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: 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 »


Playing Favourites: Joey Negro

Posted: May 7th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

 

Rinder & Lewis – Lust (Pye Records, 1977)

The first one is by Rinder and Lewis – “Lust”, which is kind of a space disco prototype so to say. For 1977 it was kind of a landmark record I guess.

For 1977, yes. I suppose Rinder and Lewis were a very prolific production team in the 70s and 80s. They made an awful lot of records, a lot of albums. That’s probably one of their most moody tracks. A lot of their stuff has got a 1920s, big band, Charleston influence to it. But I like a lot of their stuff. But some of it is unusual in its arrangement. That one’s got a slightly more mystical vibe to it.

Would you say they tried to explore their field a bit further with this record? You mentioned that a few of the other productions had certain influences, like the latin stuff for example. But this one is really something different, almost science fiction.

Yes, but that’s quite different from the rest of the “Seven Deadly Sins” album. I reckon it wasn’t a track that was made to be a hit. It was probably considered an album track. But with that weird bit in the middle with the glockenspiel, it goes into a sort of devil bit about two thirds of the way through. Which is very out of character with the rest of the record. But what I think is interesting about that is that you don’t get those sort of unexpected bits in records now. I guess when musicians are making records, it’s very different to when DJs are making records. Now, when DJs make records they just tend to have the same stuff going throughout the track, it just loops round and round. Maybe there might be some changes, but there’s nothing drastic coming in really loud. A bad DJ produced record might just be a bit boring, whereas a bad record from the 70s might have a great verse and a really terrible chorus. Or you might have something really cheesy. A lot of records now are just rhythm tracks made by DJs for mixing and whatever, whereas then you might have records that have got loads in them, maybe too much. But the reason that they’re not great is maybe because they’ve got too much in them. They might have some great musical parts, but the vocals are crap. I think I’m digressing a little bit. A lot of Rinder and Lewis stuff – have you got that album “Discognosis”?

No, I know the THP Orchestra stuff which I found really good.

Yeah, and there’s El Coco and Le Pamplemousse. I like that track. It’s always very well orchestrated, they always had a bit of money to make the records. It wasn’t done on a shoestring budget, they must have sold pretty well. I think El Coco’s “Cocomotion” is one of my favourites by them as well. Obviously a lot of the stuff on AVI was produced by them, they were putting out a lot of music. They must have lived in the studio in 76, 77, 78, 79.

This is also a really good example for what you can do if you’re a good arranger – the arrangements they did are really complex and beautiful. Is that something you miss? You talked of modern rhythm tracks and functionality – I think it’s hard to pull off these days because you don’t have budgets for studio work…

Yeah of course. I suppose you have to think, this is now and that was then. Record sales were much higher, I suppose disco was like r’n’b was 5 years ago in terms of its worldwide popularity. So there was a lot more money, obviously there weren’t downloads or people copying CDs. I don’t know what the sales figures were like of something like Rinder and Lewis, but it probably sold half a million or something like that. It’s a completely different time, in terms of being able to get a string section in for your record. I’ve paid for string sections before, but to be honest with you what I’ve found is a string section with 30-40 people is so different to a string section with 7 or 8 people. I’ve only been able to afford 6 or 7 people. It isn’t really a string section! Nowadays, with CD-ROMs and whatever you can make something that sounds pretty good – not the same – but pretty good with just samples. To really make it sound a lot better, you need a 30-40 piece, big room orchestra. People at Salsoul and a lot of them classic disco records had that big proper string arrangement. Also, paying someone to do the arrangement isn’t cheap if you get someone good. Very difficult to do that now. So yeah, I do miss it. But there’s no point missing something, it’s like saying “Oh, I wish they were still making Starsky and Hutch”.

As long as a glimpse of an orchestra won’t do, it doesn’t make sense?

I think the only it could make sense is if George Michael decides to make a disco album, or someone like that. He could afford it. Or Beyonce. Some big star. But your average dance record – I suppose Jamiroquai had some live strings on some of his stuff. But then again, he was selling a lot of records.

Doobie Brothers – What A Fool Believes (Warner Bros. Inc., 1979)

“What a Fool Believes” by the Doobie Brothers, which is a merger of rock and disco.

