Recently in Digital Category

For me, over the past 18 months, one of the more inspiring label bosses and foresighted individuals working within the techno/tech-house realm of things has been Simon Nielsen, aka DJ Hi-Shock, who's based in Sydney, Australia.

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He runs several labels including two I've worked with myself (Elektrax Music and Hypnotic Room) and two I haven't but which I really dig (Android Muziq and the newly-established Gynoid Audio imprint) - as do a lot of other people, if you check out their comments pages and the responses they're getting to their new releases.

Probably it helps that he's pushed through tracks, remixes and EPs by the likes of Dave Tarrida, Patrick Pulsinger, Luke's Anger, DJ Warp, Donk Boys, Steve Stoll, Wyndell Long, Ben Pest, Jammin' Unit, Si Begg, Shin Nishimura, Paul Birken, Orlando Voorn, DJ Wada, Captain Funk, Bill Youngman and V1NZ among others.

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Hype, hyperbole and biased plaudits aside, you've got to hand it to Nielsen for his tireless perseverance in an industry that's pretty much flat-lined sales-wise over the past year, and in which he has to deal with Beatport on a day-to-day basis. Luckily for us he's currently branching out from digital download and back into the loving embrace of vinyl, with some killer wax out this year from Takashi Watanabe, Wada, Bitch Shift and Hi-Shock himself, and a lot more planned for 2010 - including some juicy mixes by Justin Berkovi and James Ruskin.

Nielsen is also a hard task-master to work with at times; he's not the kind of guy who lets inferior fodder appear in his catalog listings on Discogs, and if he thinks your latest demo is crap he'll let you know it - which means that some of my own inferior numbers were actually tweaked into far better shape than they would've been if I'd released 'em through IF?

Anyway, enough already. With the Naughties almost over and 2010 sitting on our lap, I decided to pitch a bunch of questions at this label head-honcho to find out things to come.

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Over all, how was 2009 for you - for Elektrax Music and for its associated labels/artists?

"2009 was a really busy year for me and the labels - people think that running a digital label is easy, but believe me it's much harder and time consuming than it seems. The good thing is that 2009 was over all a positive experience and the labels and artists have started to receive recognition for pushing the sounds we believe in. Getting our tracks charted by guys like Luke Slater or Dave Clarke really means a lot and gives us the belief
that we are on the right path."


How many labels will you be running next year and how do you define each one?

"With 2010 you'll see five labels under the Elektrax Music umbrella, and we'll also continue to work together with the super-cool Tokyo label IF? Records." [nah, nah, I didn't bribe him to slot this in, honest.] "It's not always easy to put things into genres but I'll will try my best: Elektrax Recordings is hard-edged, funky, tribal, dark, heavy, acid techno with a typical BPM in the range of 130 to 140. Hypnotic Room deals with more tech-house, deep house, slower techno sounds, with a BPM averaging 118 to 128. Android Muziq focuses on deep, minimalistic, dark, futuristic, cyber, artistic, emotional and techno - typical BPM 120 to 128. Elektrax Progressive is progressive house, Goa, uplifting 'non-commercial' trance ranging around 120 to 135 BPM.

"Finally, Gynoid Audio will be dark, phat, dubby, dirty techno and electronica that ranges in BPM between 120 to 130. Yes, a new label is coming in 2010 - Gynoid Audio is the sister label of Android Muziq, but it's not as minimal as Android; instead it will be slightly fatter and dirtier in sound."


What would you most like to achieve in 2010?

"Continue on with where we left off in 2009, pushing the sounds we love and keep on supporting our supporters. 2010 will see the beginning of our artist agency Elektrax Bookings, so one of the big tasks will be to get this off the ground and get our artists some gigs! I also have a wish for 2010 - less music piracy!"

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In which directions do you foresee techno, electronica and dance music in general taking itself over the next 12 months?

"Well, I don't see that much change and I'm sure the usual suspects will keep on appearing in the charts as they did throughout 2009. It is a bit disappointing that a lot of buyers and DJs don't spend enough time to search for their own unique sound, but just give in to whatever is right in front of them - and at the same time give up on being original. However, there's a vibe in the air that the serious, proper techno will be finally making a come back; the darker sounds are also being much more appreciated. This is
definitely something to look forward to in the next 12 months."


Who's lined-up for 2010?

"This year our labels did a lot of work with DJ Wada, Dave Tarrida, Roman Zawodny, Steve Stoll, Gayle San, Virgil Enzinger and Ree.K amongst others - so for 2010 we have a lot of fresh material lined up from the same guys, plus tracks and remixes from Chris Finke, Bas Mooy, James Ruskin, Go Hiyama, Glenn Wilson, Dave Angel, Ken Ishii, Space DJz, Commander Tom, Octave, Audio Injection, Pacou, Justin Berkovi, and... a few other surprises."


Who're the 'resident' artists you work with most and are keen to develop?

"The list keeps on growing but across all our labels the resident artists who release most regularly are Takashi Watanabe and Dich on Hypnotic Room, DJ Warp and DJ Hi-Shock on Elektrax Recordings, Stereo Underground and Nicky C on Elektrax Progressive, Virgil Enzinger and V1NZ on Android Muziq - and then there's of course the local [Australian] crew with guys like Little Nobody, Bitch Shift, Koda, Enclave, Alkan, Son Of Zev and Zen Paradox."


What do you look for in fledgling artists hoping to sign up with you?

"Firstly, quality tracks and top production skills; a good fan base and web presence is also a must these days for any artist, but also an awareness of the current musical trends, how the scene operates, and of course the right attitude."


Who were the real movers-and-shakers, musically speaking, in 2009?

"Takashi Watanabe was stealing the show for us in 2009 - he can turn any track into gold; same goes for his alter ego DJ Warp. Other highlights on our labels were the amazing production skills of Stereo Underground, the emotions found in tracks by V1NZ, the funky grooves from Dich, our latest discovery Raditz Room is top quality, and I can never get enough of the darkness produced by Virgil Enzinger! Finally, our own Bitch Shift [Ben Mill] also deserves a mention as he's really found himself as a producer at the end of 2009. Expect big things coming up from Ben in 2010."


Digital download vs. CD vs. vinyl. You're now doing all 3 formats. How do you differentiate between them, decide which releases appear in which format, and which one is set to be Number 1 in 2010?

"Digital will still be the main format for our releases. Let's face it, digital is here to stay and - the piracy aside - more DJs are trying out the latest gear and are falling in love with that format. We will still continue to push vinyl, mainly out of respect for the format and people
who still haven't abandoned wax. CDs are not doing very well - not many distributors are interested in this format - but we might still do a couple of DJ mixes and few promotional projects with our label artists."

What DJ Hi-Shock releases, tracks and remixes can we look out for in the new year?

"We're getting the remixes of 'Asama Express' released on Elektrax, so I will be working on a new version of that. I have also started on a collab project with Gayle San for her Equator label. I'm also hoping to finally finish off my new EP, and there're a dozen or so remixes to finish off..."


What keeps you motivated?

"I really enjoy seeing our artists go up in places and getting noticed for their hard work, having them as part of the 'crew' and exchange ideas and demos also means a lot... Then there is the music, music and more music... honestly, that's my main motivation."

