Rewind: Oliver Ho on “Psychick Rhythms Vol. 1″

Posted: November 1st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Oliver Ho on “Psychick Rhythms Vol. 1” (1993).

Were you already familiar with the Psychick Warriors Ov Gaia, or was “Psychick Rhythms Vol. 1″ your first encounter with their music?

I was already familiar with their music, I think the first thing I had heard was the album, “Ov Biospheres and Sacred Grooves”. The thing on that album that really struck me was “Linkage”. The way they sampled Egyptian rhythms, and the fact that the track was purely made up of rhythms in a very stripped back way, that were also at a slow bpm. It had a purity and a different edge, very tribal, not techno or house in style at all.

Why did you choose this particular release out of their back catalogue? What made, or still makes, it so special for you? Is it a blueprint for aspects that interest you in electronic music?

The thing about this release that struck me at the time and what continues to be relevant to me is the is the purity of intention. It was an attitude towards music as ‘magick’ that was inspirational. The idea that a particular rhythm is like a spell, something that isn’t just about entertainment, but is operating on a more powerful level. There is a message on the record sleeve artwork that reads: “Warning! This object has nothing to do with art or artificial intelligence. This double package (12″ version) was designed for mixing, for breaks, for possession, for collectors.” This seemed to articulate that there were was something inside the music, that was waiting to released, some kind of energy, that had been placed there by the makers… Read the rest of this entry »


Interview: DJ Harvey

Posted: October 27th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 32 Comments »

You’ve been away for a quite a while now.

Yes, almost ten years since I left England. The reason was not by my design. I was enjoying America so much that I overstayed my visa. If I was to leave, I would have not been allowed back for another five or ten years and I was planning on making my life there. And only a year and a half ago I got married and applied for my green card. And I now have the green card, and my work visa and my right to travel and re-enter the States. So here I am, back in the world. I recently completed a big tour of Japan and I’m on a major tour of Europe right now.

You got married and still it took such a while to get your green card?

Well, actually the process is a lot quicker now than it used to be. From the time I put my application in it was actually only four months until the card came through. Since 9/11 the background check is a little more stringent, but the whole process is now centralized, instead of the department in Washington, and the department in Detroit and so on. There’s one computer, and if you fit the criteria then it’s all good.

So you spent all those years of your self-imposed exile just playing in the States?

Yes, but on a regular basis. America is a big place. And I have a regular circuit. Starting on the Northeast coast, Detroit, Chicago, New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, Miami, then skipping over to the other side, San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boulder and Seattle. And that’s not even including Hawaii. So that’s plenty of work, even if I do that once every couple of months.

But your main bases are Hawaii, Los Angeles and New York City?

Basically yes. My most regular gigs would be there.

Would you say that these are also the cities where your music fits best? Is there a better scene for what you play?

Everywhere I play people come to hear me play. I regularly play in Miami for the Winter Music Conference and Art Basel, that’s my two gigs a year mainly there. Towns like San Diego and San Francisco have a scene, too. Most of the places have a scene as such. It’s not the biggest scene, but with all the internet communication and stuff like that it’s small but healthy.

And since you are allowed to travel again, is it some kind of relief and you accept many gigs abroad?

Not really. It is nice to travel and just to have the freedom. I haven’t been around for ten years so it’s nice to pop out and go to Japan and Europe again. But I don’t plan to spend the next ten years on the road. There are a lot of opportunities, basically everywhere I ever played before plus twice as many places again.

How does it feel to get out again? Has the scene changed in the meantime?

I don’t think it has changed at all.

Is that disappointing?

No, that’s not disappointing at all. I always had a good time. There are certain focuses on particular kinds of music over the years, whether it’s Electroclash, or Minimal, or Drum ‘n’ Bass, but in general the dance music scene still goes bang bang bang between 110 and 130 bpm. And I don’t really see boundaries between the so-called genres. I play the music that I like, whether it’s a Techno record, or a Disco record, or whatever. I think more than the music has changed the people have changed. Kids that weren’t born when I was DJing in the mid 80’s are now in their mid 20’s, there’s a whole new generation of people who have come through as well as the survivors from the old school. The formula of a dance party is still very similar. I suppose communication via internet had an impact. Even though I have been away for ten years people know exactly what I have been doing. It’s not like I completely disappeared during that time. The networking has made sure that my influence via production or gossip has been maintained.

