Druffmix 44 – Shake The Foundations

Posted: July 14th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

“Now Iapetus took to wife the neat-ankled maid Clymene, daughter of Ocean, and went up with her into one bed. And she bare him a stout-hearted son, Atlas: also she bare very glorious Menoetius and clever Prometheus, full of various wiles, and scatter-brained Epimetheus.”

“Sorry – We don’t need no education.”

Loleatta Holloway – We’re Getting Stronger
Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr. – Shine On Silver Moon
David Simmons – Will They Miss Me
Olympic Runners – Keep It Up
Ray Dahrouge – Steppin’ Out
AKB – Stand Up Sit Down
Snatch – Another Brick In The Wall
North End – Kind Of Life
John Paul Young – Love Is In The Air
Delegation – Promise Of Love
Collins & Collins – Top Of The Stairs
Magda Layna – When Will I See You Again
Nina Simone – Touching And Caring
Haircut One Hundred – Prime Time
Blue Rondo A La Turk – Coco
The Communards – There’s More To Love
Heaven 17 – This Is Mine
Gary Low – I Want You
The Jacksons – Can You Feel It
Debbie Gibson – Electric Youth
Mike Mareen – Dancing in the Dark
Lime – I Don’t Wanna Lose You
Noel – The Night They Invented Love
Donna Summer – Our Love
Soif De La Vie – Goddess Of Love
Sylvester – Rock The Box
Donald Fagen – New Frontier
Space- Carry On Turn Me On
Any Trouble – Foundations
Mike Oldfield – Guilty
Psychedelic Furs – Heartbeat
Pete Shelley – On Your Own
Karen Finley – Tales Of Taboo
Sexual Harrassment – I Need A Freak
Terry, Blair And Anouchka – Missing
Microdisney – Town To Town


Playing Favourites: Traxx

Posted: September 25th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Interviews English | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

The Residents – Diskomo (1980)

I discovered this track in one of your live sets, and I was really surprised by it. How did you get to this?

I actually heard this being played by Ron Hardy at the Music Box.

Ah, so it was Ron Hardy who inspired you then?

The people that have inspired me musically where I am now is Ron Hardy, Larry Levan, Larry Heard and fortunately but unfortunately and Kurt Cobain. Those are pretty much some of my strongest influences. Later on it became people like Farley Jack Master Funk when he was really bringing it to the table musically on the , and from that point on it’s like my whole world expanded, it expanded to unparalleled paradox.

In regards of “Diskomo,” though, when I heard Ron Hardy play it, it didn’t make sense to me because I wasn’t on drugs. But a lot of people that were in the party scene at that time were experimenting with drugs. Ron would spin records faster, because he was under the influence. So the thing is I probably heard “Diskomo” at a faster speed. You never knew what Ron was doing at this time, so when you hear “Diskomo” and you hear these sort of patterns and tone pads and kind of modular effects like wind and stuff in this manner, it was hard to tell what was what. If you were in that time period, would you think that was Ron Hardy, or would you think that was a record?

It has a really eerie atmosphere…

It’s the same thing with Ian Curtis, and what Joy Division did. The producer behind them gave that whole thing atmosphere, that sort of specialness. And that’s what “Discomo” did for me when I heard it.

This new wave post punk music is not necessarily something you would associate with early house, which is kind of peculiar, but you seem to be attracted to this kind of music…

This is house music. That’s the thing that nobody—and let’s make this clear, I am nobody to tell you what is and what isn’t the truth—but I can tell you what I know and what I saw. And it was the innovation that Larry and Ron undertook, and it’s the innovation that I have personally taken on myself. I am singlehandedly the ambassador of truth right now. I feel like I have singlehandedly taken on the roles of these artists in the way that they described their music and the way that they played their music, and I feel that I’m someone that can say that this music that has somehow been forgotten has a greater significance than people can imagine.

– Video 5-8-6 (1982)

Let’s talk about New Order. This has a kind of long-jam approach to recording, but it is also kind of a blueprint, not only for later electronic developments, but also for their own developments. There are already shadings of “Blue Monday” in it, but it is much earlier, 1982.

I play “Video 586” in my sessions. I play every type of sound known, and I am probably the world’s biggest risk taker. There are probably three other people that I could say right now that are as risky as I am.

Who are they?

, from , Germany, James T. Cotton and myself. And, actually, someone who is on another level to also give full etiquette and education and experience is . In my eyes, even though he doesn’t DJ, musically what he does with IBM and these other projects… it’s not the sort of stuff that you would usually hear.

But he does DJ, doesn’t he?

Jamal is one of my guys, and I have never seen him play wax. But what I have of him, the material that I have gotten from him, is still sick. It’s like another level of Ron Hardy through Jamal Moss. Without a doubt.

You seem to be quite like-minded in your approach…

Well, “Video 586” is an idea that I didn’t realize that was important until later, Jamal didn’t realize until later, that JTC didn’t realize was important later. It’s the idea of not following the law of 4/4 music, or the law of what it should be. This is what made music risky, and this is what made New Order risky.