There’s other tracks, like the Alessi Brothers “Ghostdancer”… I suppose that just shows how popular disco music must have been at the time when people like The Doobie Brothers and Carly Simon were actually making disco records. I suppose it’s the same as nowadays people making a record with a more r’n’b type beat. Or at the beginning of house music, there were lots of pop acts making house records. I was listening to a best of ABBA a few years ago. It started off sort of glam-rock, sort of sweet, like Gary Glitter, that sort of production. And by the late seventies their stuff had got pretty disco-ey. And by 82 it was folky. So I think the disco beat was just featuring on a lot of productions by acts who just wanted to make a contemporary sounding record. That’s probably why a lot of the American rock establishment hated disco so much. It wasn’t just that it was there: their favourite acts were making disco records! They hated the fact the Rolling Stones made disco records, it just wasn’t allowed.

But the thing is, that when the disco boom ended, a lot of the rock acts who made disco records acted like they never did! They deserted it pretty quickly.

Yeah, once it became uncool they pretended they never liked it, it wasn’t their idea and all that. I tried to once do a compilation album of that sort of stuff. But it’s too difficult to license it all. They’re all on major labels, they’re all big acts, and it’s very hard to license that stuff. In fact I’d go as far as to say it’s impossible: just too difficult and expensive.

Was it just because of budget reasons, or because the acts didn’t want to be reminded of what they did in that area?

I think often those big acts have to approve every compilation album license. A lot of the time, for the people who work in the compilation album license department, it’s easier for them to say no than to write to the management of Supertramp or Queen. And often, if they do see a title that has disco in it, they will say no. And a lot of them won’t license the Rolling Stones to a comp that’s got a projected sales figure of less than half a million. There’s so many reasons why it’s problematic. You could do it, but you’d have to leave off so many tracks, there would hardly be any point doing it. I did have a chat with a major label about doing it and that was one that owned quite a lot of them. But it’s just so difficult. They want to see a big marketing budget, they want to see you spend a hundred grand on television adverts. Otherwise they just go, why are we on this compilation album?

I think it’s a shame really, there were so many good disco records done by major artists…

Yeah. I like a lot of those things. I’m doing this compilation for BBE which is maybe a similar thing, just it’s not all well known acts. People like Fleetwood Mac, they did that track “Keep On Going”, those sort of things. I guess it’s blue-eyed rocky soul. Quite danceable… it’s not all disco, but it’s not really rock either. More black music based. I always think, if you look at the back of a rock album and it’s got someone playing bongos on it, it’s worth checking out. Read the rest of this entry »


Finn Johannsen – La Maison Des Ingénieurs De l’Aggro

Posted: November 12th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Macro, Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

This mix was inspired by a very memorable Macro label night we did in Paris. Peter Kruder, Stefan Goldmann and me were invited by Hardrock Striker. Of course drinks in Paris clubs were expensive and it was Halloween, so everybody with a costume had reduced admission. Which led to a whole crowd in costumes. I messed up a few mixes because I laughed so much about the guys dressed as teletubbies in the front row. See photos below.

Odd Machine – Phase Out
Instra:mental – Leave It All Behind
Zomby – Tarantula
Stress – Down In The Dungeon
Shake – Indagoo
Dread & Fred – Warriors Advance
Posthuman – Callisto
Paul Du Lac- Blow Back
Ricardo Jefferson – The Egg (Part One)
Patrick Cowley & Jorge Socarras – Memory Fails Me (Oni Ayhun Remix)
Mark Grusane & Mike Cole Feat. Deanna – Time & Space (Vocal)
Marcello Napoletano – Space Voodoo
B.D.I. – City & Industry
Anthony “Shake” Shakir – Arise
The Oliverwho Factory – Disco Nights
Rennie Foster – Good Time Charlie
Octave One – A World Divided (Jupiter II Mix)
Gesloten Cirkel – When It’s Late
Iamthatiam – Inri
Moderat – Seamonkey (Surgeon Remix)
Patrick Cowley & Jorge Socarras – Soon (KiNK Remix)
Ben Klock – Ok (Kenny Larkin Remix)
Optic Nerve – Origins
Oni Ayhun – OAR003-B
San Proper – December 10th
Dan Curtin – Other
Tama Sumo & Prosumer – Alien Mutts
Kirk Degiorgio – Isidora
Roska – Sheppard
Lowtec – Angstrom
Peter Kruder – After The Dawn
As One – Freefall
Newworldaquarium – The Force (Âme Remix)
dBridge – Wonder Where
Kinf Midas Sound – One Ting (Dabrye Rmx)