I think the internet helped to keep your status alive. All you did was thoroughly discussed on specialist websites and message boards. I guess this is quite different to how it was before.

Yeah. Scenes used to be localized, and now it’s globalized. Which is good and bad. If something fresh happens in a small area it doesn’t have time to develop, it is instantly global. Early Punk or Hip Hop had two to five years a hardcore scene as such. Whereas now, as soon as there’s a bright idea it’s everywhere in the world and everyone’s had a piece of it before it maybe manages to have a big foundation.

Nowadays it might also be easier to get influenced by another DJ, or even to imitate somebody. In pre-internet days you could maybe get your hands on some mixtape, but it was difficult. Maybe you read about DJs, but you never had the chance to hear them. And now you can download tons of sets from legendary DJs, and from legendary clubs, too.

Yeah. I think that’s good and bad, too. These days I don’t let people record my sets. I suffered from heavy bootlegging. And a lot of the time when I play it’s for that moment. Maybe you’re sitting in your car, listening to a set, but you have no idea of the atmosphere or the climate at the moment when the record was being played. The tape might sound bizarre or disjointed or strange and it might not particularly work in the car or the boutique or at home. But at the particular moment, that was the right thing to do. So I try and keep my sets for the people who were there and it’s for memory banks only.

So you think it gets watered down?

It’s a double-edged sword. Sometimes there’s a little bit too much access. Some of the mystery is gone. If you think of DJs like Ron Hardy, I’ve only see one small grainy photograph of him, and you wonder who this guy is and what his character is. If you want to find about me, just hit Wikipedia, DJ Harvey images, and you know what I look like, my style. But there is a little mystery to who or what I am and I quite enjoy that. Luckily the personal appearance still counts for something. Because they have had absolutely everything besides me physically. And here I am, in the flesh, I actually exist. I’m not just this digital entity. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Fantastikoi Hxoi on “The White Room”

Posted: October 18th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Fantastikoi Hxoi on “The White Room” by The KLF (1991).

What introduced you to the KLF? Were you already familiar with their previous incarnations as Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu or The Timelords, or did it start with their period from KLF onwards?

Well, I was something like twelve years old when “The White Room” broke internationally. I remember the “Last Train To Trancentral” video coming on after Paula Abdul on TV. I was like “ok, this is different”. It was a bit spooky to my young mind to be honest, all that faux-ritualistic imagery – and the music was equally gripping. Some years later I discovered The Orb and re-discovered the KLF and all their previous incarnations. Slowly I started to realise what they were really about.

Considering that “What Time Is Love?” was already released in 1988, would you say that The KLF introduced rave to dance music with all the according signals, stadium noises and such, or did they pick up on developments that were already there? Did they actually relate to a timeline in dance music?

As far as I can tell, they are one of the first underground rave acts that brought this kind of music (or elements of it) to the mainstream, complete with conceptual visual imagery and a certain philosophy. And ‘mainstream’ of course, is not 20.000 punters in a field in the UK. It’s a 12-year-old in Greece, on telly. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Luke Howard on “Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band”

Posted: October 4th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Luke Howard on “Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band” by Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band (1976).

I first fell in love with Kid Creole & The Coconuts in the 80s and then discovered “Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band” a few years later because August Darnell was involved with it. How was your first time with the band and album?

I came quite late to the album. It was 1991. I was talking with two older friends about our favourite disco artists and they mentioned Dr. Buzzard’s and I hadn’t heard of them, so I quickly found myself a copy. I had known of Kid Creole and Coati Mundi (August Darnell and Andy Hernandez) much earlier, as my sister had been to New York in 1981 and brought back copies of the ZE Records compilation Seize The Beat and the second Kid Creole & The Coconuts album. Also, Kid Creole and the Coconuts went on to be really commercially successful in the UK and they did loads of touring here in the 1980’s. But I’d never heard of Doctor Buzzard until much later.

“Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band” had a few songs that became notable single successes, but somehow I always thought they worked best being listened to in the context of the whole album. Can you separate the songs from one another? Are there ups and downs?

