modern amusement preview, jozif chat

leeds is mentally over run with nights. when a new one pops up it’s generally not worth investigating ’til a few months in (by which time most have joined a long and sorry list of also-rans). modern amusement, though, stuck out from the off, despite much pointy-elbowed competition.

read the rest of modern amusement preview, jozif (…)

unravelling the drumcode

adam beyer’s fuse mix is a fine one, so too his entry to the fabric series, so i was pleased to be asked to write this feature for the december issue of i-dj mag

read the rest of unravelling the drumcode (…)


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review ~ youandewan, meet me in teufelsberg ep, magicbag

about a year ago i interviewed – very – young dj and producer youandewan.  he already had a couple of auspicious tracks under his belt for fledgling leeds imprint magicbag (including an ep with dop) but it’s his latest outing which really confirms what i initially thought: he got skills.

it’s a very assured collection of four different tracks which all have a clear affinity with the dubbier, sketchier, deeper and dustier trenches of berlin’s underground house and techno scene.  from scb to scuba, basic channel to dettmann, it’s all in there.  opener ‘alone in berlin’ is a brave and successful exercise in slo-mo and deep house tension which tumbles along, fully restrained, at a very teasing 109bpm for seven escapist minutes. it always feels as though it’s going to bubble over and kick on but never quite does, and because of that has you in the palm of its hand from start to finish.
next track ‘jigsaw’ rushes from the off with closer, tighter drums; a slinky percussive skip and controlled but busy background synths adding a lofty ceiling.  in time, the bassline breaks free and swells out below the mix and the synths expand to encompass the whole track. it’s when things get deconstructed and the crisp, surging-into-deep-space-a-la-hot-flush bassline is allowed to pulse that you really begin to look forward to hearing it on a dancefloor, though.
‘crosseyed & painless’ is simple, dusty and swinging house music which recalls kassem mosse as much as ame’s best, whilst sandy ep closer ‘eidolon’ is the same simple construct but after many more drugs, and comes from a much darker corner of the club. it’s heavy, dry clapping, militant and –owing to an expertly used forlorn female refrain in the latter parts – melancholic music which resonates with a deft, real-world roughness.  you can expect more of the same from a super-solid remix the scot’s recently done for midland, or catch him perfecting one of his subtly shifting warm-up sets at mint, leeds, where he is resident for techno types system.  either way, this shit is reaaaaal good.  

new year’s eve by the djs

blog went dark – christmas got in the way – but is back with a selection of thoughts (admittedly intended for another outlet, offline for redesign) on new year’s eve from a number of djs across the world.  happy hunting in 2011 everyone!

lee curtiss

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

i’ve had a bit of a tradition with the wolf+lamb boys that i play for them at the marcy in nyc. we’ve had several amazing nye/nyd parties together. the best nye for me will be hopefully next year when we can do a visionquest nye.

and least favourite?

i had a few stinkers back when i first started djing 12 yrs ago, but i tend to forget those and remember the good ones, it’s better that way.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

this year it would be footprintz the things that last forever, forthcoming on our new visionquest label, it’s perfect for the ball drop.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

i have indeed, to spend more time with my friends and family.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i am returning to the studio to work on several different projects. i intend to write the music first and then see which label it fits after it’s done. i think that is the way to get the best results, no expectations, just write what comes out and go from there. we have a few visionquest remixes that will be out soon on cocoon, dfa and catwash. i’ll also be looking to finish another solo get physical and supplement facts eps.

ryan crosson

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?
best new years eve in recent memory was probably last year. shaun reeves and i were fortunate enough to have gigs together on nye in brooklyn for blk market and on nyd for droog in l.a. when you have to do a monster flight after a gig and then go play again right when you land it’s a bit tricky, so to have one of your best friends with you always makes it special.

and least favourite?

there have been a few crappy nye nights but one doesn’t really stick out in my mind like, “oh shit! that’s was the worst!” my worst probably would’ve been in high school at some point. chances are we went to some over-planned event that completely sucked and there weren’t enough girls…bummer

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i’ve never been one to cue up a specific track at midnight. i guess it would depend on where i am and what i’m doing. shaun and i were playing at midnight last year but i can’t remember what track was actually playing. slow hands did a pretty cool ‘auld lang syne’ edit. i guess i’ll go with that for now.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

the problem with new year’s resolutions is that i’ve never stuck with one once, ever. but next year i’d like to start exercising at some point and continue cultivating my moustache.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

most importantly our label visionquest is set to launch in january. the first ep will be benoit & sergio. out soon is the supplement facts 025 with guy gerber, dop, varoslav, guti, greg paulus and myself. i have an ep & album coming with cesar merveille on circus company and visionquest respectively. i’m also working with tale of us, dyed soundorom, on a field recording project and on a solo album.

kris wadsworth

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

1999-2000. i have pictures of me and my boys smoking joints that are about as fat as your wrist. it was stupid. we were waiting for the y2k shutdown so we could go loot everything. it never happened.

and least favourite?