@ Social Club

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Gigs, Macro | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

 


Rewind: Thomas Meinecke über “Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band”

Posted: October 12th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews Deutsch | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Im Gespräch mit Thomas Meinecke über “Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band” von Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band (1976).

Beginnen wir mit einer simplen Frage. Wie bist Du auf Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band gekommen?

Den Namen habe ich zuerst in Andy Warhols Magazin Interview gelesen, ich würde mal tippen so 1977 oder 78. Da gab es damals eine sehr gute Musikkolumne von Glenn O’Brien, und Interview war in den Zeiten, als es noch nicht so richtig losgegangen war mit dem Hedonismus in der Subkultur, ein Zentralorgan. Man konnte sich sowohl über P-Funk informieren als auch über frühe Ausformungen von New Wave, Pere Ubu, Richard Hell, Blondie usw. Diese ganze Szene wurde natürlich sofort quasi vor der Haustür chronistenmäßig mitgeschrieben. Hier in Deutschland war von der Informationsseite in Sachen interessanter Rock, Pop, Soul und sonst welche Musik nicht viel geboten. Es gab damals die Zeitschrift Sounds, dort glänzte dann manchmal Ingeborg Schober mit einem Artikel über Kevin Ayers oder Roxy Music-Ableger, oder La Düsseldorf und Neu!, es war noch die Zeit bevor Leute wie Diedrich Diederichsen dort geschrieben haben, oder Hans Keller, die das Andere dann auch aufgegriffen haben. Wenn man aber ein bisschen mehr wissen wollte, fand ich es echt schwierig, und ich bin sowieso Warholianer und fand in Interview eine schöne Quelle. Und da wurde dann im Zusammenhang mit ganz anderen merkwürdigen Musikformen, ich glaube es war tatsächlich gerade etwas mit P-Funk geschehen, Dr. Buzzard erwähnt. Und wie das dort beschrieben wurde hat bei mir sofort eine Sehnsucht losgetreten. Ich war eben jemand, der auch damals gerne Disco hörte, ich hörte aber auch gerne Punk und mochte das Gebrochene in Disco. Ich fand den Camp-Aspekt, den man als Leser von Andy Warhols Interview sowieso beherrschte oder erkennen konnte, an Popmusik immer sehr reizvoll. Das Zitathafte, das Vorformulierte. Und es schien mir in der Beschreibung dessen, was diese Band machen würde, als wäre das so eine Art afroamerikanische Ausgabe von Roxy Music. Eine dandyeske, hedonistische Formation, die über das, was man von anderen, sehr eleganten Formationen wie Chic kannte, hinausging. Und so war es dann auch. Ich habe mich auf die Suche gemacht, man konnte über Import die Sachen schon irgendwie erwischen, und da kam dann gerade das zweite Album „Meets King Pennett“ raus als ich das las. Das habe ich mir gekauft und dann das erste gleich danach, was ja schon 1976 erschienen war. Und 79 kam dann ja gleich noch „Goes To Washington“ raus. Das sind die drei ganz großen Alben dieser Band. Es gab später noch ein etwas verunglücktes, wo auch die Besetzung nicht mehr dieselbe war. Und es gab natürlich eine ganz große Folgegeschichte ins etwas leichter Verständliche, mit Kid Creole & The Coconuts, den Coconuts und Coati Mundi usw. Diese ganze New York-Paris-Achse auf dem ZE-Label, wo es dann rüberging bis zu James Chance, der dann plötzlich bei den Aural Exciters mitspielte. Und plötzlich mischte sich das, was man Post Punk nannte, mit Disco, was ja heute ganz modisch und modern ist, diese ganze Post Punk/Disco-Connection. Und das Ganze kündigte sich mit Dr. Buzzard schon an.