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Dead Channel site upgrade

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Vote 2 Votes

I'm a wee bit behind the times sometimes - I just noticed that the Dead Channel crew over in Leeds in the UK have upgraded and rejigged their website; apparently they did this a couple of weeks ago.

It's still got all the free LPs to download from Ant Orange, Chris Kubex, Wobble & Dubb, Noisepsalm, Micoland, Gwylo, Naffdogg, and some completely hack geezer named Little Nobody.

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They say "All our releases are now fully streamable, every track from every album, so you can be sure you're spending your hard-earned bandwidth on quality music.

"This has been a more frantic effort than most DC projects, due to work/life commitments (yawn). Please send any bug reports, problems (or glittering praise) to ant[at]smoothandfresh[dot]com."

Micoland

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Vote 5 Votes

My first brush with Michael Schofield was nowhere near the TV; instead it was early last year via a free download album, titled All Loop Traffic, from fledgling netlabel Dead Channel. The artist name was Micoland, and the music was sublime.

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Just over a year later Mick has mixed two of my own tracks ('Robota' and the soon-to-be-released 'Compulsion'), we're label-buddies on Dead Channel, and I like to think we're mates in general. One thing's for certain: Schofield's music continues to blow me away, which is one reason I figured it was fine time that I inflicted one of my insufferable interview Q&As in his direction.


Mick Schofield is your real name, right? Or do you prefer Michael? And how'd 'Micoland' come about, anyway?

"Michael Schofield is my real name - although Prison Break has kind of spoilt that for me now! People call me Mick or Mico - Micoland is my place I suppose, atmosphere and sense of place is important to me and my music goes where I tell it to."


What's the story behind your activities with Wobble N Dubb with Naffdogg?

"Wobble N Dubb is probably the most experimental music I'm involved in at the moment, but also the most dancefloor. Me and Naff [Naffdogg] decided there would be no rules with the project, except that it has to work on the dancefloor and be completely live. Well, as live as you can get with laptops! A lot of the music is improvised and we don't always know where a live set is gonna go which makes it pretty exciting. All our recorded tunes are also written this way: MIDI-synced laptops running Ableton, triggering loops and sounds on the fly, vibing off each other... seat-of-the-pants shit! No rules regarding genres either, really, although techno and dubstep play a big part we also take on breakcore, experimental noise, ska (2 Tone style), breaks, hip hop, electro, hardcore, gabba - all gets thrown in to the melting pot."


Where were you born, and what's that place most famous for?

"I was born in Glasgow, Scotland, which is famous for alcoholism, teenage pregnancy and Frankie Boyle. And Rustie now as well, which makes a refreshing change."


Yawn question. How did you get inspired to start making music?

"I've always been around music really - my dad was well into electronic music in the '70s and '80s and built his own synths and things, so I've always been interested and wanted to have a go myself from an early age. I think I really started taking it seriously in my mid-teens, when I started to get into music more interesting than chart dance tunes and cheesy hip hop, and got into dub and Warp Records, stuff like that."

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What keeps you in there making tunes, and what essential changes have you noticed since you started out?

"Although I've been making music for over a decade and playing it out for many years, I still feel like a bit of a novice when it comes to the music industry to be honest. The Leeds scene is great, but it's also quite insular, it's a nice little bubble, but I need to push my music beyond its city walls really. The internet and social networks let you reach a much wider audience than was once possible without the backing of a distributor, but it's still hard work getting your music heard."


What kind of gear/software are you making most use of in the studio right now?

"Ableton is my main tool, but I try and use hardware too as everyone is using the same soft synths at the moment, like NI Massive - I'm guilty of it too, but those sounds are everywhere at the moment especially in dubstep. I use a Roland JUNO-6, a Korg Poly-800 bent by my very talented friend Dave Headcleaner, and the Kaoss Pad quite a bit. I'm currently making good use of the new Akai APC-40, especially performing live."


Which part of your studio is the most fulfilling?

"My desktop background - I find visual stimuli very important, and since I moved my studio into the attic I have no window. I often change my desktop daily to give myself a fresh outlook."


What keeps you fueled throughout production?

"If these have to be legal substances, I'd have to say Lucozade and cigarettes are essential."

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Which current artists and/or labels are grabbing your attention?

"I've been following dubstep since its inception, and it has always influenced my work, but currently I find myself returning to earlier influences such as Skam Records and Roots Dub. Cardopusher, Funckarma, Kelpe, Akira Kiteshi and Blue Daisy have pricked my ears in recent months."


How would you personally define the sounds you're currently making?

"Dubstep and techno styles filtered through my hazy mind."


Which labels have you released your music through to date, and what's your relationship like with these labels?

"So far I've released stuff on Dead Channel, Dirtyload Records and IF?. Dirtyload has kind of bit the dust, really. Dead Channel is a free netlabel and is my main outlet at the moment. I should be releasing something on a new label called Conflagration Records - a spin off from the Leeds night of the same name. I'm always looking for new labels, outlets for my tunes tho'..."


Biggest influences on your own music?

"Kode9, Milanese, Surgeon, Prefuse 73, Scientist, Aphex [Twin], Skam Records; anyone pushing the boundaries of electronic music, especially techno, dub and hip hop influenced sounds."


What new Micoland releases should we keep a eye out for?

"My follow-up to the MyColdLand LP [2008] is due out on Dead Channel in the next few months; it will be called Modern Ruins. In the meantime you can download my retrospective album Hidden Records 01-06 for free from dead-channel.com."

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Speaking of netlabels and digital download, CDs are a disappearing facet of the music industry, and quite a few people are cutting back on vinyl these days because they say it just doesn't justify the money invested. How do you feel about this?

"As long as DJs are still using vinyl, there is an incentive for labels to release on that format if only to make sure those tunes are getting played out - which is where dance music of all kinds should be, surely!? CD is a dead format, really. I can't remember the last time I bought a CD. I spend a fortune on mp3s though, from online shops like boomkat.com, mainly because I DJ using Ableton. I think there is money to be made selling mp3s, but I think it's more difficult than ever before to actually sell your music for hard cash."


Is vinyl then becoming more of a select option?

"Vinyl's survival is in the hands of DJs' habits, it has been since the '80s, really. If vinyl dies, it's probably the fault of people like me! I love DJing with a computer, you can be so much more creative live, remixing people's tracks on the fly, and really customizing your own sound. I'm happy to endure reduced fidelity for total creative control. The more people start thinking the way I do, the less chance vinyl has of surviving. I'm not at all conservative. Things change, you gotta move with the tide, or inevitably you will drown. People listen to mp3s - fact - and if you want people to actually hear your music out of the club, that's where you gotta be."


Do DJs really then need to continue to use vinyl?

"It's up to the individual; I prefer the creative freedom of using Abelton. You can do anything with that software if you put your mind to it. There is arguably more physical skill in DJing with vinyl, especially beat juggling/scratch-mixing. I've never been a fan of virtuoso/performance displays of skill, to be honest; wanky guitar-solos get on my tits. I want music that moves me, not that impresses me. Does your average punter at a rave really give a shit how you're beat-matching your records? No."


What do you think of veteran British producers like Neil Landstrumm, Tobias Schmidt, Dave Tarrida, Cristian Vogel, Subhead, Tube Jerk and Si Begg?

"Si Begg and Neil Landstrumm are definitely amongst my favourite producers. They inhabit the same mindset as me in that they take on influences such as grime, dubstep and dancehall, but make it their own."