2000-2001. my friend was playing a warehouse in east detroit and got in a fight with some marine. he kicked the marine in the face so bad that we both had blood spatters on our jackets at breakfast. orange schnapps, cheap scrambled eggs, and the sense that something really fucked up happened.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

darude–sandstorm

have you any new year’s resolutions?

to keep moving forward and not worry so much.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

a bunch of really awesome collaborations with some really talented people,
working with some new labels, being in a really cool documentary about independent
electronic musicians, and loving my dog even more!

soul clap

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

2008 for sure. We had a residency playing swanky disco vibes at this super posh hotel in Boston and all our friends joined the cougar fest. Plus we got free hotel rooms with a window that opened up to the bathtub above the bed. Special shout out to our ex-girlfriends JK and MM for helping make it a night to remember.

and least favourite?

Maybe it wasn’t the worst, but last year was pretty rough. We had a super cheesy gig in Boston that included an endless stream of terrible requests. Then we took the bus to NYC to play at the Marcy, but it ended in a river of tears 5 minutes after we showed up. Fail.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

Slow Hands has done an awesome edit of Auld Lang Syne that’s perfect for the ball drop.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

No more feeding Gizmo after 10pm. He really turns into a gremlin.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

Well most immediately is escaping back to Miami after two gigs up north (where it’s mental) in the UK on New Year’s day. Then we have our first official mix cd dropping on No.19 in February followed by a DJ Kicks, which we’ve done with Wolf + Lamb. We also have remixes of DJ Harvey and Robert Owens coming next spring and we’re working on our album.

simon baker

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

sydney 2008/9 without a doubt, don’t usually care for fireworks but the show they put on there is an unbelievable sight , afterwards i played on the “spice afloat” boat party with radioslave around sydney harbour with the sun rising, the boat rocking, doesn’t get much better.

and least favourite?

hmm, never had a really bad one that i can remember, usually too leathered to care anyway!?

favourite tune to play at midnight?

played various tracks over the years, but westbam – oldschool baby (piano mix) is a good old school classic, never fails to go off and have a stream of people asking, what the fuck is that track with the piano. good happy vibes for nye.

have you any new year’s resolutions, what are they and why?

to look after my ears and protect them more. i had a recent scare with a perforated ear drum. i have the monitors far too loud, and need to start been careful

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

my debut album called traces due out on 2020 vision in feb. remixes by radioslave (out now) and art department to come soon.

rob james

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

my fav new year would of been in leeds a couple of years ago, i went to back to basics vs dirty disco at my house. it was all about the afterhours though.

and least favourite?

my worst was in blackpool where i’m from. i was still in the queue at 12 and when i managed to get in there was a power cut and so we were sent back outside where it started raining. it was horrible.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

you’ll have to wait and see…

have you any new year’s resolutions?
yeah to finish a lot of tracks that i need to finish, i like starting new tracks when i get a new idea. so i’ve got loads that need finishing. also to get back to the gym, i used to be really into my fitness when i was in the army and now i’ve let it slip massively.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?i

want to experiment with different types of electronic music from disco, house, new edits and techno. so not sticking to the same sound.

subb-an

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

below 2008, it seemed like the courtyard in birmingham was going to explode!!!

and least favourite?

when i was too young to go out and had to listen to the raves on the radio whilst in a sulk!

favourite tune to play at midnight?

there’s sooooo many… but this year it will probably be a special sas edit that we’ve done just for the night.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

to take things up another gear with more music, more gigging and more parties!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i’m just finishing up a release for crosstown, sorting out the years releases on my label one records and some projects for some exciting labels

jet project

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

destroying shine in belfast by dropping plastikman, spastik to a packed main room is def gonna be hard to beat.

and least favourite?

we’ve been really luck and not had a bad one in over 10 yrs…

favourite tune to play at midnight?

can often depend on event’s that year, past midnight tunes have included tracks by james brown, prince, the beastie boys, and various house and techno classics..

have you any new year’s resolutions?

launching another label as extended play is getting into its stride now and fairly stacked with releases but we are getting so much great music sent our way.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

start work on our new single and album project for riva starr’s snatch! records, dj tours in oz, asia and the states

russ yallop

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

probably the millennium, gatecrasher did a party in the don valley stadium and it was 25,000 people all in front of the same stage so atmosphere was really special.

and least favourite?

got hazy memories of one in particular where me and a mate in a bid to save money got raucously drunk before going out, then of course couldn’t get in anywhere. not sure where we spent the countdown but the night ended with me walking the 2 hour walk home, pushing my ko’d mate along in a shopping trolley. bad times.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i suppose it’s compulsory to play something anthemic, i’d probably choose something like deniz kurtel mix of fables & fairytales for this year.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

just the standard ones really, ie doing less of something ‘bad’ and doing more of something ‘good’.

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

i’m on the case with various musical projects, though next year i’m looking forward to starting using real vocals. not my voice you’ll be glad to hear, i need to track down a good female vocalist with a lot of patience!

tony rohr

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

one of the great ones that come to mind was in sicily (2007?) with alexi delano and josh wink. we were all playing different parties, but somehow i met alexi for an amazing 3 hour dinner. then i went to go drink about 5 litres of wine with both him and josh. i think i ended up losing about 200 euro in bets with alexi about abba of all things. haha… classic! the party itself was pretty amazing…. i think. it’s a little cloudy there.

and least favourite?

same one… we realized the promoter had fucked over both the club and the booking agents for fees and flights the day after.