Wenn Du damals über Interview davon erfahren hast, ist das ja schon ein Erstkontakt, der kontextuell vorbelastet ist. Konnte die Musik denn einlösen, was Du Dir davon erhofft hattest?

Ja, es hat es total eingelöst und ist sogar noch darüber hinausgegangen. Ich fand es, um mal den etwas merkwürdigen Begriff von Ornette Coleman auszuleihen, „harmolodisch“. Ich hatte das Gefühl hier ist eine musikalische Theorie am Start, die ich gar nicht in Worte fassen kann, aber der ich völlig fasziniert lausche. Und nicht nur lausche, zu der konnte man ja auch ganz toll tanzen. Es hörte sich an wie wenn man zwei Radiosender gleichzeitig hört. Die Anleihen bei leicht verständlicher Musik wie Swing, was ja die Camp- (schwule) Subkultur schon seit Jahrzehnten vorgemacht hatte, wie man spießige Elemente wie Glenn Miller gegen den Strich lesen konnte zu einem Soundtrack der Dissidenz, der sexuellen insbesondere, die ja auch immer eine politische war. Es war ja damals sowieso gang und gäbe, dass Disco sehr zickige und spießige Swing-Elemente rekontextualisierte, resignifizierte, völlig neu ins Feld führte. Aber hier ging es noch darüber hinaus, hier war es tonal sowas von komplex und schwierig. Versuch mal so eine Melodie nachzusingen, die diese unglaubliche Sängerin Cory Daye da immer zu singen hat bei denen, das ist unglaublich komplex und wurde später bei Kid Creole auch runtergerechnet auf einfachere, und dann vielleicht auch massentauglichere Formeln. Ich erinnere das so, dass mich das echt umgehauen hat. Ich fand den Sound der Bassdrum unglaublich. Den habe ich eigentlich erst wieder bei Theo Parrish gehört. Eine große, runde, weiche, unverhältnismäßig laut abgemischte Bassdrum, die dann sogar in Stücken wirkt, die gar nicht Disco sind, so wie bei „Sunshower“, das vor kurzem von M.I.A. noch mal als Sample auf die Tanzfläche geführt wurde. Unglaubliche Sounds, unglaublich viel Arbeit. Ich habe irgendwo mal gelesen, 600 Stunden waren sie im Studio fürs erste Album und haben dann wohl trotzdem von der Plattenfirma kein weiteres Backing erfahren. Sie haben gesehen, „Ah, die Platte steht ja schon in den Läden!“, und hatten davon noch gar nichts gewusst. Aber sie wirkt so, wenn man sie sich anhört, von einer solchen Elaboriertheit und Sophistication, wie man es selten bei Plattenproduktionen hat. Read the rest of this entry »


Garçons – Divorce (Philips)

Posted: August 4th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Rezensionen | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Dieses 1979 in Zusammenarbeit mit der Downtown NYC-Bastion ZE Records erschienene Mini-Album ist in der Tat so chic dass es schmerzt und räumt nonchalant alle möglichen Punkte auf der nach oben offenen Hipster-Skala ab. Eigentlich als Begleitgruppe von Marie Girard konzipiert, ein Jahr später erschien ebenfalls auf ZE mit einem souveränen hellblauen Lacoste-Polo auf dem Cover das legendäre Debütalbum als Marie et les Garçons, inszenieren sich die Jungs hier als die naiven französischen Gäste der New Yorker Post-Punk-Disco-Szene, sozusagen der Brückenschlag zwischen Les Bains Douches und Danceteria. Ungläubig werden mit Accent die Skyscraper bestaunt und der ganze Glitz der darunter auf Straßenlevel schäumt (25th Street! Broadway!), aber gleichwohl sind die Pariser als feste Größen in der Schicki-Zwischenwelt ihrer Heimat bestens ausgestattet (die Straßenkehrer from outer space-Outfits auf dem Cover? Les Garçons sont habillés par Jean-Carles de Castelbajac). Damals zollten sich die Premiervisagen der Alten und Neuen Welt noch den gebührenden Respekt und deswegen sind sie auch alle für dieses transatlantische Joint Venture zusammengekommen: Ramona Brooks singt im Hintergrund, die ZE-Supremos Esteban und Zilkha produzieren, Bob Blank nimmt auf und DJ Tom Savarese mischt ab. Die Fotos der illustren Beteiligten auf dem Innersleeve rahmen ein Textfeld in dem sich zigmal „Danse-Dance-Danse-Dance“ wiederholt. Für die verständnislosen Außenstehenden fällt nur Häme ab: „Watch the critics when I dance with you, we’re so with it.“ Für den Rest gilt: “Dance, dance, let the French boy dance“. Mehr Geschenk als die Statue of Liberty, und wesentlich besser angezogen.