I think you can separate the songs from each other, yes. They’re all standout songs in my opinion – there’s no fillers on the album. “Sunshower” was big on the Balearic scene in the 90’s, “I’ll Play The Fool” and “We Got It Made” were big on the two-step soul scene in the mid 80’s and “Lemon In The Honey” and “Cherchez La Femme” are disco classics. However, I think it works wonderfully well as a whole album. It’s only seven songs and I think it’s perfect as an album. It’s in my top three favourite albums of all time (I’m not quite sure what the other two are). Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Rusty Egan on “Low” and “Heroes”

Posted: September 20th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

In discussion with Rusty Egan on “Low” and “Heroes” by David Bowie (1977).

I assume you got into the albums “Low” and “Heroes” at the time they were released, but were you already a fan of his before that?

Yes, since Ziggy Stardust.

David Bowie was always famous for continuously reinventing his career, but did this phase particularly appeal to you?

Bowie’s Berlin Years I believe were the foundation of The Blitz Club playlist. Via Bowie I found Kraftwerk, and that lead to Neu!, Can, Cluster and Krautrock as it was called, Bryan Ferry then led to the work of Brian Eno, and his Ambient series …all this music lead to the basis of my collection. If you join the dots Bowie, Eno, Iggy, Kraftwerk, Mick Ronson, Lou Reed. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Dave Mothersole on “Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit”

Posted: August 30th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Dave Mothersole on “Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit” (1988).

You wrote in a recent article about the roots of the music played in Goa that you came back to the UK from there and found acid house in full swing. Did that connect with what you heard in India, or was it something else entirely?

It was the very start of acid house. I got back from India in March 1988 – Shoom was still at the fitness centre in Southwark (although I never went) and a month or two later Spectrum opened at Heaven on Monday nights.

It was different from what I’d experienced in India. In some ways it was more tame as people had to go back to work or college or whatever after the weekend or on a Tuesday morning after Spectrum, where as in Goa partying was a full time occupation for most people and therefore more extreme. Goa was like Mad Max with palm trees and techno – almost totally lawless in those days, so nothing compares to it really. I’d been there the previous season (86 / 87) too and I’d come back with all these stories about freaks dancing all night to music that sounded like one long track – like all the best music you’d ever heard with all the crap parts taken out. How it didn’t stop all night and how everyone was freaking out to it on acid and on this new drug called ecstasy. I think my friends back home all thought I was mad, but when acid house came out they were like ‘ok, I get you now’. So I was pleased that they finally knew what I was on about. There were things I didn’t like though, like the MCs. Partying in Goa was like a mystical, very psychedelic experience. Almost a spiritual thing and it was all about getting inside the groove and letting the music take over, so to have some guy shouting ‘hands in the air’ every few minutes as everyone faced in the same direction was a bit distracting. So in that way it was different.

The music was totally different too. The influence of the soul scene (where most of the DJs came from) was very strong so there where a lot of song based tracks with very soulful vocals. The themes were different as well – the famous Martin Luther King speech over Mr Fingers; Ce Ce Rogers ‘Someday’; ‘Promised land’ – these were all Black American themes – songs about the struggle for liberation and freedom. They translated perfectly to multicultural, 80’s England though. Before acid house black and white kids didn’t mix so much on the dance floor, there were exceptions but on the whole the clubs were either separate or divided. Acid house changed all that overnight and these songs, with lyrics about reaching the promised land and living together as one family had a very powerful resonance with the audiences. I think it was a tremendous relief for my generation to finally come together in this way. And this applied not just to the divisions between black and white, but also to class divisions and those that separated the various different youth cults. It was an amazing time – an entire generation taking the same drug at the same time. Listening to the same music, feeling the same emotions. My friends all went from wearing designer clothes and hanging out at the pub to clubbing every weekend in dungarees, purple kickers and long sleeve tops and hoodies with peace signs, smileys and flowers and stuff on them. Some of them even quit their jobs and started throwing parties, selling drugs, DJing – anything they could do that would let them carry on partying. It was a huge change and it happened really fast. By the summer of 88 loads of people were into it and come the summer of 89 it was massive. Huge parties, every club in the country playing house music, office workers out on Friday shouting ‘mental’, mainstream compilation albums full of acid house hits and 10 year old kids dressed like ravers.