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i actually only djed once at a party on nye when it turned midnight. it was a house party thrown by my friend in his loft, and it was going into 2000. so of course i played prince’s 1999. you really can never go wrong with prince at a house party.

have you any new year’s resolutions?

this year is to finally learn more german. i’ve been going to germany for close to 10 years now… enough is enough!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

include the much anticipated double pack oddmatik on clink recordings in addition to my album oddlantik avenue for cari lekebusch’s h-production label. oh! and we are re-releasing my classic track slowburn on weave digitally with some killer remixes in 2011 too!

joseph capriati

what’s your favourite new year’s eve ever?

the best for me is playing in a big techno party or festival together with lots of friends. since i started to play every new year eve i can’t imagine a 31 december without gigs, i love to start the new year on the decks!

and least favourite?

the worst new years eve i think is to stay sick at home!

favourite tune to play at midnight?

i could start the year with a big pad intro or something like that 2 minutes before the midnight, and then after the countdown at midnight, insert a killer kick and bass!!

have you any new year’s resolutions?

for next year i hope to do better and better with my job, make good records and play a lot. that’s what i really want to do first!

what are your immediate projects in the new year?

for 2011 i’m going to work hard for drumcode, i will release a new ep for adam beyer in the first half and another in the second half of the new year. also i planned some new important remixes for strong labels like soma, tronic, bush etc.

interview ~ the art of production with paul woolford

this summer i wrote a feature on dj schools old and new for dj mag. as part of it, i was asked to speak to someone who really knows their shit when it comes to making electronic music. of course, my first thought was paul woolford – you only need listen to one of his records to see that he is a man with an acute ear for production.  rich textures, deft flourishes and subtle sound designs all replace any painfully du jour motifs in his work for planet e, cocoon and of course his own label, intimacy, and as such the man has a lot of knowledge to impart. 

and he kindly did, so much so i thought it a shame not to share our full exchange, so here it comes…

initially, what are your thoughts on the rise of djing/producing as an educational discipline? is production something that can and should be taught on courses and at university do you think?

as an educational discipline, i think it’s great that people now have a structured way of learning how to produce and engineer music. furthermore, most of these learning environments at schools, colleges and places such as s.a.e. are very practical, hands-on studios and this kind of direct experience is key to the development of any participant’s skills. overall this is a fantastic thing that, by and large, democratizes the process of learning, where once you had to slowly work your way up from the bottom by finding a job as a tea-boy at some large studio complex, spending 2 years doing that before they upgrade you to a tape-op.

these kind of positions were very hard to find, and although today’s music production courses have liberated the availability to learn, the irony is that the skill-sets of each approach are very different due to technological advancements. for example, you wouldn’t necessarily learn how to operate a studer 1/4″ tape machine on a standard music production course today, however there was a time where everything was recorded on to tape. likewise, back in the day you wouldn’t have learnt how to make a full production in a piece of software such as ableton so in the words of lcd soundsystem “there’s advantages to both”.

i understand you are self taught… what benefits do you think that has over one of these courses?

yes i am self-taught, and for me this has been of optimum importance because my sole motivating factor has been how things sound, the spirit of the production, and not wether they are sonically “correct”. this is something that makes a huge difference to dance music, although in other forms of music it is less useful – so for example it would be hard to make a modern country & western record that sounds great by badly recording the vocal, whereas in so many dance records these kind of quality issues can often be the things that give us a raw vibe, something that draws us in and charms us by way of the d.i.y ethos that pervades dance music.

increasingly we are seeing that the march of students graduating from production courses has meant that the general standard of production has improved over the years across dance music, but with this it would appear that in the rush to release music and to make a career, there are so many records emerging that are sonically “correct” (for want of a better expression), but redundant in terms of ideas, that the flooding of the market means the genuinely good ideas are getting missed.

recently i read a very harsh review on a website of a talented young up-and-coming uk producer’s new 12″. the record is a great example of being very well-engineered, everything was in the right place, an abundance of sonic detail and plenty of musicality. the reviewer basically said that it was all good, in fact, better than good, but that it felt bland. there was an outcry on the comments underneath from the public, with nearly all in support of the producer and saying what a great record this was. now, after repeatedly swallowing the information in the review, i realised that the absence of something raw somewhere within the production was probably the deciding factor in the reviewer finding the material bland. i know as a dj that when i spend 8 hours going through new promo material, nearly everything sonically is coming from a very similar place. the records i buy are sometimes alarmingly lo-fi – for example the works of theo parrish, moodyman, (and especially in their early days) can be so raw sounding, but the point of all this is that the balance of spirit and production is the common factor in all the best records. they charm you. some of today’s producers are regularly making their records with deliberate murky elements within the mixes, in techno look at the work of ben klock and especially belgium’s peter van hoesen who creates works of art from surface noise. the power of these records and the way they sound is simply not something that can be taught, it is about spirit.