Have you heard any of the music coming out of Australia?

"Not much Aussie music makes it over here, to be honest, which I think is a real shame, based on the stuff I have heard. IF? Records has exposed me to a lot of music I wouldn't otherwise have heard."


What do you think of the diverse Japanese producers like Captain Funk, Toshiyuki Yasuda, Co-Fusion, HIFANA, DJ Warp, Shufflemaster, Merzbow, Alone Together, et al?

"Japanese producers and artists have always taken influences from outside and made them into something distinctly Japanese, which I have a lot of respect for. By that I don't mean anything as crass as simply fusing Western music with their own musical traditions, they invent totally new stuff. I'm particularly impressed with a young Japanese producer called Quarta 330, that's some of my favourite shit at the moment. Really original. I wish he'd hurry up and release an album though!"


How do you like your mushrooms cooked?

"Raw and magic."


Care to add anything else? (about your own new releases/remixes/ideas/ideals/grievances/philosophies/quips/earth-shattering announcements/etc)?

"I think people should stop bemoaning the death of this format or that genre, and embrace the new possibilities. You gotta take influence from the past, but look forward to the future."

Input - Output Inc.

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Vote 5 Votes


Turns out these people don't just have a nifty t-shirt design you can buy online at Goat King.

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Since 1999 Input - Output Inc. has worked with people like Neil Landstrumm, Dave Tarrida, Tobias Schmidt, Bill Youngman, Si Begg, Michael Forshaw, Tube Jerk, Steve Glencross, Jason Leach, Al Tourettes, and Paul Birken.

Most of these people would make regular Fun In The Murky lurkers a little green with envy, and much of the back-catalogue stuff has been on vinyl, but recently the label has steered into the digital domain as well.

As a digital carrier they've also seen fit to help out a wad of like-minded fellow indie electronic labels.

"The idea for the 'new' site was basically to set up a platform for friends and labels I like, so it would be easy for everybody to get their stuff available," says Jon, better known as producer Cynthia Stern - the mover-and-shaker behind Input - Output Inc.

The imprints piggybacking on the platform include Tonewrecker, Slappy Recordings, Klangnet, Bonus Round, Elektrax, Combat, Rag & Bone and Digital Distortions, and we've run our own label IF? through them since February - probably because I dig and admire all these other previously-mentioned people.

The site itself also looks sweet.

"It isn't as huge as Beatport, where I actually think it's hard to find good stuff," Jon says. "And since there's no massive company behind i-o-inc.com, it's rather easy to keep the prices down as well. There's so much good music here. We're currently working on a new 'mix' section, so there'll be even more stuff to enjoy soon."

Picking your own favorite musicians and labels - when you run a label and digital music carrier yourself - can be a diabolically tricky call.

"Hmm, this is always a tough one," Jon agrees.

"But I'm a great fan of Tobias Schmidt's sound, rough-and-ready but still so extremely well-produced. I also must mention Subhead, of course - way ahead of their time, 'ruckno' as Jason [Leach] himself calls it. Nowadays i really dig the new bassy sound from the UK, loads of nice dubstep, bassline and ravey stuff coming from there on labels like Coin Operated, Rag & Bone, and the list goes on..."

Childhood influences are another matter, especially for this particular producer born in late '70s Gothenburg, in Sweden - a place I visited for one day several years ago, but chiefly only remember for its trams.

"I was well into a Swedish band called Imperiet, or The Empire," Jon laughs, "and my dad used to brainwash me with Neil Young, Talking Heads, and all that, so I guess that counts as well. There was always music around when I grew up."

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Jon has an extensive back-catalogue of his own as Cynthia Stern, on labels like Noodles, Urban Electro Squad and Database.

"I guess I first got into electronic music making thanks to my old mate J Antoni , but then he turned more into a house producer and I just kept going with what I wanted to do. My sound, I think, has just evolved through the years; I don't know if it's unique or not - it's basically just having a laugh."

That laugh seems to have lately been stretched between job commitments, the label, the digital platform, web design, production, and a hectic personal life.

"I haven't been in the studio for quite some time now," Jon admits. "But recently I've been writing tracks with Teutonic Kaboom from Manchester, and I'm about to do a project with Lief Ryan. Besides that, I've just worked a lot on my live set, which has been good fun playing out. I actually DJ'd for the first time in ages the other week in Berlin, and it was proper fun playing all the new stuff out on a good sound-system."

Labelwise, there's also much to look out for.

"I've just released an EP ['Follow'] by myself, with remixes from nice people like Warlock, Smashback, The Wee DJs, Faceless Mind, and Paul Birken. For the future, nothing is written in stone but it looks like there will be releases from Bill Youngman, Dave Tarrida and Debasser - but since vinyl sales are really slow right now, I cant really say where and when."


NOTE: Cynthia Stern photo by Skerries.


Bill Youngman interview

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Vote 8 Votes

This is what the Tresor site says about Bill Youngman:

After years of jazz and classical guitar training, Youngman decided in '94 to put the strings aside for a bit of electronic dabbling. Being influenced by instrumental music, drum 'n bass, hip hop and bleep techno resulted in his take to be coined "electrostep".

In 1995 he met producer John Selway from Serotonin Records, for which he would release his first EP in fact entitled 'Electro Step'. This debut EP displayed Youngman's hybrid of drum 'n' bass tempo, breakbeat chops with the tonalities and bleeps of classic electro. Youngman started to perform live in New York and released a couple more EPs for Serotonin. In 1998 Youngman met Neil Landstrumm (Scandinavia Records, Tresor) and soon after an exchange of tracks - the 'Zooted' EP - was released, which contained innovative cuts that well complimented the Scandinavia Sound. The 'Bad Box' EP followed in '99. Landstrumm and Youngman collaborated on further tracks experimenting with the machines and broken beatboxes.

Keep it simple, I say - my new self-disciplined look.

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I love Youngman's work, and have done for years - ever since I picked up 'Zooted' back in Melbourne. And while his live work with Tobias Schmidt inevitably smites my senses, he also just did a sizzling remix of a track I made with Japanese artist Kana Masaki, called 'Because It Pays So Thin', so I'm thoroughly swayed by the man's talent anew.

What was I saying earlier about simplicity? OK, without further ado nor unnecessary rambling, hereafter follows a Q&A that Bill and I just conducted via e-mail, bouncing between Berlin and Tokyo. I love modern communications technology. Beats the telegraph hands-down.


Yawn question. What get inspired you to start making music?

"Watching DJs play breaks after finishing my Sunday matinee hardcore shows at my local youth center."


Where in the US were you born, and what's it famous for?

"New York City... famous for bad air, stress, suit and tie guys."


When did you move to Berlin, and why?

"Made the move in 2001; it wasn't planned... I was offered a German tour, did it, and fell in love with the city in the first week. Simply stayed with my gear, and the shirt on my back."


You've been producing music and interacting within the music industry for quite a time now - how long exactly? What keeps you motivated, and what integral changes have you noticed over that time period?

"I've been making music since I was a young one. Studied guitar for many years, did loads of four-track recordings until the day came where my boss, Dr Rhythm,
became more useful than simply a back-beat for the guitar-shredding. My motivation comes from exploring new ways to translate my immediate emotions into sound. The constant attempt at innovating to keep my ears happy...