Was it like hearing the roots in Goa, and then back in the UK, acid house seemed to be the next step musically?

I wouldn’t say the next step from Goa, as the scene in Goa existed in it’s own little bubble. Culturally, I was very pleased that we were the first country to take the concept of dancing to electronic music on ecstasy, and push it straight into the mainstream. This wasn’t a new concept – people had been doing it throughout the 80’s in Chicago, New York, in Dallas (at the Stark Club), in Ibiza and of course in Goa – but we kind of democratised it. You didn’t have to be a freak in India, a New York club kid or a jet set Ibiza type anymore. You could be an ordinary kid, you know, from pretty much anywhere in the UK. That was really cool.

Musically, house had been popular in England since 85 / 86. ‘Jack Your Body’ was number one in the pop charts in 86 for example, and ‘Love Can’t Turn Around’ was top five in the same year. So I was already familiar with house music and indeed it’s roots as I’d been into the soul scene before and had grown up dancing to records like D-Train’s ‘You’re The One For Me’, ‘Beat The Street’ by Sharon Redd and Sinnamon’s ‘Thanks To You’. And then the whole electro thing hit big in England, so yeah, it was the next step musically for sure, but it was ecstasy that made it explode in the way it did. Much as I was familiar with it though, house music could still be shocking. I remember standing in the queue outside Spectrum for the first time and hearing this thunderous acid track booming out of the club and thinking ‘fuck me, this music is dark’.

On the whole though, the music in Goa was far more foreign to me. I lived in Italy as a boy and went on holiday there most summers right up until I went to India, so I was familiar with italo disco, but that was my only reference point. That an a few Front 242, Yello and Nitzer Ebb records my brother had. It might sound strange but until acid house broke, European club music was very rare at parties in England. After acid house that all changed, first with stuff like A Split Second and Code 61, then later with all the R&S and Music Man stuff and after that the Frankfurt stuff and whatever. Pre acid house though, only a few gay clubs played euro beat (as we called it) so hearing it in Goa – particularly in the psychedelic way they played it there – was a complete revelation to me. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Mike Thorne on “Strange Days”

Posted: August 16th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Mike Thorne on “Strange Days” by The Doors (1967).

Were you a Doors fan since their debut album, or was “Strange Days” the album that got you into their music?

I heard their first album shortly after release in 1967 and thought it astonishing. There was a presence and directness to the songs and the playing that was so fresh and new. Also, the sound and production were exceptional – everything still sounds so clear and present.

What drew you to them in the first place, especially compared to other rock groups of that era? What made them special? Was it Jim Morrison, the musicians, or their peculiar moody and dark approach to rock?

The band were clearly a distinctive group of talented people, interacting very constructively, and delivered the noise and force that’s always been attractive. They were one clear pole. In the days when music mattered, you were either a Beatles or a Stones person, with Pink Floyd or Soft Machine. There’s a parallel contrast between the Jefferson Airplane and the Doors. Even though I liked much of their output, the Airplane could be ‘nice’ in the unthinking hippy way in times when we were all feeling our way. Much of their output didn’t have anything like the power of Somebody To Love or White Rabbit, and could be downright sappy. The Doors always played rough and direct. More recent public polarities include the Blur/Oasis media circus, but that wasn’t so much about stylistic contrast. Read the rest of this entry »


Rewind: Ken Vulsion on “Love Will Tear Us Apart”

Posted: August 9th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

In discussion with Ken Vulsion on “Love Will Tear Us Apart” by Joy Division (1980).

How did you first come across “Love Will Tear Us Apart”? Was it love at first sight the time it was originally released, or did you get to know it later on?

I grew up in a sleepy part of New York State. There was little access to new, alternative music there in the 80’s. Every Tuesday there was a New Wave radio show on the Ithaca College radio station, the DJ was Mike Weidner. He played “Love Will Tear Us Apart” on that show, which I recorded to cassette. This would have been in 1981 or 82. It was love at first listen.

The song is generally considered to be one of the best songs ever written. Did you have the notion that this song is exceptional, or was it just another song you liked very much?