would you agree the technology/software aspect has made production into a teachable science, as it were? has the technical aspect of the art meant that there is more to teach and learn within an educational structure? i imagine such courses were much less popular before logic, ableton and so on…

i agree that the software aspect has definitely made production a teachable science, and i would also say that the ease of these programs to learn has also been a key factor in the popularity of the courses and the uptake in them. of course there have always been sound engineering degrees, but many years ago before today’s courses, you could only do them at certain locations. one such example of a producer who studied at salford school of sound recording is brian dougans, one half of future sound of london, and these days, amorphous androgynous. this was the old-school approach i spoke of earlier so it is very different to what you would learn today. the sheer sonic richness in his music speaks for itself.

do you think it makes sense degree-level production courses are now in operation at places like leeds met? i’m no producer but it seems cynical; seems to bastardise the art a little…

- this isn’t paul’s but i saw it in berlin and have been looking for an excuse to post -

i think that it’s definitely a positive thing that you can easily study for a degree in music production. i am all for music being a universal thing, my view is of inclusive, i am certainly no elitist, although i am very specific and particular about what i seek personally in music. the view of some that this could be a cynical approach is quite a reductive argument i feel, in that for many, yes it is cynical, and here i am talking of those who purely want to make money from music with that as the primary motivation, but for others, the skills you would aquire on such a degree course are a springboard to unlocking further potential and furthermore for a still smaller number, with the eventual aim of becoming a recording artist in the true sense of the word.

where do you stand on the argument that production is about an artist expressing themselves vs it being a teachable science? isn’t the latter taking something out of the process? if you go on a course you can sidestep years of loving music, being involved, being influenced and just get taught how to make a track-by-numbers, then bam… unleash it to beatport et voila

personally i feel that production is actually a process, you are speaking of artistry when you mention an artist expressing themselves. production to me is the actual process as well as the management of the process. the expression comes from the artist inside an individual. so for example, when rick rubin produces a band or artist, he spends so much time observing, listening, and understanding the artist, without even sitting at the console – he has a very comfortable chair and basically lays down in the studio – this is still production, but on a wider scale. his intention is to bring out the very best in the artist psychologically so that when it does come to the actual recording stage, the recordings will be at their optimum level-best. this is where the language has become skewed over the years because many people who come from studying may be able to make a track with the bass, mids, vocals, highs in the right place, but this is basically modern enginering

i feel that the point being made in your question is that there is a lack of true artistry within dance music in the light of things becoming wholly generic. modern technology has opened so many doors but it’s also true that it has made things very samey in some aspects depending on the inquisitiveness of the user. i think as you say, if you take one of these courses and then sidestep all the years of developing your own relationship with music then that is definitely taking something out, and it will show in the end result, there is no substitute for experience and everything you absorb over the years as well as your background and life experience influences your music sometimes subtly, at other times transparently. for those with little imagination and who are stepping in to dance music to make money or for lifestyle reasons, they are contributing to the rise of the generic. one of the problems in dance music is that people spend too much time looking at what others are doing and take the cues there rather than questioning if the way they proceed is really correct for themselves. this is particularly true in the dj world but this is another subject.

do you think production can actually be taught at university level? isn’t that intellectualising it too much and missing the point? are there hard and fast rules everyone can benefit from or should producing be more about your own journey?

i think there are definitely some hard and fast rules, but these are very specific engineering things, about bass placement and not muddying the lower and lower-mid frequencies. learning this stuff academically is a very definitive way of absorbing it. you learn in different ways by being self-taught. as much as i prefer to listen to music made from people at the vanguard of scenes and movements, most people do not, and it would be selfish for me to think everything should be done the way that i like it to be done. and of course, what you are saying is true in that for most of the people who’s music i admire, you just cannot teach it, it comes from the artist. i think there are good elements of both learning your own way and taking things from the “proper channels” shall we say (another expression that doesn’t quite sit comfortably).

now, going onto something that has been a corner-stone of dance music’s creative development over the years; the mistake. going back to the time when phuture and pierre’s batteries were running down on their 303 leading them to make ‘acid trax’, the mistake has been something that has repeatedly changed dance music time and time again. these mistakes are statistically far less-likely to happen if you have studied strictly by the book, so there is a huge case for treading your own path.

do you think there are any common floors in productions today? anything specific which seems lacking/not up to scratch across the board in the music you listen to/get sent?

from the perspective of somebody who is sent a stack of fresh music daily, i’d say the most common flaw is the derivative/generic sound of things. this is why when somebody who has a genuinely original take on things rapidly emerges – good examples from recent times would be joy orbison, floating points and james blake. all three of these artists have a different and very musical contribution to make and have shown that there are always new directions for those with the desire to take them. and artists is exactly what they are. naming no names, you can clearly make the distinction between those that are firing out fodder to drive a dj career and those who are more interesting and relevant and i think we need more artists and less button pushers.

plat du jour ~ cosmin trg

today’s mix comes from romanian producer cosmin trg. since adding the cosmin to his trg moniker, cosmin nicolae has ventured into a world of dubby house atmospheres and skippy garage rhythms on labels like the rejuvenated rush hour. it’s certainly tickled my fancy, as does his tidy and wide reaching track selection (surely showcasing his influences, old and new) for the zero” blog which includes everything from basic channel to shed via stl and john roberts, with one of many highlights being roman flugel’s latest delicious offering for dial, ‘how to spread lies’.


