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Nick Douwma, the Londoner known as
Sub Focus, became a global dance superstar through his constant output of accessible, adventurous, and technically precise drum'n'bass tracks, which draw influence from house, dubstep, dancehall, and rock music. Signing to RAM Records in 2005, he became a fixture of the U.K. Dance charts beginning with that year's number one-ranking single "X-Ray." Well-received originals and remixes for artists like
the Prodigy,
Deadmau5, and
Basement Jaxx followed, and
Sub Focus made his mainstream breakthrough with 2013's
Torus, which reached number 11 on the U.K. album chart and contained several hit singles. He's continued issuing anthemic drum'n'bass and house tracks, collaborating with artists such as
Rudimental,
Wilkinson, and Dimension, and scoring further hits in the U.K. and New Zealand.
Douwma is a self-taught producer who began producing music on his PC at age 13 and attained his know-how from software manuals. One of his demos eventually made its way into the hands of
Andy C., the co-founder of RAM Records, one of the U.K.'s premier drum'n'bass labels. Signed initially to the RAM Records offshoot label
Frequency,
Douwma made his recording debut as
Sub Focus in 2003 with the 12" release Down the Drain/Hot Line. A couple more 12" releases on
Frequency followed in 2004, along with one on
J Majik's Infrared label.
Douwma's breakout year came in 2005, however, when he made his RAM Records debut, issuing
X-Ray/Scarecrow and, later in the year, Frozen Solid/Juno. These 12" releases were also compiled on the Frozen Solid/X-Ray maxi-single in response to their widespread demand, as "X-Ray" was awarded Single of the Week on tastemaker Zane Lowe's BBC Radio 1 show. Also in 2005,
Douwma was chosen to remix
the Prodigy's "Smack My Bitch Up" in promotion of the group's 15-year anniversary collection,
Their Law: The Singles 1990-2005.
In subsequent years,
Douwma continued his affiliation with RAM Records, releasing a 12" more or less annually and performing as an affiliate DJ at clubs such as Fabric and festivals such as Glastonbury. In 2009,
Douwma issued his full-length debut,
Sub Focus, which incorporated an eclectic fusion of futuristic house, dubstep, and electro-rock. The following year, he produced the track "Kickstarts" for British singer/rapper
Example, which peaked at number three on the U.K. singles chart, and in 2011 he inked a deal with Mercury, with plans to release his second LP under the
Sub Focus moniker in late 2012. The album sessions went on longer than expected and spawned five singles that gained
Douwma increasing recognition and success with each release, culminating in the euphoric U.K. number ten hit "Endorphins" featuring vocalist
Alex Clare. The success of the single was no doubt powered in part by its brilliant music video, which saw brutal riot police cracking down on dissidents in a dystopian future where music has been banned. A number of other high-profile vocalists, including
Bloc Party's
Kele Okereke, appeared on the eventual album, which was titled
Torus and released in September 2013.
After the release of
Torus' final single, a version of "Close" featuring Daniel Pearce,
Douwma spent some time touring and designing a new studio. He resurfaced in 2016 with a pair of singles that underscored his jungle and garage roots, "Love Divine" and "Nobody Knows." The old-school feeling continued with 2017's "Lingua," a drum'n'bass- and dancehall-tinged track featuring vocals from
Stylo G.
Douwma followed it a few months later with "Don't You Feel It," a collaboration with Finnish vocalist
Alma. He also co-produced
Rudimental's "Trouble," featuring
Chronixx and
Maverick Sabre. 2018 brought collaborations with
Wilkinson ("Take It Up") and Dimension ("Desire," which charted in the U.K. and Scotland). 2019's "Solar System" and two subsequent singles with
Wilkinson, "Illuminate" and "Just Hold On," were all chart successes in New Zealand. ~ Jason Birchmeier & Paul Simpson