It is exceptional. The newness and truth has never faded.

It seems that a lot of people attach very personal feelings to “Love Will Tear Us Apart”? Is it the same with you? Does the song offer more ties with the listener than others?

I was 18 and in a doomed love affair at the time, so it is full of associations – though I can now enjoy it as a perfect pop object, without feeling heart torn.

Would you say that “Love Will Tear Us Apart” is a perfect pop song in terms of composition? Is the music just catchy or does it also have other, maybe even more significant qualitities?

I think at its core there is a perfect piece of pop craft. But it is the execution that it is so unique. Just compare the original to Paul Young’s version (which I also like for my own perverse reasons!).

What place does “Love Will Tear Us Apart” hold in the works of Joy Division? Was it the exception to the rule or a logical consequence?

Certainly a standout, though I certainly have new favourites. When Anton Corbijn’s film “Control” came out I got really into Joy Division again, such a great little film. The same when “24 Hour Party People” came out, there were some songs that really stood out (another great pop music movie!!).

Would you like more music to sound this complex, meaning that a song can be sad, beautiful and wonderful at the same time?

Yes!

Of course it is absolutely not possible to separate the song from Ian Curtis. A lot of the fascination of “Love Will Tear Us Apart” lies within his personality, and the way he sings about these very intimate problems affecting his life. Yet it seems other of his lyrics are hinting more at the trouble he was really going through than these. How much of the song’s power actually stems from listeners relating to this analysis of a dysfunctional relationship, and how much stems from the legend surrounding his early death? Or is it both?

I wasn’t aware of Joy Division until after Ian’s death. Some of the lyrics (i.e. ‘were my failings exposed’) got into my head because of my own confusion in dealing with a first, difficult love and suicidal feelings. Ian’s own suicide amplifies every word.

Do you think that the song’s lyrics contain more hints at other of his problems than the description of his disintegrating marriage? Or are such interpretations just the consequence of his early death?

Some of his biography was unknown to me then (his struggle with epilepsy). Back then I was into the song, but not a “fan”….I didn’t own a Joy Division t-shirt.

A lot of Joy Divison’s legacy seems to based on him being handsome and charismatic, his distinctive voice and of course his actual suicide. Thus he became his generation’s prime example of the tortured artist. Is this unfairly neglecting his true abilities as an artist? And is his status just based on the fact that he died, or is there more to it? Was he as gifted as he was tragic?

I think the work holds up regardless, same with Kurt Cobain or River Phoenix. The ‘twice as bright’ flame club.

I always felt that “Love Will Tear Us Apart” is already part New Order part Joy Division, even if at the time it was written there was of course only Joy Division. Do you think the band could have made a change of direction musically towards a less darker sound if Ian Curtis would have lived on, or was the sound of Joy Divison always dependent on its singer’s condition?

The sound lived on and evolved. “Your Silent Face” by New Order is an interesting bookend to “Love Will Tear Us Apart” Softer vocal, sleeker production, but still that raw sad emotion.

I always found it very impressive how the rest of the band decided to carry on without him. At first they still clinged to the previous band but then they really re-invented themselves. Did you feel they had the potential to achieve this around the time it became clear that they would not stop?

New Order existed by the time I first heard “Love Will Tear Us Apart” so that timeline doesn’t exist for me. I may have bought the Arthur Baker version of “Confusion” before the 7″ of “Love Will Tear Us Apart”.

Tony Wilson, the head of Factory Records, was at first very concerned that Bernard Sumner would take up the part of the singer. But then he managed to develop a performer persona of his own, and the band did so, too. Do you think this was out of defiance, or was it out of trust in their own abilities? Or did it just evolve?

At the time I was singing lead vocals in a few bands (Identity Confusion and XOX were two of them LOL). I had an almost distorted confidence. I was shy, but defiant enough to get up in front of a small town crowd in leather jeans. Defiance can be a great motivator.

Since then, both Joy Division and New Order built up a legendary status in music history. Do you think their legacy can be told apart, or are they one and the same in the pop music’s canon by now, just with different phases?

Since everything happened so fast, the bands will always be connected.