zero” // podcast #023- cosmin trg

label spotlight ~ no 19 music

in line with planning to post on here more often, one of the new features i intend to peddle your way is this one, label spotlight

it kicks off with no 19 music, the canadian label run by jonny white which, to date, has released slightly off the wall house and tech (just look at he ghoulsih artwork, below, for pointers) by shaun reeves, jimmy edgar, james teej, the boss himself and a few select others.

read the rest of label spotlight ~ no (…)

win tickets to secretsundaze on nye

i have come into the possession (quite legally and legitimately) of a pair of tickets to secretsundaze’s new year’s eve party at the red gallery, london. after another top 12 months of underground house sessions, they return one more time in 2010 with a couple of the stars of the year.

the first is 20 year old irish talent space dimension controller who’s house-y, space-y, electro-y tunes for the likes of r&s and clone have seen his star rise in the latter part of the year, whilst his club shows have also won him plenty of fans, including the podcast people over at ra.

joining the young gun is a much more experienced hand but someone who was still responsible for one of the biggest records of the year courtesy of his re-rub of the gathering’s house anthem, in my system, namely chez damier. playing alongside the resurgent chicago producer will be the the secretsundaze residents plus, of course, the men behind it all for the last 9 years, giles smith and james priestley.

to be in with a chance of wining the tickets, all you have to do is become a fan of teshno on facebook, then pop an email to dearteshno@gmail.com and I’ll pick a winner at random.


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deniz kurtel ~ interview

it’s september 2009, late one saturday night (or early sunday morning) and i’m laying on the hard wooden floor of a friend’s house, a long way from reality. we’re listening to a mulletover podcast by simon baker and, suddenly, there’s a collective ‘ooof!’ as we hear what i later find out to be this - a deniz kurtel remix which is so good it stands out a mile from its pallid peers, and still does today.

read the rest of deniz kurtel ~ interview (…)

smooth operator – seth troxler

ok, it’s been a while since the last post on teshno (life kinda gets in the way, you know) but i’m back.  in the coming weeks i have a deniz kurtel interview for you but, in the meantime, enjoy (hopefully) this feature i wrote on seth.

it was originally published in last month’s dj mag but i reproduce it here, in full, so more people get to see it.  (incidentally, it was published with the same images, too, which i assume gave the piece its title in the mag. they are now part of my private collection.)

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interview ~ soul clap

last year saw the rise of the w&l stable, a proliferation of sultry after-hours house, and a much needed injection of humour into the oh-so-serious world of underground electronica.

then, boston duo elyte and cnyce aka soul clap took things a step further: side jobs as corporate djs meant the pair had to play more accessible, well known music for the masses which, in turn, fed back into their ‘proper’ dj sets.

read the rest of interview ~ soul clap (…)


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detroit house and techno ~ the interviews


something i wrote for idj mag in the uk – thought it worth sharing…

the intro…

the re-release of robert hood’s ‘minimal nation,’ and carl craig’s re-instatement as musical director of the demf, are momentous events, not far behind us. shadows of the first and second wave detroit forefathers, then, perennially loom large over the shoulders of any new motor city blood. whether that pressure is why techno headlines have come mainly from berlin in the last couple of years or not, is now irrelevant: detroit’s where it’s at in 2009.

read the rest of detroit house and techno (…)


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lee foss – interview…


once again this teshno interview comes to you accompanied by a louche podcast (bundled content is all the range now don’t you know) so why not stick it on before we delve into a session with one of 2009′s underground stars.

you’d normally get a potted history of the interviewee now but, as his liquid, libidinous house and techno should already be playing in your ears, and as he has so kindly gone in to as much details as he has below, i shall cut the preamble short this time: introducing mr lee foss…

tell us…who is lee foss? where have you come from and where are you going?

hmm, i’m from dekalb illinois originally, lived in chicago for 10 years, except for a few seasons when i was in ibiza/london, then moved to los angeles a little less than 2 years ago. i’m probably going to be moving to london primarily but still spending a lot of time in la and ny in the new year, just had a difficult breakup from a long time girlfriend and need a change, and as jamie jones and i are starting a label and focusing on more hot natured stuff it makes sense.

if the aim of this interview is to introduce people to you, what should i be asking? what do people need to know about you? what makes you, you?

hmm i couldn’t say what people need to know about me, but i guess what makes me me is loving music and having a sense of urgency about doing something about it.
also, i love the wire.

what music did you grow up around and does that influence you now?

my parents listened to pretty standard white 60’s stuff mostly around the house. beatles, momma’s and the papas, jim croce, beach boys, stuff like that. as a child that is what i grew up around, i do remember really liking michael jackson songs that i heard. as soon as i was old enough to buy my own tapes and cds it was hip hop and r +b and new jack swing, and that was pretty much the only music i was into throughout the 90’s, daft punk and stardust and going to a few raves started getting me into house towards the end of the decade just before i moved to chicago. the house stuff got me into disco when record shopping as chicago is a great city for that.

