rhythmic sources and turning to jazz, funk, and world music.

At the same time, Brazil had a powerful tradition of samba, Afro-Brazilian percussion, and street orchestras (batucada).

This culture fit perfectly into the breakbeat-driven mindset of DnB.

2. Formation of Sambass (late 1990s – early 2000s)

The genre took shape when Brazilian and European producers began deliberately blending drum & bass with samba, rather than simply using exotic samples.

A key role was played by:

  • Brazilian musicians bringing authentic rhythmic traditions,
  • European producers with a strong DnB background.

This is how Sambass became a fully formed substyle, not a passing trend.

3. The Golden Era

The peak of Sambass popularity came in the early to mid-2000s, when the genre was widely played in clubs, featured in festival sets, and became a symbol of “positive” drum & bass.

Unlike aggressive substyles, Sambass was perceived as music of joy and movement.

Sound and Technical Characteristics of Sambass

From a production standpoint, Sambass combines DnB discipline with samba freedom.

  • Tempo: 165–175 BPM
  • Rhythm: breakbeat + syncopated Latin percussion
  • Drums: Amen Break + conga, bongo, surdo, shaker
  • Bass: soft, funky, non-dominant
  • Melody: bright and sunny, often with horns and guitars

Important: in good Sambass, the percussion lives its own life rather than simply mirroring the break.

Sambass and the Philosophy of Organic Sound

Sambass fits perfectly into the modern Organic Sound trend:

  • live rhythms,
  • natural dynamics,
  • a feeling of “playing by hand” rather than clicking with a mouse,
  • minimal sterility.

This is electronic music that is felt by the body, not just heard by the ears.

How Sambass Differs from Related Genres

  • Liquid Funk — more soulful and vocal
  • Jazzstep — harmonically richer but less rhythmic
  • Drumfunk — rhythmically complex but colder
  • Sambass — rhythm + celebration + Latin energy

Sambass always sounds warmer and more alive than most DnB substyles.

Key Artists and the Scene

The formation of Sambass is impossible to imagine without these names:

  • DJ Marky — the main ambassador of the genre
  • XRS — the Brazilian Sambass school
  • Patife — a technical yet musical approach
  • Drumagick — fusion of electronics and samba
  • Makoto — international expansion of the style

These artists made Sambass recognizable worldwide.

Sambass Today

Today, Sambass is experiencing a quiet but steady revival:

  • as part of world-influenced DnB,
  • as an alternative to aggressive sound,
  • as music for festivals, summer, and open-air spaces.

It sounds modern while staying true to its roots.


Frequently Asked Questions About Sambass (FAQ)

What does the name Sambass mean?

It is short for Samba & Bass — a literal description of the genre: samba + drum & bass.

Is Sambass a drum & bass substyle or a separate genre?

Formally, it is a drum & bass substyle, but with such a distinct aesthetic that it is often treated as a separate movement.

Are live instruments used in Sambass?

Yes. Many tracks feature live percussion, guitars, and horns, or highly authentic recordings.

How is Sambass different from Latin DnB?

Latin DnB is broader and may include various Latin American influences. Sambass specifically focuses on Brazilian samba.

Is Sambass suitable for the dancefloor?

Absolutely. Sambass works perfectly in clubs, at festivals, and on open-air stages, especially during daytime and early evening.

Why is Sambass considered “positive” drum & bass?

Because of its major-key harmonies, live percussion, and carnival mood — it evokes joy rather than tension.


Sambass is drum & bass with the heart of samba. Music where speed does not cancel warmth, and electronics meet living rhythm.

Listen to Sambass online, discover popular tracks, genre classics, and new releases on Minatrix.fm.

Turn on the stream and feel how carnival rhythm accelerates to DnB speed — alive, sunny, and truly musical.

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