"I can safely say that is my mental goal; I pay little attention to what's happening in scenes. I'm always afraid to be subconsciously influenced by anything other than what comes natural to my character."


What gear/software are you making most use of in the studio at the moment?

"Always changing - trying out new kit that I don't know always results in randomness, sometimes for the better. If i had to narrow it down to my favorite pieces, it would be the MS-20, MPC, and Digital Performer."


Which part of your studio is the most vital facet?

"I have a rare Siemens mixer from the mid '80s, a gift from Jamie Lidell. It looks like a spaceship and is an inspiring centerpiece even when not in use..."


What food/drinks keep you fueled throughout production time?

"...food? Sand and chocolate keep me alive... and scraping the remains of a human life out of the studio when session is done..."


Your first releases came out through John Selway's Serotonin label. How'd that happen?

"John and I attended the same music school - he had already finished during my run there, but had visited from time to time and I bumped into him after partying in the wee hours and played him some of my breakbeat experiments. He didn't believe that I made the music, so I had to explain to him my method. After a small chat, he decided to give me a boost and help me shape my 'electrostep' sound."

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The 'Zooted' EP was the first release you did on Neil Landstrumm's Scandinavia imprint, right, in about 1998? How did that come about?

"Another fluke... I met Neil for about a half minute in New York at Satellite Records as he was scrounging around for an Akai S-1000 to borrow for his evening gig. I asked for his address, which was then scribbled illegibly on a sticky note. I sent him some bits and pieces, and he was actually debating a move from Scotland to N.Y.C, so we linked up as soon as he touched dry land. I presented him 'Zooted' on our first meeting, he dug it, and then he put it out."


Here's the mandatory inane question: If you were pressed into a corner and forced to confess under great duress, how would you define the sounds/styles you're currently making?

"Low attention span theatre, I would say... I'm always jumping around and bending genres together. What I would like to say, if asked, is that my style is simply 'electrostep'."

 
You've released stuff through Tresor, Serotonin, Scandinavia, Feinwerk, Input-Output Inc., and Neue Heimat. What's your relationship been like with these labels?

"For the most part good. I have always, in my opinion, found the right homes for my compositions, and work with people I like personally, or simply stand behind the music."

 
Biggest influences on your own music?

"Hearing random bits of music and not knowing who made what. Trying to avoid my soul being tainted."


In the latter '90s you, along with Cristian Vogel, Si Begg, Dave Tarrida, Subhead, Tube Jerk, Neil Landstrumm and Tobias Schmidt were basically life's blood for me as a fan and DJ. What do you think of the "newer" guys coming through like Luke's Anger, Ben Pest, and Donk Boys?

"I'm thrilled to see that this slightly experimental leftfield take on techno is kept alive by the newer producers."


Which current crop of artists and labels are grabbing your attention, and why so?

"I honestly don't pay too much attention to what's coming out, or hip/cool for that matter. There are so many producers these days, and affordable, easy-to-use software has made it possible for anybody to piece together a track. I hear lots of brilliant work from unknown new producers on the Internet, but due to the mass amounts of producers, it would be impossible for me to say one small handful of artists and labels has grabbed my attention.
The mind is overloaded from so much creative output."

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What new Bill Youngman releases can we look out for?

"I'm slowly working on a new album which will pretty much cover all of my styles and emotions. It has been a long time in the making, and will be a while before it's ready. I never felt like I have finished a complete book; who is Bill Youngman? I'm always finding myself, and have been writing chapters of the story along the way.

"I'm overly critical about my own work and the bigger part of it stays in my home. I don't release many of my compositions for the sake of simply putting them out. Every one of my releases has a true personal meaning for me. I'm not in a rush, but have a mixed plate cooking up in the kitchen.

"There will also be a new audible album on the way early next year. I'm feeling this at the moment. I've also been back on my metal guitar and have almost an album's worth ready of weirdo electronic hardcore madness. I find joy in confusing myself!" (laughs)


You've worked extensively with Tobias Schmidt over the years - what's happening in that department?

"Toby and I meet a couple times a year and work on bits for our live sets and tracks. We have a few releases worth of material ready to go, but it's difficult to find the right home when the scene for our style of music barely exists. I would sometimes rather not put it all out than simply do it on a label that has no relevance - kind of like a painting that stays on your wall, you can enjoy it forever... but I certainly want to share with all. Maybe they will all end up in the great Internet museum. We are currently debating the next steps."

(And now the pseudo-toughies...)

CDs seem to be a disappearing facet of the electronic music industry, and a fair amount of people are cutting back on vinyl production these days because they say it just doesn't make back the money invested. How do you feel about this? Do you agree?

"CDs and players have become a fairly dead medium. The digital road makes audio simply easier and more obtainable. Vinyl is expensive and the latter part of
DJs I know have switched over to digital DJing. Vinyl is still special; you can't beat the sound of of a hot cut, but at the same time the convenience of digital and mp3 has made it
possible for the masses to create, produce, and share music. There are many positive and negative points, too many to get into."


Is vinyl dead? Or just becoming more of a select option?

"It's not dead. I appreciate the people who still press and buy vinyl. I love having an actual physical product in the hand - it's such a joy to get a test-pressing back and wait for the finished release... every vinyl release is like a birthday present. I have seen a rise in small labels who have decided to do strictly vinyl and no option for digital, as well as artists/labels making special limited-edition vinyl runs. For me it's like owning a piece of art, every vinyl is unique in its own way. If you really want to have the tracks, then you have to make an effort to find them."


When we decided to switch some of the IF? Records back-catalogue to digital download, I got an anonymous email saying "You've sold you're [sic] soul to the devil!!!" (I kid you not). So... have we...?

"As I said before, digital makes it possible for a wider audience to hear and obtain music on the whole. At the same time, there is no risk in releasing only digital music, making it harder to stand out in the pool of labels. Making vinyl from the heart and financial side are two separate issues. I love vinyl, but plan on releasing remastered versions of all my earlier works in a digital format. It's an unobtainable idea for me to press a record of niche music, only to lose all the money put into the product and get nothing in return. I want the music to be available for all, no matter what the medium is."


Do DJs really need to continue to use vinyl? Or can they instead construct entire sets out of stuff they've downloaded off the Internet?

"I've seen/heard people play sets on all mediums and platforms. I make the effort to bring gear to my shows as a live performer - I could just as easily play back pre-recorded material, but I have a very purist attitude about what my performance means. I have to satisfy myself, even if the bulk of the public doesn't know the difference. They only listen, as they should."


Have you heard any of the music coming out of Australia?

"Very little - would like to hear some more... Any tips?"


What do you think of the Japanese producers like Captain Funk, Toshiyuki Yasuda, Co-Fusion, HIFANA, DJ Warp, Shufflemaster, Merzbow, Alone Together, Gadget Cassette, et al? Do any of these people stand out for you, and why do you think the Japanese scene is so vibrant and charismatic?

"I know very little about these producers mentioned. I'm always interested to hear the sonic influence of different cultures - and again tips would be most appreciated. I'm fascinated about Japan and its people. I have yet to go, but looking forward to it someday in the near."


What's your day job - and is it fun? Does it foster your music output, or hamper it?

"I mostly work on my music, do some sound design, and beta test software the other half of the week. I really enjoy beta testing programs because it keeps me on the cutting edge of the software industry. At the same time, it can often be tough to switch back into music mode as one has spent the day using the same tools that would be used for work and production. I try to take at least one day off in the week from all sound/computer related activities."
 