i would say that my love of 90’s r&b and hip hop and new jack swing influences me more than anything else and is tied in closer to my ethos, though obviously 80’s funk and disco are a huge interest and influence as well.

you’ve done some edits and stuff for w&l’s black label… what makes you want to play around with old stuff/samples?

i think there are a variety of factors, but i would say it’s largely because i was making music for years on my own in chicago in logic and not really getting very far, except for when i would do edits which i would send to my friends who were bigger djs and they would love. my experience and interest in 80’s funk and disco and 90’s r&b and hip hop were probably my strongest asset till i moved to la, started working on music full time and switched to ableton live which improved my workflow enough to become a competent producer quickly.

to tell you the truth it takes a long time to get the notes right as a producer. it’s trial and error for a long time and gradually you just start to do everything better, so for a long time samples were the best and only way for me to really start a track and not get bogged down. they sort of worked like sculpting around a mould, forcing me into a key, then from there the sample might not even end up in the track in the end but it would have helped shape the creative process, that happened in almost every song on my album.

you’re close to jamie jones and work as hot natured together but individually your sounds are quite different i’d say… how does it work?

i think with the hot natured releases, they sound different from our individual tracks because we are sort of meeting in the middle of what we do. and also sometimes they are mini experiments, like let’s do a song like ‘a’. i can tell you this much, i’m really excited about some of our upcoming releases this winter.

it’s a cool working process, it’s nice because we respect one another’s opinions and always listen to what the other person has to say, and i have a very specific skill set that actually brings something to the table, because obviously jamie doesn’t need any help to write great records.

how does it work? we just sit down in long sessions and make music. sometimes we take breaks.

you also work with lee curtiss as freelance lovers. that’s a lovely name…tell us about that partnership? how is it different to your solo work and work with jamie?

we’ve finished a couple of really cool tracks but haven’t been around each other
enough to work in a long time, which is a shame as lee is a really good friend of mine and we work together really well. but we should have plenty of opportunity really soon and i’m excited about that, should be really fruitful.

how do you prioritise with all these different projects?

well the hot natured original productions only happen when jamie and i are in the same place, so until recently, only if he was visiting l.a. as i spend more and more time in london, the priority will increase. i would like to work with lee curtiss more but we just haven’t been in the same place at the same time enough, but again i think that will change in the new year. to answer the question the collaborations take priority when i’m with my friends but aren’t touched otherwise although i have worked on a few hot natured tracks on my own if the project was started but not finished.

you used to play r&b and hip hop i think… why the change of track? what do you make of the state of those genres in 2009? are there any lingering references in your work at the moment?

i was initially a house/techno/electro dj in chicago and was opening for big djs pretty quickly in that scene, but obviously there isn’t a ton of money in that, so as i transitioned to a full time dj, i started working w venues in other scenes playing old school hip hop and 80’s funk and disco, new wave etc. i went through a phase where i was getting back in to 90’s hip hop again 3-4 years ago and the parties were really fun. it was a skill set i already had, and i knew the music, it’s what i grew up on. i can tell you that a few years in chicago playing 3-4 nights a week, sometimes 20 hours a week will really make you a good dj. it also forced me to find a ton of music again and to learn more about those genres. specifically w r+b and hip hop, i didn’t purposefully stop playing them, they were making me a lot of money in chicago, i just never went out and made the connections in la to start playing them or working in those genres. i threw myself into building what we were building and those other genres were still influencing and informing my production so i didn’t feel like i was losing anything.

the state of hip hop in 2009 is a joke. yeah 90’s hip hop and r&b is in everything i do.

what’s an average day/party with the wolf + lamb family like? they said on one of their podcasts they are ‘obsessed’ with you! sounds a lot of fun…

i couldn’t begin to explain the average marcy party here, but i love being in ny with those guys. gadi, zev, denise, greg, i consider them all really good friends even though i’ve only known them since march. it’s edifying that they are into what i do, because i’m definitely into what they do.

the average day usually involves biali’s at atlas in the morning, eating something else that is really ill, working on music, ordering rueben’s late night. walking around williamsburg. the average party is the best party in the world, can’t be described.

how does that help you musically or personally?

musically gadi has had really good feedback that has helped me, and playing the parties is definitely a great experience as a dj, i would say it has raised my profile in nyc. personally it’s helped me to have some great friends who are looking out for me in a really amazing city.

what rules/processes do you impose on yourself before, during and after writing music… what do you aim to achieve?

i wouldn’t say i impose any rules or processes on myself but i can tell you that there was a point this summer when i was writing the bulk of my album that i was obsessed with it and the work and it’s release to the point that it was instrumental in some irrevocable damage to my personal life.

i would say i have enough drive to do the work, and i don’t really need any processes, i generally have ideas. in my day to day life, or at parties, when i get new ideas i text them to myself and they usually work out. i work as much as i can but there are various factors that usually keep me from working excessively or even as much as i’d like. it’s one of those things the more you work/play keyboards, build/use your sample libraries the easier it gets to make music you are excited about.

i hope that music reaches people and that they enjoy it, my goal is just to continue to improve as a musician and to make music that i am proud of that others enjoy, for the first time in my life i can honestly say i consider myself a musician first, instead of a dj.