Apparently Joy Division underwent a severe crisis due to Curtis’ condition. Do you think it could have happened that the others would have continued without him anyway?

Hard to say. Crisis is part of the band dynamic usually.

Are their elements of  New Order that still owe to Joy Division, apart from being the succeeding band?

Maybe they were able to use the death as an opportunity to shift into a new direction.

On the other hand, would Ian Curtis have done a seminal track like “Blue Monday”?

I wonder if he was much into dance music. He was a very interesting dancer.

If “Love Will Tear Us Apart” is the timeless classic in Joy Division’s back catalogue, what would be New Order’s?

For sure “Blue Monday”. It’s perfection. And the record is a perfect object, just like “Love Will Tear Us Apart”. The sleeve designs by Peter Saville are sublime. He was as much a rock star to me back then as Ian.

Do you think it would be possible that another band would write a song similar to “Love Will Tear Us Apart”, and it would become as lasting, or will this history not repeat itself?

I live for new music that affects me as much. So, yes!

Sounds like me 08/10


Rewind: Serge on “Ocean To Ocean”

Posted: July 26th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

In discussion with Serge on “Ocean To Ocean” by Model 500 (1990).

I assume you were already familiar with Juan Atkins when the “Ocean To Ocean EP” was released in 1990. He was the first of the Detroit techno originators to release a record. Was he also the first of them you heard?

I am not sure… probably yes. But it could also have been the first Transmats of Derrick May. It was around ‘87 when I heard the first techno and this came out in 1990.

What makes this record so important for you? Are there special moments and memories attached to it?

It is just one of the best records Juan Atkins did, and one of the first records where techno became techno, where it became a form of art, and not just a tool to make people dance like disco, and like what house and techno was in that period, but an expression of feelings and emotions in an creative sophisticated and highly skilled way. You also hear this on other records from that 1989 and 1990 period, but somehow this one is one of my most favourite releases.

 

How would you describe the music on this record? Do you like it in its entirety, or do you prefer some tracks to others?

I love all tracks and it is difficult to describe. I can only do that properly in my native language I think. “Infoworld”, “Ocean To Ocean” and “Wanderer” are tracks that are unique. It’s electronic music but not as we knew it in that period, like we knew house music, or electro and new wave. All electronic dance music was driven by rhythm and drum machines. The drive and the energy on this release come mainly from the mindblowing basslines and melodies and strings. The percussion is not the most important part of the tracks, which is rare in dance music! For me this is techno in its most vibrant and creative form. Back then (89-90) this was music from another world. This was the future! No-one ever heard anything like this before.

I think “Ocean To Ocean” and “Infoworld” are very trademark Atkins sounding, they contain a lot of elements typical for him. The pensive vocals, the delicate electro leanings, the way he establishes a feeling with fragile melodies and moody strings. Would you say this record defines his sound even more than other of his releases?How would you place it in his career?

Actually I don’t think it is very trademark Juan Atkins. You think so? “What’s The Game” and “The Chase” are maybe closest to these tracks. But I think his previous tracks are more electro orientated. I think this was more sophisticated then anything he did before. Fragile and a more dreamy atmosphere, as if you were away from the world floating in space or something It doesn’t feel so grounded and dancefloor orientated.

Juan Atkins had a few guest spots on Derrick May’s Transmat label, but this is the first release under one of his best know aliases. Do you think May wanted to pay his dues with it?

I think it completely fits on what Transmat and Derrick May where doing in that period. Techno in a more creative and expressive way. I have no idea if there are any other reasons, beside the killer tracks themselves, to release this record.

I always found it peculiar that “The Wanderer” sounds very much like May, and that there never surfaced another version of this track. Is this more of a collaboration, and there might not even exist a version which is more Atkins?

I don’t think so. It might be a collaboration, or actually it says it is a collaboration, but they all shared gear and worked together on tracks. I think “Infoworld”, and “Ocean To Ocean” are very much Derrick May. The way it builds, and how the melodies and strings are done, the drum programming. But Derrick may doesn’t get credits on those tracks I believe, only Marty Bonds. Also they don’t sound completely like Derrick May.
I actually never heard Derrick May do those melodies and sounds so loud in the mix with such a dominant arrangement. His tracks normally evolve and organically build up. Atkins used to do more of an arrangement, like electro producers. I actually never listened to the tracks like that. I always assumed that it were some kind of collaboration, like sharing studio, work on mixing together, playing a melody etc., and I just didn’t care what and how was written on the labels because that probably wasn’t correct anyway, haha.