De:Bug online 08/09


Playing Favourites: Soundstream

Posted: May 18th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

> Love Unlimited Orchestra – Welcome Aboard (1981)

I found it interesting that this record sounded already a bit like what Metro Area were doing later on.

It is a very unusual track, especially for the time it was produced. There was not a lot then sounding like this. It almost has a housey touch, and a very beautiful atmosphere.

The track title is very telling, it is the perfect way to start a set.

Exactly, we did a show for betalounge.com once with Smith N Hack and used this as the first track.

The sound is very romantically space-like. Is this something you look for in disco? Some kind of futuristic touch?

Well, here it is a feature that definitely attracts me. I also like that it is so reduced. I like tracks that are special and unusual, like this. It is very straight, there is not too much happening in it.

Barry White kind of transformed his symphonic kitsch into something completely different with this production.

The beat almost sounds like it was sampled, very strange. I think it is a warm up bomb.

Your productions are normally not associated with sounds this mellow.

Yes, but this has this certain straightness to it, and I always like that. They hold this sequence for the whole track and just add strings and vocals, and the beat just goes on.

> El Coco – Cocomotion (1977)

This goes right back to your first Sound Stream 12”. I found it interesting that you just used a tiny weird loop, instead of its catchy bassline.

Yes, I often just get hooked on single parts and sample them. “Motion” was more like an edit. It is just a loop which then gets chopped up a bit. I like the loop because it holds the tension for so long, it’s very trippy.

But it is a very special approach to editing. You certainly were not aiming for authenticity or better DJ use.

It is kind of how it started. The first re-edits in Chicago for example. They looped bits and extended them until they developed a hypnotic quality. I think Ron Hardy initiated that. He rode a loop for several minutes and after a while it just sucked you in. This repetition also goes back to James Brown. His band played a riff for a while, then a break came on, and then it started all over again.

So you decidedly edit music to achieve a track-like quality?

Yes, definitely. With nearly all my productions I try to last long with little, and it is the same with other music I like. Simple tracks that don’t need much to hold attention for quite some time, instead of losing that after half a minute.

I remember hearing a Ron Hardy set a while ago, where he extended just the break part of Isaac Hayes “I Can’t Turn Around” for ages.

Yes, they reissued that tape edit recently. It sparked early house, like “Love Can’t Turn Around”. It is basically the same, they took the tape loop and replayed it with synthesizers, and some additional bassline and piano.

What do you think of edits that keep the arrangement of the original and just tweak the beats?

No. Something new has to be created in the process of editing. And as a DJ, I’d rather take a real drummer and fight my way through the timing. It’s funkier than a streamlined edit. That makes no sense to me. It’s okay if you have track with a wonderful part in it and then a break follows with guitars or something else you just don’t want to have. But an edit ultimately has to lead to something new.

Do you make edits for your sets?

I did a few. But they are secret. Read the rest of this entry »


Finn Johannsen – Nippon Mobile Music Part 1

Posted: January 22nd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

The first in a series of mixes with some of my favourite Japanese Synthpop from the 70s/80s for RBMA.