Why do so few DJ’s take risks that way do you think?

Because they are scared. They’re scared to lose the crowd, they are scared to be risky, to do something that they have never done. That’s why you have something called the social chain, and it’s what everybody else follows. I am not on the social chain. Those people that I have mentioned, Mick Wills, James T. Cotton, Jamal are guys that I know do not play by the rules.

So is that your main agenda? To change the set of rules?

My main agenda is to change the rules to the way that they should be. The way that everybody is crying, “Why can’t it be like the days when I was growing up.” Because this is the point, think about it: Why do people play records from the old days? Because they wanna remember. Why do you always have to remember the past? Why can’t you deal with now? Read the rest of this entry »


Soif De La Vie – Goddess Of Love (Uff-Zick)

Posted: July 5th, 2007 | Author: | Filed under: Rezensionen | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Das Leben hält Momente bereit, in denen man nichts dringender braucht als einen pfeilschnellen Hi-NRG-Torpedo, der mit billigen Sequencern und schmierigen Verlockungen den Hochkulturballast im Kopf versenkt und als sexy Glitzerstrahl direkt in die Nacht fährt. Soif De La Vie haben mit diesem Wunderwerk der Lehre von Moroder, Cowley und Orlando noch ein Kapitel hinzugefügt, das es gehörig in sich hat. Auf zehn Minuten Länge gibt es hier das volle der dynamischen Disco-Futuristik und dazu derrwischt eine Frau, vor der man wirklich Angst bekommt und doch, ihrer Willkür möchte man sicher jederzeit ausliefern, zumal der letzte Wille schon längst sturmreif geschossen ist. So ist das bei wahren Göttinnen.

Online 07/07


Finn Johannsen – Betalounge 03/06

Posted: March 4th, 2006 | Author: | Filed under: Mixes | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

My first appearance at the seminal Betalounge, live at its premises in . I was scheduled to play an old school house/disco night in town so I played what I prepared for that. The location was a place were people were usually hanging out in the afternoon before they hit the nightlife, but I had the whole place dancing at some point. I was particularly honoured that many friends and other DJs showed up, including Vienna’s hip hop legend DSL, whom I always really admired.

You really cannot underestimate the impact of the . Operating from San Francisco and Hamburg they were the Boiler Room of those days. Just check their vast archive and you will know what I mean.

image-php2_

live @ betalounge.com / Hamburg / Germany/ March 4 2006

Tracklist

  1. New Deep Society – Warehouse (Days Of Glory) Acapella
  2. 2 House People – Move My Body
  3. Master C & J – Face It
  4. Kym Mazelle – Useless
  5. Willie Colon – Set Fire To Me
  6. Blaze – What’Cha Gonna Do
  7. Denise M – Do You Love Me?
  8. Ulysses – Magic Wand
  9. Raww – Don’t You Try It
  10. Slingshot – Do It Again/Billie Jean
  11. Shirley Lites – Heat You Up (Melt You Down)
  12. Madonna – Physical Attraction
  13. Mark Imperial – The Love I Lost
  14. Set The Tone – Dance Sucker
  15. Alexander O’Neal – Fake
  16. Jamie Principle – Waiting On My Angel
  17. The Puppets – Way Of Life
  18. Heaven 17 – Crushed By The Wheels Of Industry
  19. Victor Romeo – You Can’t Fight My Love
  20. – What You Make Me Feel
  21. J.M. Silk – Music Is The Key
  22. S.O.S. Band – No Lies
  23. Sharon Redd – Love How You Feel
  24. Nightlife Unlimited – Peaches And Prunes
  25. Raz – Amour Puerto Riqueno
  26. Mario Reyes – What Ever Turns You On
  27. Quando Quango – Love Tempo
  28. Change – Angel In My Pocket
  29. Raze – Let The Music Move U
  30. – I Want It To Be Real
  31. Pete Shelley – Homosapien II
  32. Mark Imperial – I Can Feel The Music
  33. Rocky Jones – The Choice Of A New Generation
  34. Colonel Abrams – Music Is The Answer
  35. Lime – On The Grid
  36. Blancmange – Blind Vision
  37. Mark Imperial – J’adore Danser
  38. Le Jeté – La Cage Aux Folles
  39. Soif De La Vie – Goddess Of Love
  40. Eastbound Expressway – Primitive Desire
  41. Miquel Brown – So Many Men, So Little Time
  42. J.M. Silk – I Can’t Turn Around
  43. Christian Alexander – Body & Spirit
  44. Kraze – The Party
  45. On The House – Pleasure Control
  46. Rickster – Night Moves
  47. Irving And Romeo – Brighter Day
  48. Sterling Void – Set Me Free
  49. Sterling Void – It’s Allright
  50. The Nightwriters – Let The Music Use You
  51. Victor Romeo – Love Will Find A Way
  52. Shalamar – Right In The Socket
  53. Change – Glow Of Love
  54. Brightledge – Learn To Love