and how do you hope people will react to your music and is that important or do you have different goals?

i suppose the most important thing for me is that i’m happy with it, but yeah i care if people enjoy or react to it. i don’t really think of the music i make as club music though i’m sure some djs will play it, so i’m always immediately thinking of my music from a album/afterparty/car/home listening situation, and i want people to enjoy it and for it to affect them. that was what was so important to me when i was doing my album was creating a cohesive and emotive statement. i find it hard to believe anyone makes music only for themselves.

you started culprit records this year i think… what’s the label’s outlook, how is it going?

i would have to say it is droog’s label, though i do have quite a bit of input and influence on the direction, and a lot of the early output has/will centre around me/hot natured. i think the emphasis/outlook is on what has been going on in la and how the scene grew there and artists started to work in my/droog’s studio and the great music that was coming out of that and influenced by what was going on there.

i think it has been very successful for a new label, and i think it will really turn the corner w the release of hot natured equilibrium/wintertime a forthcoming ep that is garnering a lot of attention.

what brought about the move from chicago to la? you moved your whole studio didn’t you? you must really have wanted to go – artists i’ve spoken to before from chicago says it’s player hater central was that anything to do with it?

i think it can be hater central, but it wasn’t for me, i actually had tremendous success there and was making a ton of money djing locally and my ex girlfriend was making a ton of money as well, so we gave up a sure thing and it was hard to do. i basically saw an opportunity to build something in la with my friends that would be really special and it has been. they were bringing me out frequently to dj, and i saw the opportunity we had to throw some incredible parties and start a brand. i think had i stayed in chicago my career definitely wouldn’t have progressed the way it did, but i can say that giving up my life there was the hardest choice i ever made, and the struggle of being in la with virtually no income the last few years was more pressure than i would wish on anyone, but i’m proud of the results.

i can tell you for a fact i didn’t really want to leave chicago and i had as good a local career as you can probably have there, the problem is there is no real local scene or community to inspire you, build your profile, or help you connect to other artists. it will always be my home though and i love
to go back and play for spybar.

you’ve built your own scene in la with droog and the rest of your crew – what has it taught you, how does it influence you? was it very important to bring the party to you instead of go to the party in i.e. berlin or wherever?

that is actually a really good question and something that conflicts me heavily about my possible move to london. i have been proud of working with growing u.s. labels like culprit and wolf + lamb, and the idea of building something ourselves. it was very important to me that that was my path rather than going and riding coat tails in europe. for me i saw no point in sending my music to big labels and hoping to be a cog in a wheel on a machine where i have no say in the direction. my friends and i have enough good ideas to do things the right way from the ground up.

the scene in la influenced my life in more ways that i could begin to explain and definitely influenced my music.

can you tell us about your love of vests?!

ha i like tank tops. l.a. is hot.

tell us a bit about what people can expect from you at louche?

they can expect me to play songs beatmatched into each other and ‘mixed’ with eqs. probably about half of them will be songs i made. then get really off my head.

and finally can you leave me with a question for the next person i interview please?

what is the meaning of life?


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simon baker ~ life on tour…

simon baker has risen through the ranks over the last few years. as resident at asylum & technique in his hometown of leeds, and at ddd in the country’s capital, he has warmed up thousands and thousands of clubbers for the big names djs who followed. putting to use his understanding of the dancefloor, he released a track in 2004 called ‘the liptrick’ originally as a white label, only for fellow leeds star ralph lawson to snap it up on his 2020 vision label.

a year later in 2005 baker decided to set up his own imprint to give total control of his output and, although that is now on the backburner, his productions and dj reputation have earned him gigs across the globe from the us to asia, south america to aus.

whilst anyone with more than a passing interest in electronic music would no doubt sell their mother to become a world touring dj, it must have its downsides. imagine always living out of a bag, spending long periods alone travelling or killing time waiting for your slot, spending time away from partners and family, your nice x-box set-up and tv….to that end, i found out from simon about life as a touring dj..

after a gig the night before – where do you normally stay, with who?

after a gig, back to the hotel usually. depending who am with, i might head to an afterparty. ok, i often head to the afterparty!

before a gig i usually hang out in the hotel and sort my music out, chill out. sometimes i will go for dinner with the promoters. all depends how i am feeling.

what time do you get up? what/where/when do you eat?

sleeping as a dj (if you get to bed) is usually hindered by a hotel check out or an early flight. my sleeps often are cut in half for this reason. i eat a loada crap when on the road. any sort of healthy diet goes right down the pan.

is it then off for a plane or train to get to the next gig?

yeh that’s it, planes trains and automobiles, off we go…

what do you do during any journeys… ??

if i haven’t slept, i will often just relax as much as i can and keep my head together in various situations you have to deal with. ie airport queues, security and so on. i actually have a category on my ipod purely called “airport queues” it helps me a lot!!!

i am shit at sleeping on moving things, so rarely catch up on sleep in between (which isn’t ideal in this job. i really envy those fuckers who sleep on planes as soon as they sit in their seat) but when i am feeling ok, i will do music stuff, go through tracks, make some new ideas/loops, or just watch a film on my laptop or read something. it’s all utilising the time when you’re on the road. you have lots of it if touring, so just have to make the most of it.