Lastly - how do you like your mushrooms cooked?

"I would need to know the type of mushroom first. In the next interview?" (laughs)


Care to add anything else?

"I will be taking over Serotonin Records. Jason and John have very little time to deal with the label due to their own endeavors. It would be a shame to see it die. There is a lot of meaning there for me, as it being my first musical home. Funny how life can take you full circle sometimes..."

"Oh, and send me some good sake... I'm getting thirsty over here in Berlin!"

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For me, 2008 was the year I gratefully stumbled across Japan's DJ Warp and Alone Together, along with a fellow Aussie called Ben Mill.

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And while his own name itself may as yet mean not quite so much to people outside the circles I work with (bar, of course, his mum back in Melbourne, Australia), the guy is rapidly getting noticed through a slew of equally innovative and infectious tracks.

And after all the guy is from Melbourne. Coming from Australia has its own baggage when you take a good, hard look at the history of electronic sounds, and dance music in particular. Severed Heads, SPK and Ollie Olsen (Whirlywirld) were trend-setters there in the 1970s and '80s.

Techno-wise, Melbourne has been a hotbed of creativity since the 1990s, with people like Voiteck, Zen Paradox, Honeysmack, Frontside, Digital Primate, Son Of Zev, Blimp, Artificial, and TR-Storm all emerging from that city.

Mill could be seen as part of the latest wave, and one key to this producer's success seems to be his flexibility. Mill was previously better known as techno outfit Bitch Shift but recently has also been making more house-oriented inroads as Chairman of the Board, as well as releasing more melodic sounds lately under his real moniker.

Mill has also been prolific in the remixing stakes of late, having rejigged tracks by Dasha Rush, Little Nobody, Enclave, Alkan, ABiS, Koda, DJ Warp, and others, and was in turn himself remixed by Justin Robertson - he who previously mixed Björk, Happy Mondays, Fatboy Slim, Luke Slater, and Felix Da Housecat.

So, we set out to find out a wee bit more via the contrived Q+A that follows:


What are the significant differences between each of your current projects, Bitch Shift, Chairman of the Board, and just plain Ben Mill?

"Well, producing as just plain old me really stems from the opposite poles that are Bitch Shift and Chairman of the Board. Bitch Shift is really just straight, tough techno, usually percussion-heavy, and it usually serves no other purpose than to try to rock a dance floor. Chairman of the Board, however, is far more chilled; it's house music, I guess - sometimes summery, and sometimes more cerebral. As a dance music fan with a particular penchant for the techno orientation, that leaves quite a void of diversified sounds... hence enter Ben Mill."


What's the point of diversifying in this manner?

"Really, it's to avoid confusion. It'd be nice to just sit down and write anything and say 'Hey, this is what I felt today, but it's still me', but the industry doesn't work that way and - whilst this is a job I love - recognition is nice, and sometimes you've got to play by the rules to gain it. Sometimes you've got to break them to gain it, too! It also helps me a bit in the studio in a weird way. Being able to put on a 'hat', power-up, and write - that gets your creative juices flowing in a specific direction."


If you had to describe your own particular niche sound, under the various aliases, in 21 words (or less) - how would you do so?

"Wow! A toughie. Bitch Shift is definitely percussive-orientated, dirty and often lo-fi. Chairman of the Board is always breezy, and Ben Mill? Well, maybe the diversification is the niche!"


What's the joy for you in remixing, and how do you approach the craft of doing so?

"I love remixing. The world is full of people far more talented than I!" (laughs). "So it's a joy to be able to deconstruct what they have done. Nine times out of 10, after listening to the track once or twice, I can hear what I think would make for a great remix or re-working of the piece. Sometimes it's one part or stem that jumps out at you; other times it's the entire work, or an attempt to really emphasize a mood or feeling that I pick up on in the original."


How did you feel about the coup of the recent Justin Robertson remix of your track 'Faith in G Minor'?

"To be honest, I'm still a bit shell-shocked. Definitely it's a highlight for me thus far - when I heard the news that he'd accepted to do the mix, I was speechless. I love Justin's remix, and in getting back to my previous answer it was an amazing feeling to hear a pro like him pick up on what I was trying to achieve, then push it to another, different level."

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Which labels have you worked with, and how are they different? In what ways do you adjust to the needs of each outlet?

"The list so far goes: Digiticed Music, IF?, and sister labels Elektrax and Hypnotic Room Special Edition. All are quite different. My first release was on Digiticed, a small indie label that's non-dance specific and who ran things off Creative Commons Licensing. These days all my work goes to the other three labels. Elektrax and Hypnotic Room run in quite similar fashion and are very professional outfits. IF?, a long-time Melbourne/Tokyo label, is far more leftfield, which gives the artist far more freedom. While Elektrax and Hypnotic Room are fairly specific in sound - which is fantastic and presents a real challenge trying to get things just right, to meet certain needs yet still be different and unique - the challenge IF? throws at you is the freedom you are allowed and what exactly to do with it. I love working with all the labels at the moment, and they are definitely on the up and up."


Which other producers and/or labels are doing it for you at the current time, and why so?

"I always dread this question." (laughs). "And not because I don't have favourite artists - because I do - but because artists don't stick in my mind; tracks do! If I had to pick one, I would say that Mark Broom is really doing it for me right now. His diversification is great and always right on the money. Label-wise? Apart from the ones I am on, I'd say Naked Lunch. They really have the tough stuff by the scruff of the neck at the moment."


Speaking of right now, how's the Melbourne scene? Which producers there pique your interest?

"Melbourne techno is vibrant! It's a different sound these days than what I grew up with. More laid-back, melodic and deep, which I love and respect, from the likes of Haul music, Beat Geek, Pinksilver, etc. The 'traditional' sound is still there, though, and we are still rich with live acts such as Koda, Enclave, Son Of Zev, and so on. The beauty of it is I have probably missed mentioning a truck-load of artists! I don't get out as much as I used too. It's nice to know it's out there, though, being enjoyed and blowing minds - the same way it did mine many moons ago!"


What equipment are you currently using to produce music, and what added extras do you keep in the studio to amuse/inspire you?

"I'm all software, apart from Midi keyboard and monitors. Embarrassingly, I'm still using Logic 5.5.1" - (laughter) - "with the latest version of Pro Tools and a bucket load of VST and RTAS software I have collected over the years. An Mbox 2 feeds a pair of KRK Rokit 6s. Plenty for the space I'm in."


Any hot tips for aspirant producers out there?

"If I'm honest, I think I was a little 'green' as a producer when I had my first release, so really practice hard, hone your skills, develop your ears (and trust them) and know your theory. 'Learn the rules in order to break them' is how it was put to me recently. Take your time and understand that the little things count for just as much, if not more."


All time most-inspiring musician....?

"Good lord... um... Well, considering the current forum, it's got to be Jeff Mills. I'm on my second copy of Lifelike and I still listen and daydream regularly... Ahh."

Chicago is not just a windy place, the largest non-coastal U.S. city, or the undisputed home of house music.

While I did my post-grad uni thesis on industrial music in Britain in the 1970s, I partially cut my crap DJing teeth on the Chicago output of labels like Relief Records, Dance Mania and Radikal Fear back in the mid '90s.