1990 was a year in which Detroit techno seemed about to change. Derrick May fell silent, not releasing any original material under his own name since then, other producers of the first wave slowed down comparably, including Atkins, and new talent was about to enter the scene. Is this some kind of finale to the pioneering phase of the sound, or was it impossible to predict back then?

In a way you might be right. It was a small group of people up until then but I don’t think it was a finale for the pioneering phase. Those years, ‘88-’89-’90, all happened in a flash. Records from that period were not consumed as fast as people consume records nowadays, there was no internet, not 200 new records a week. So even after 6 to 12 months or even 2 years records sounded fresh. Actually I believe it was the start for the pioneering phase for many others. The period that new artists and new sorts of techno showed up was after this period. Until ‘90 it was a small group of people dominating techno music and they had their limits of what they could do on a technical and a creative level. So probably for them (Derrick May, Atkins, and Saunderson, plus a couple of others such as Marty Bonds) the pioneering phase was over. But I would say that wasn’t until ‘92 before all different styles appeared and the pioneering phase somehow ended for Detroit techno.

Was this phase of Detroit techno a sound you liked more than what followed, or was it just different?

I think all early periods of new music styles and artists are the most creative and interesting periods because of the lack of a scene and the absence of expectations. I was in the middle of that early techno period and the ending of the acid period when I discovered everything and bought most of those records right after they came out. So yes it was special because of the impact of the music and the nightlife, and also because it was in my teenage years.

There was a tradition of Dutch producers and DJs bonding and collaborating with ones from Detroit at that time. Where did that come from? Was it out of mutual respect, or a likemindedness rooted in cultural and musical parallels? How were you involved with it?

I think that was because in Holland there was a small group of record collectors, DJs and also producers who knew each other from record stores, parties etc. We had great import stores in a small country so you always ran into the same people at some point. Small fanzines where made and people could easily go to parties or stores in other cities or hook up with others collectors. Artists started to collaborate and shared info etc. Speedy J was the first European artist releasing on a Detroit label, Plus 8, and It’s Thinking aka Gerd and Dirk J Hanegraaf) were the second artist on a Detroit label, Malego Records, and they both lived in the same area south of Rotterdam. Then the connection from Eindhoven with Stefan Robbers and Planet E was made etc., and likeminded people started collaborating. There was a lively scene in Holland and club tours got organised for Detroit artists and artists got invited release records on each Dutch labels and to collaborate.

I was one of the collectors and DJs. I played in a local club on the west coast, and was visiting record stores in Rotterdam, Amsterdam and Antwerp on a regular base. In that period, the pre-internet era, there was a lively trading scene for gear and records. And that was how every one did meet. Record stores were a sort of meeting point for all the DJs.

How did this cultural exchange differ from the Detroit/Berlin axis?

I think the Berlin/Detroit connection is established with the Submerge and Jeff Mills period, the rawer techno after ‘91, while Holland and the UK had more a connection with Derrick May and Carl Craig and early Plus 8. But at the end it is about people and I’m sure that the UR thing was as big in Holland as it was in Berlin/Germany and vice versa with Transmat etc.
The fall of the Berlin wall was more of an influence and think that after that people in Berlin and East Germany had better access to import records.

In more recent years, it seemed that especially Dutch labels released records that were decidedly reinterpreting the classic Detroit sound. Was this out of a fan perspective, or was the intention to keep a certain Detroit sound up to date, instead of other, maybe lesser loved sounds from there?

I think many of the Dutch techno freaks, and also UK heads, still had a weak spot for the early 90’s Detroit techno. It is probably an attraction and a passion for that sound which doesn’t fade out very quickly. Also it is a group of people making and buying records not because they are club DJs. I guess it is a form of nostalgia for a period when things where new and had a lot of impact.