what do you do when you arrive in the city you’re playing in?

get picked up, go to hotel. sleep, eat. if it’s early in the day i will go for a walk around and try and see some of the place i am in. i like to do the tourist thing as much as i can, after all i go to some amazing places in the world, but its not always possible. i usually only get to see the airport, motorway and club.

what do you do in the hours leading up to the gig… just hang around in hotels?!

yeh, chill , watch films, make music, go through tracks for the gig. drink the mini bar dry etc etc.

are you alone a lot of the time?


yup sure am. it’s actually great when you know someone in a city to hang out with. means so much more to share experiences i think. the job is definitely a solitary one, so you need to be happy with yourself and comfortable travelling around on your own most of the time. even though i am cool with it, i will always jump at the chance of a gig with someone i know.

what are the best/worst things about it?

the worst – well, as above. it can be lonely at times. it can also be fucking gruelling doing gig after gig, night after night on a tour, and getting on planes in between. i can hear people maybe saying…ohhhh diddums, what a hardship etc etc, but until you’ve experienced it…..it can be tough going believe you me!

the best – having stupious amounts of fun doing what i love, partying round the world, playing and making music , and getting paid for it. if i am ever pissed off sat in an airport waiting for a delayed flight on a cold sunday night, after 2 nights of no sleep and just wishing i could be home in bed, i just remind myself….i used to work for a corporate load of shite 9 to 5, sat behind a desk pen pushing, getting told what to do by kids younger than myself. it really helps the situation believe me !

myspace/simonbakerinfantrecords

Simon tours North America in December and has the following releases out now:

‘Magicbag Sampler 2′ feat Simon Baker, DOTB, Patrick Graeser & Josh Tweek * Magicbag

Simon Baker ‘Moonblock / Dragsnap’ * murmur

alex niggemann ~ interview

let me introduce you to someone who’s been pricking my ears… at 25 years old, düsseldorf born alex niggemann is a pretty young man in the generally mature world of electronic music. unlike pop or indie, where you have teenage upstarts like arctic monkeys [literally] topping the cool list, dance culture seems to prefer its artists to really earn their stripes. there’s none more canonized than old masters like the belleville three, whereas the same certainly isn’t true in other genres: would anyone really protest if i said that no one gives a fuck about paul mccartney or u2 nowadays? i doubt it.

read the rest of alex niggemann ~ interview (…)


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nekes ~ interview

before you start reading this, why not compliment nekes’ words with some of his sounds, and download yourself the podcast he’s just done for louche (after all, it’s the man’s music, not words, which i imagine you’re most interested in). if you like what you hear in that mix, (which takes in myriad house styles from tumbling, deep 4/4 to funkier fare littered with warm analogue rushes and thudding, looped bass) then check him out live at louche on october 9th, alongside ray okpara, for an oslo records showcase.

read the rest of nekes ~ interview (…)


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seth troxler ~ interview

seth’s rocked my world this year. his music has character, as does he, and that’s something house and techno could do with more of. there’s playfulness, seriousness, depth and charm to his work, and i reckon some of that comes through in this interview, too. he’s done a load of them recently so some questions are as you’d expect, some are aimed at prising a nugget of info from the man that no one else has before. let me know if i succeeded, then sample his sounds with an ra, ibiza-voice or save the cannibals podcast.

read the rest of seth troxler ~ interview (…)


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lee curtiss ~ interview

another interview from a series with detroit’s current champs.

how did you get into all this?

“all of this”…. i like that, you make it sound like you’re asking how i ended running cocaine for the mafia on some documentary on the history channel. but seriously, i’ve been making music since i was a teenager, so once i started listening to dance music and djing, i think the progression into making the music was inevitable, and once i started producing full on, i realized quickly that i wanted to make djing and producing my full time job. the rest just kinda filled in from there.

read the rest of lee curtiss ~ interview (…)


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bearweasel ~ interview


i first got wind of these on ben watt’s weekly kiss show a fortnight or so ago…

confirming britain can do the sort of deep shit that surreptitiously sweeps your mind and feet away as well as any of their european counterparts, bearweasel have both impressed me and – more importantly some would say – ben watt recently. The fluid mix they turned in for the buzzin fly boss kept me locked in for the duration, so i thought i’d see if i could find out more about a pair who only release on mates’ labels [murmur, viva, 8bit - pretty fly mates, eh?]. here are my findings which include some fairly insightful thoughts on piracy, creativity, and the world of production. pretty funny in places, too…

read the rest of bearweasel ~ interview (…)

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jet project ~ podcast


if yesterday’s interview was of any interest to you at all, this should come as a welcome midweek tonic, and will probably serve as some sort of catalyst to get you thinking about the weekend, itching to go out…

it takes in their own tracks, as well as ones from dj sprinkles (the man behind an album from january which is getting early shouts as the best of the year), finnish dark artist kiki, and the rising profiles of anthea and alex cellar (incidentally, the track used here I reviewed for ra to much distain from the message board, including jay haze, who kindly offered the thought that i was a jealous, wanna be dj. funny.)

anyway, get on the ‘weekend offender’ jet project podcast now.