So, when it came to getting someone to remix the next Little Nobody track, Jass Muzak, itself heavily influenced by Chicago-style jazz and Chicago-born drummer, Gene Krupa, I turned to one of my favorite contemporary Chicago DJ/producers, Wyndell Long - a man who's previously worked with Mike Dearborn and popped up on superb labels like Peacefrog, Djax, Pro-Jex and Primate.

Wyndell then surprised us all by responding with not just one brilliant remix, but two. "I wanted them to keep the main original sounds, but be rooted in the classic Chicago sound - without sounding too crusty," he assessed.

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He also did a brilliant remix of another Little Nobody track, Compulsion, just for good measure, all the mixes destined for release through Elektrax and IF? Records this year - Jass Muzak in fact available later this month.

"This is the kind of stuff I like to spin," Wyndell says.

Simple as that.

So, when later bouncing off Wyndell to compose this interview/story on the man, I decided to keep it equally simple, and go Q+A format instead of setting the stage and leading the witness. Wyndell has so much to say, anyway, who wants my two cents' worth cluttering up the mix? Read on, and enjoy...


Let's backtrack a bit: How'd you get inspired to start making music?

"That's simple: Prince and Mike Dearborn. I'd been a huge fan of all kinds of music, R&B, classic rock, and alternative. Prince really opened my eyes to one man being able to be a full band. Taught myself how to play piano, but didn't do much with it until I got to college. Ran out of money so I got a midi keyboard, a rack synth, and connected it all via midi to my Amiga. I started making rap beats and R&B trax for the campus NIU American Idols. I enjoyed producing stuff, but it would only go so far. I met Mike [Dearborn] a couple years later and he opened my eyes to a few things. He was releasing stuff on Djax and had a crate of records that amazed the shit out of me. His own Djax trax, [Joey] Beltram, [Neil] Landstrumm, Steve Stoll... just genius after genius. He let me hold the crate for a week or so and I dived in and listened to everything. I had no idea techno 'n' house was still going on. Much of the scene we had in Chicago had vanished, due to the labels and promoters constantly ripping off the artists. I guess the artists started getting calls from promoters and labels overseas, and the rest in history. I buckled-down and started recording tracks. I sent demos to a few contacts I had got through K-Alexi and I got calls from Peacefrog and Primate. That's basically how it started."


You've been producing music and interacting within the music industry for quite a time now - what keeps you motivated, and what integral changes have you noticed over that period?

"14 years, off and on. The ability to sit down and create something unique is always going to be the central motivation. It most definitely isn't the money. You don't make a lot of money doing this kind of music - therefore you have to have a real motivation for doing this kind of work, and it's good to be versatile. I do a lot of music in different styles, also audio mixdown and mastering, sell the occasional beat here and there, and now I'm getting back into making trax and DJing. Keeps me busy."


What gear/software are you making most use of in the studio at the moment?

"I used to use a lot of hardware. Never could afford the Access Virus, Akai or Roland boxes so I always had 'lower class' gear. Kawai syth racks and Zoom samplers. I switched to a PC-based system a few years ago. I tried a few of the studio-in-a-box programs and found Reason to be the best answer, along with Sonar. I know gear-happy, Pro-Tools and analog-loving producers frown down on Reason, but really, they can stick a thumb up their ass with that shit. Reason sounds as good as the person who is using it. If you have a basic understanding of creating and recording audio, then that's what your trax will sound like. If you have skillz, then you trax will shine like a Radiohead track. I had no problem importing my custom sound sets into Reason, and once you get pass the presets and get into the Combinator and programming, you can make some timeless stuff. It sounds better than any of my hardware setups did, and it's so much easier to route audio.

"With my custom sound banks and a few refills, I'm able to create just about anything I need to, and for multi-track vocal work I can export everything to Sonar. It's truly amazing what you can do with a fast PC - just don't let your music PC touch the Internet. One of the things I'm trying to do is work with arpeggiators in my techno productions - getting back to that old analog sound. I never used them for any of my vinyl releases. I've always admired artists like Steve Stoll who could turn a great synth-sound into a classic six-minute track, without overloading it. It'll be one of my goals for future trax work.

"For my hip hop and other types of music I do, I tend to stick to sample libraries, programmed synth-patches, and try to never, ever use presets. Less is more these days, so I try to keep the productions easy on the ears. Much of it is being an audio engineer as well as a music producer. Knowing how frequencies interact with each other, knowing when to compress or limit, et cetera."


So which part of your studio is the most vital facet?

"I have the entire collection of the classic albums video series, as well as the Beatles Anthology on my music computer hard-drive. When I need to take a break, there's nothing like looking at how The Dark Side of the Moon or Aja were recorded. My hat goes off to those bands of the '60s, '70s and '80s."


What food/drinks keep you fueled throughout production time?

"Bubblegum and water. All I need."


Which current crop of artists and labels are grabbing your attention?

"To be honest, I've been less-enthused about today's techno 'cuz it all sounds like it's coming out of the same studio to my ears. I do like what's coming out on some of the netlabels out there - I find them to be a great source of trax that try to innovate instead of bullshit with presets and special FX. I'm amazed it's all available for free: good-quality music that 10 years ago you'd have had to pay for. Thinner, Epsilonlab, Archipel, One Bit Wonder, Clever Music... all put out great stuff. Some of my all-time favorite labels are Synewave, Proper, Novamute, Tresor, Peacefrog, Djax, Torema, Elypsia, Drop Bass Network, Sm:)e Communications, Axis, Primate, and Majesty, just to name a few. I like the stuff that's on stompy.com as well. Good, jackin' house music. I purchase from there a lot too. Big fan of Moodymann and Leon Louder."


Mandatory inane question #101: If you were pressed into a corner and forced to confess under great duress, how would you define the sounds/styles you're currently making yourself?

"Retro-future Chicago Jack. I'm trying to make tracks that don't have that over-compressed, overproduced sound I hear now; my stuff is geared towards making people dance. With my hip hop 'n' trippy productions, I'm trying to keep it musical, which can be hard in today's market."

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You also have your own awesome outlet through nosleepmusic.com. What's happening in that department?

"It's more like a Jeff Mills/Axis thing, an outlet to release my own productions. There are a lot of people downloading music from my little netlabel; I can see the statistics on my web control panel. I just wish they would reach out and give me a shout. Send me a DJ mix. Something. Hope they're enjoying the sound.

"It's a lot of fun to do the releases. I learned after being bent over and entered a few times by labels that you do this kind of music, #1, because you enjoy it - not to make money. I would like to work with more artists; hopefully I'll get the time to do it in the near future. Last artist I did a release with on nosleep.com was Martin Mueller, who went on to get a release on a Neuton-distributed label (on the Exacta.udio imprint) and is doing a lot of work now. Unfortunately, Neuton closed its doors last year."


Biggest influences on your music?

"When it comes to tracks, its the Chicago instinct to make music for the dancefloor, first and foremost. Something that makes me move. I was drawn to Chicago house cuz it was always focused on dance, no matter how warped a sound might be. Sub kicks, crisp hats, dirty samples. It's all Chicago.

"For my other productions I'm influenced by a wide variety of artists, ranging from R&B, alt-rock, and classic rock. I can take in Steely Dan, Velvet Underground, Parliament, Radiohead, Prince, DJ Premiere, the Pixies, My Bloody Valentine, all in one sitting, and bring all that to my music. It might effect how I play a bassline, or EQ drums, or emulate guitar. I will always be a big fan of music. No ego here."