Mixes recorded for RBMA

Part 1

Ippu-Do – German Road (Epic)
Salon Music – Hunting On Paris (Phonogram)
Yellow Magic Orchestra – Key (Alfa)
Miharu Koshi – Ryugujo No Koibito (Alfa)
Earthling – You Go On Natural (Phonogram)
Hajime Tachibana – Liquid (Ralph)
Sandii & The Sunsetz – Sticky Music (Alfa)
The Eastern Gang – Charlotte (Miracle)
Minako – Town (Alfa)
Yukihiro Takahashi – Drip Dry Eyes (Alfa)
Miharu Koshi – L’Amours Toujours (Alfa)
Testpattern – Modern Living (Alfa)
Yukihiro Takahashi – Walking To The Beat (Alfa)
Ryuichi Sakamoto & David Sylvian – Bamboo Houses (Virgin)
Ippu-Do – Morning Menu (Epic)
Ryuichi Sakamoto – Kimi Ni Tsuite (Nippon Life Insurance Co.)


Druffmix 06 – Look Ma, No Skills

Posted: October 14th, 2007 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Well, it was about time for another round, wasn’t it? In fact, we’ve been promised red hot sessions by wonderful people, but apparently those recordings are so complex and uncleared that they are still in production hell.

In the meantime, the Druffalo Hit Squad sat down, took some sips, pondered and went selecting. This time we decided to drop the tempo and go all epic. Monolithic beats, sweetest tunes and late night to early morning street cred, rhyming and scheming, with a pinch of stardust. We even went busy with the crossfader at some point, if only on one record. It’s a new technique we call “The Absorber Scratch” that will wreck competition worldwide and can only be used sparsely. The first one to locate it in the show gets a free round of kisses, hugs and Anchovy Bellinis at Berlin’s Roses pub on Oranienstr, next time we crawl there.

We are a problem that no one can fix, with Druffmix 6!

Alain Delon – Comme Au Cinema (Extended Version)
Chaz Jankel – I Can Get Over It (If You Can Get Over Here)
Bomb The Bass – Winter In July (Cosmic Jammer Club Mix)
Digital Underground – Freaks Of The Industry
Adina Howard – Freak Like Me (Remix Without Rap)
Destiny’s Child – Girl (Single Version)
Fresh 4 – Smoke Filled Thoughts
MC 900 Ft Jesus – The City Sleeps (Album Mix)
Young MC – I Come Off (Southern Comfort Mix)
Leta Davis – Joey’s Groove
Robert Palmer – Every Kinda People (Reproduction Extended)
The Pasadenas – Reeling (Extended Version)
Malcolm McLaren – Waltz Darling (Extended Version)
The World’s Famous Supreme Team – Hey D.J. (Instrumental Version)
Summer Slams – Mellow Moment
Massive Attack – Daydreaming (Brixton Bass Mix)
People Under The Stairs – Tuxedo Rap
Pizzicato Five – Baby Love Child
The Cover Girls – Wishing On A Star (Jeep 12”)
Saint Etienne – Spring
Grace Jones – Slave To The Rhythm (Blooded)
Martine Girault – Revival
Lalomie Washburn – Try My Love (Radio Mix Extended Vinyl Version)
Richie Rich – Coming From London
Dungeon Family – Trans DF Express (Club Mix)
Maxi Priest – Peace Throughout The World (The Video Remix)
Bobby Konders & Massive Sounds – Unity
Banderas – This Is Your Life (Less Stress Mix)
Massive Attack – Any Love (Larry Heard Mix)
The Style Council – It Didn’t Matter
Rufus & Chaka Khan – Ain’t Nobody (Hallucinogenic Version)
Caron Wheeler – Livin’ In The Light (Brixton Bass Mix)
The Sindecut – Tell Me Why (Part 2 – The Exchange)
Saint Etienne – Only Love Can Break Your Heart (Kenlou B-Boy Beats)
Eric B & Rakim – I Know You Got Soul (Vocal)
Tony, Toni, Toné – Oakland Stroke (Brixton Club Mix)
Intime – Second Sight
Danny Tenaglia – World Of Plenty
Chapter & The Verse – Which Way Is Up?
Pressure Drop – You’re Mine (Album Version)
Stereo MC’s – Two Horse Town
Jesus Loves You – Love’s Gonna Get You Down
Mr Fingers – What About This Love (Even Deeper Mix)
Mica Paris – Young Soul Rebels (Original Version)
Julia & Co – I’m So Happy
Inner City – Hallelujah (Leftfield Glory Mix)


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