There is a lot of outside criticism claiming that most Detroit artists do little more than maintaining the city’s legacy in the history of electronic music, whereas Detroit artists are notoriously sensitive about artists beyond their scene copying their sound. Are both right? Or wrong?

I think one must understand that most artists, so also Detroit artists, are limited in what they can produce, especially with technical limitations. So their most vibrant period is the beginning of their career when they were limited. Now after 20 years they can never produce music with the same creativity, naive energy and passion as back then in their teens. You can’t blame anyone for that, it is just how it is. Manny Detroit artists are now living on the reputation they gained years ago. Some of them still try to invent new things, still are trying to make music with passion and push boundaries, others just try to make a living and play what they think people want to hear. That’s just how things go. Exactly the same thing happens with many European artists.
Of course many Europeans are influenced by what the early techno pioneers did, just like they were influenced by certain artists and records as well. Everyone has influences. Some use that only in the back of their mind, others try to copy that 1 on 1. And if they succeed in doing that, they risk being called copycats. Others don’t succeed and get praised by the unique productions they make, haha.

Was there a point in your activities where you thought it was crucial to leave this Detroit thing behind, because its quality potential seemed exploited? Was this one of the reasons why you reinvented Clone for example?

I can never leave this Detroit thing or this Chicago thing behind me. It is a essential part of my passion for music. As is disco and funk.
I didn’t reinvent the label because I wanted to leave something behind. I did that because the circle was round. I finished my circle, my musical journey in electronic dance music. I was back where I started and I was there right at the start of techno and house and went through the natural developments. But I can’t do this same journey again without losing passion, so I had to change something or quit. I mean there is a new generation. I release music of young talented guys like Space Dimension Controller, Astroposer and Kyle Hall, who where not even born when this Model 500 record came out. They are at the start of their musical journey and I needed space and freedom to work with young cats like them without being blasé.

Do you think that music like “Ocean To Ocean” will always remain valid, as long as it just reaches this artistic level?

What do you mean with music like “Ocean To Ocean”? If someone copies it? If someone makes a record as good as this it will be valid of course, but it must have a unique character and artists fingerprint on it, combined with its unique moment in time to become such classic, so it can never be “Ocean To Ocean” or “The Wanderer”.

This is a one of the records that went forward and did something new. A new step, together with several other records in that period, that represents a new development in techno music. That’s a big part of the value of the record and also part of the impact it had on me back then! For someone who grew up with techno and who went to a rave with Carl Cox or Marusha or a night at Tresor as first techno party might have a different feeling by hearing this record for the first time then. It most likely will have less impact. The discussion how good it is, and if there hasn’t been records made that are better etc is to difficult, haha.
The only thing one can do nowadays is making a record that reminds very much of this and brings more or less the same emotions. But there can only be one “Here Comes The Sun” of the Beatles, even though Oasis comes close with their songs. Their songs never can get the status of an original Beatles song.

Does it then matter how often it has been tried before by others to achieve this?

These things can not be organised. It is just a matter of being at the right place, doing the right thing, and only history can tell! You cannot try to write a classic record like this. That just happens. I mean with hard, passionate work and dedication one can achieve things. What you will achieve, or how good the record will be received one never knows until 15-20 years later. I am sure that right now, in the last months, a classic record has been released of which we don’t know yet that it is a classic record!

Will the originators from Detroit themselves be able to achieve something like this again?

No.

Sounds Like Me 07/10


Rewind: Johnny Dynell on “Jam Hot”

Posted: July 19th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

In discussion with Johnny Dynell on “Jam Hot” by Johnny Dynell and New York 88 (1983).

In 1980 you started your DJing career in New York’s seminal Mudd Club and then you played every club important to the downtown scene in the following years. Is “Jam Hot” the sum of what you experienced as a DJ?

The opposite, actually – “Jam Hot” was very near the BEGINNING of my DJ career.

Would you say that some clubs you played at were more relevant for the sound of “Jam Hot” than others?

Danceteria is where “Jam Hot” was born and I DJed there but it was really all the discos and latin clubs like La Escuelita and G.G. Barnum’s that inspired me. In fact, on the back cover of “Jam Hot” is a picture of my beautiful wife Chi Chi sitting in the famous swing at G.G. Barnum’s. Read the rest of this entry »


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