What new Wyndell Long work can we look out for?

"I'm getting a lot of remix work, so most of my output will be from there. I don't really send demos and stuff like that anymore - I wouldn't even know who to send to. I've had some labels request demos, so I'll probably cook up some new flavor and see where it goes. Otherwise I'm quite happy just putting out new tracks on my netlabel."


You've released through a lot of respected labels like Peacefrog, Primate, Djax, Reel Musiq, Subspace, Majesty, Elypsia, Pro-Jex and R&S. CDs seem to be a disappearing facet of the electronic music industry, and a fair amount of people are cutting back on vinyl production these days because they say it just doesn't make back the money invested. How do you feel about this?

"The music business, on a whole, is dying a slow death. Pretty soon, the way it's going, it will just be a hobby anyone can do. Soulja Boy is making hits with one finger and fruity loops. His target audience doesn't care how the song was made, they don't care about hearing expertly-played chords, bass riffs, minor major changes; they want a slamming beat and loud vocals. Again, less is more today.

"The way music is listened to, as well as how it is obtained, has changed a great deal in the last five years. You could be a music noob, go buy a 80GB mp3 player, then go over to a friend's. He'll take it and fill it to the rim with music. Thus you went from having barely any music to having a collection it would take a lifetime to obtain - that's what's happening now. Downloading was a problem before, but people have been collecting so much stuff over the years now. In fact, if they shut-down file sharing today, it wouldn't matter. The damage has been done. The collectors out there have enough stuff to last them four lifetimes and will continue to pass friend-to-friend, pal to pal. The music business must have been too busy snorting yayo to foresee the damage the mp3 could do to their business model. On top of that, in some genres of music the quality of the songs suck ass. Most of the hip hop I hear sounds like thugs who never finished high school. Not good, cuz that market dries out fast.

"All these factors are making it less and less productive to press these records. For the trax scene, eventually all of the labels that had a successful catalog will go to digital format. It doesn't make any since to press vinyl today. How many people other than DJs do you know that own turntables? It's not enough to support a business. Hell, most rappers and singers out now are trying to become actors in order to get a steady paycheck. The market has changed so much."


Is vinyl, then, dead?

Not dead - just hanging on. It will end up being a nostalgia-type thing. Something for labels to do to celebrate 10 years in the business, or something like that. I sold a lot of my records recently. Not a lot of buyers like you would think. Folks are feeling the digital trend. The days of carting heavy crates to gigs, or your records being stolen or lost at an airport, are over. I bring about 30 records with me for sets cuz I still like the feel of it, but at home it's all audio CDs (no mp3s).

"The cost to press vinyl makes it hard to turn a profit from what I've been told, and those that still do only do small, limited runs. It's sad, really, cuz vinyl is the best way to DJ. No doubt. Nothing like seeing what you're playing. But lets face facts here - the CDJ-1000 MK3 is a beast, and technology determines what's standard now.

"The CDJ-1000 is an amazing piece of technology as well, it's about as close as you can get to using vinyl with CDs. I use a couple of Denon DNS1000s for my mixes and they're a wonderful thing. When you factor in how lightweight it is to carry a crapload of CD-Rs, versus the bulk-weight of a crate of vinyl, coming to a set with CDs or a 4GB USB thumb drive... the future is freaky, for sure.

"I don't buy vinyl anymore. It's easier for me to either download trax, or create my own stuff. Now I can make something with the dancefloor in mind (which is a better way to approach creating trax for me) on fire, burn it and play it. No cost of pressing up acetates or sending a dozen demos in hopes of getting the trax pressed by a label. CDs are lightweight and convenient. The sound is much better; I don't fall into that crusty view of the whole vinyl vs. digital argument. Sonically, CDs cover the full spectrum of sound, and to me that's important. I remember the first time I heard Parliament's Flashlight on CD. I had no idea there were hi-hats in the damn song. With vinyl you lose high-frequency response as the record goes further to the end. Flashlight was the last track on Side B, so a lot of the high frequencies and clarity were lost. It was like hearing it for the first time on CD. This is what CDs bring to music production - a CD is as good as the recording and mastering engineer makes it. You can take out the digital harshness of a song with simple EQ-ing, or a nice tape saturation plug-in. Give it that warmth you hear producers bitch about. I always remaster tracks I intend to play in DJ mixes as well (if needed), so if something sounds too shiny, I can put that dirt and thump in it so my set has a universal bounce to it.

"This is the day and age when everybody is a DJ and can download Beatport's Top 20 and do a DJ mix with Traktor, with the computer doing all the work for you. With all this technology, the one thing that will always weed out the bullshit DJs from the real ones is what they play, especially now. Everyone is going to the same spots to get music now, so chances are everyone will play the same shit sooner or later. If I go see Mark Farina, Derrick Carter or DJ Heather play, I know I'm going get shit I ain't heard yet. The kind of stuff that most DJs won't get to because they want to sound hip, and play two hours of trax that all sound the same from the same source. So many mixes I've checked out over the past year have bored me to pieces. In fact, the last great mix I heard was a nice funky house mix on some blog page which was done with Tracktor. Go figure."


When we decided to switch some of the IF? Records back-catalog to digital download, I got an anonymous email saying "You've sold you're [sic] soul to the devil!!!" (I kid you not). So... have we...?

"Tell them to eat shit with some melted cheese. I can't take comments like that seriously. I guess everyone is suppose to ignore new technology and stay stuck in the days of surface noise, rumble, and scratches. Vinyl is like VHS. It was very nice while it was relevant, but when something comes along that's better, you use it. Are you going to go back to video tape and chuck your DVDs or Blu-ray movies in the garbage? Only music producers and audiophiles scream junk like that.

"Truth is, the music business as a whole is a slowly dying industry, so you need to do whatever you can to make ends meet. Digital makes sense. Everybody and their grandma has an mp3 player now, and there will come a day when the up-and-coming generation won't even know what a record player was... they'll have to Wiki it."


So do DJs really need to continue to use any vinyl? Or can they effectively instead construct entire sets out of stuff they've downloaded off the Internet?

"Why not? I do, and it's great going between the formats when playing live. The only thing I don't like about digital is the non-user friendly nature of blank CD-Rs. When you burn enough of them, you end up having a CD wallet resembling Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans painting. They all look the same, the CDs. How do you know what the hot shit is? Colored stickers? Doesn't work. With vinyl you could look at the record and know what's on it, or look at the record label and know what style you were grabbing. Too bad you can't do that with CD-Rs. I burn six to eight tracks per CD-R, and in reality that can get messy when trying to find that hot track you want to bang at the right moment.

"I saw a video with Ritchie Hawtin, mixing four tracks at once with Traktor along with some funky controller. The songs were blending themselves. He could Skype or check his e-mail while spinning, it looks like. Opens up a whole new area of possibilities, especially for DJs like me who love to hold blends for a long time. When he was looking for tracks, he had picture covers to represent the EPs. Nice."


Where in Chicago are you from?

"Born on the South Side, Marynook, near Stoney Island Ave. Moved to the south suburbs during the wonder years. Had the best of both worlds."


Chicago has such a cool history with house and techno, taking in people like yourself, Curtis Jones (Green Velvet), Mike Dearborn, DJ Sneak, Glenn Underground, Gene Farris, DJ Rush, Emmanuel Pippen, and Boo Williams, just for starters. Who do you most respect from the city, and who have you worked with?

"Mike Dearborn will always be a favorite of mine - not just because he re-introduced me to the music, but more so because people like him, Sneak, Curtis Jones, K-Alexi, Mills, Armando, Stoll, Gene Farris, Paul Johnson, DJ Skull... these guys make stuff I can't. That's what draws me to them.

"As a music producer, I'm limited to what I can come up with. I can't make a decent acid track to save my life, but Mike [Dearborn] can take acid and make it something new every time he fired up the 303s. I never figured out how to use an appregiator or pattern-programmer, so when I listen to Steve Stoll, I'm listening to a master at a work. Sneak makes jams that are for the floor, to get your groove on with. None of that experimental stuff. Classic jams. I can put on Latin Seoul from Sneak and just close my eyes and smooth out. Never gets old. I also loved Armando's (R.I.P.) acid tracks. Good shit.

"Chicago needs a revival. Needs to come back strong. Innovate. The rest of the world has been stepping it up."

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So what's the scene in Chicago actually like these days?

"I really don't know, to be honest. Most of the underground clubs are closed, and the ones that are open tend to cater to the same names year after year, so it's hard for new talent to get noticed. Plus it pays shit here to DJ, so you don't get a lot of action. I don't know which labels are still keeping it up in Chicago; I'd like someone to e-mail me on that. There are a couple spots to buy vinyl, like the legendary Grammaphone's, but not a lot of labels are releasing it anymore, so go figure.

"A lot of track producers I loved in the late '90s and early 2000s don't sound like themselves anymore, that includes Chicago guys. They changed their sound so much just to stay relevant and it's a shame that you have to do that. Of course, you can't make a track using the soundsets and samples from the '90s anymore, and expect to be taken seriously. Hell, with the cost of fuel rising, it's been harder for US DJs to travel overseas and spin on a regular basis the last few years. As a consequence, they have developed their own styles now overseas, whether it be schranz, minimal, glitch, ghettotech, whatever. They don't really need Chicago or Detroit music anymore. It's a natural progression. It's progress."


What do you think of veteran British producers like Neil Landstrumm, Tobias Schmidt, Dave Tarrida, Cristian Vogel, Subhead, Tubejerk, Surgeon and Si Begg? Do any of these people stand out for you? Who do you currently dig cutting tunes over in the UK?

"I loved Neil's work before he went all laptop-tech. I still bang his early Peacefrog jams. You would have thought he lived on the South Side of Chicago with what he was dropping back then. Surgeon makes quality stuff as well. Great producer. I DJ'd once with him and Marco Bailey way back. Fun times. Tobias makes nice stuff as well. There're a lot of track-makers and labels I loved that came out of the UK that recorded on Ipcress Communications, Missile Records, Primate."


Have you heard any of the music coming out of Japan?

"I've heard some hip hop coming from Japan. Much better than the crap that passes for hip hop here in the 'States. I always liked Sublime Records out of Japan. Much respect for their stuff, very funky and innovative. Fumiya Tanaka's Torema label as well. I don't know if they're still releasing. Fumiya once sent me most of his catalog to me. It's a treasure I still adore. Great, funky trax.

"I think the Japanese have a handle on making trax 'n' beats that kind of gets lost in Europe and here in the 'States. Innovation is no good without soul 'n' funk. Otherwise it's music that sounds like a computer did it for another computer, not another human being. I swear when I hear what's available on Beatport (the new stuff, not the catalog stuff) I'm thinking every artist up there has to be using the same gear, same studio and same mastering engineer. Where is the funk? Why does every track have the same kick sound? How am I suppose to nod my head to bleep-bleep or another large VST synth saw-tooth chorused bassline? That's what I love about the work of Fumiya, Co-Fusion, DJ Warp, Toshiyuki Yassuda... It's major tech, but used in a way that sounds different each time and designed to make you move. I hate trax that I'm supposed to 'figure out' or understand. It has to move me.

"I mean look at the funk you get with Hifana. You don't need to speak Japanese to groove to those jams. I remember when Farley Jackmaster Funk mixes would be played over WBMX, a Chicago radio station from the early '90s. You would hear Liaisons Dangereuses' Los Niños Del Parque and Peut Etre... Pas (one of my all time favorites) being jacked; couldn't understand a word of it, but bobbin' your head to the funk. That's what's been coming from Japan for the last few years. Hope to visit there someday. Keep jacking that shit, Japan!"


How would you define those aforementioned remixes you've done for us, of Jass Muzak and Compulsion, in a nutshell?

"Just trying to combine the old with the new, without relying on the same sounds everyone else seems to be recycling. They are strictly for the dancefloors. I'm not trying to create some new form of synthesis.

"I found that people responded best to my mash-ups and 'emotional jacking' tracks the last time I played out live. I'm trying to incorporate that into my sound and DJ mixes now. Also trying to keep the amount of elements I use to a minimum. Less-is-more, trying to get better at that. Besides, those Reason Combinators will eat up your CPU in no time."


What kind of listener/audience were you aiming at with them?

"Hot skinny chicks in the white tank-tops and pigtails. No really, that's kind of what I imagine when creating trax now. Girls like to groove, and they generally don't like to have the shit scared out of them by some massive VST synth plug-in. Guys tend to stand around and stare at the speakers. The chicks get them to jack, and all is good."


Not looking a gift-horse in the mouth at all, but is there any particular reason why you decided to do these mixes?

"It's a lot easier than creating from scratch. I can take a jam, feel it out, and try to add some jack to it if needed. I try not to get all experimental with it, I want the remix to have the same elements it did in the original. Remixing is fun, and it seems to be a genre on its own. Besides, no one is satisfied with the original mix anymore it seems. Might as well have fun with it."


Care to add anything else? Pet peeves apply here.

"I can recall when there was only 'house' music in Chicago. In a mix you would hear techno, house, deep house, disco, hip hop, jazz tracks, all in one mix. Things have gotten so categorized that often people only want to hear one narrow singular type of music. Kind of sad, and I hope things change. Variety is the scary spice of life. Technology, no matter how deviant, is a wonderful thing. Embrace it. I could have got into computer recording long before I did but I was too pig-headed and fossil-like to make the effort. Racks and racks of prehistoric gear for someone like me ain't a good way to make music. I should have moved to an all-computer setup a long time ago. I had no recall with my setup. Now I can open up something I did eight months ago in Reason or Sonar, and it's just how I left it, right up to the last patch I was editing. Now I have sounds beyond sounds. I can take a shitty track I did a year ago that I left on the 'to do' shelf, and remake it into something worth listening to, burn it, and play it live. This is the way to make music. Embrace technology.

"Same thing with DJing. CD turntables have been on the market for over a decade now, but I just got into them in my own studio maybe a year ago. I could pimp-slap myself in the face for being so late coming into it, because the benefits are so big. I've sold most of my vinyl and I only have one Technics 1200, which is covered most of the time. I went from having a crate of about 120 records for six years to having thousands of digital tracks in a few weeks. It's so nice. Learn the new toys and network, network, network.
All my remixes will be posted on my site for listening. All my netlabel releases will be available for download from my site as well, and feel free to contact me to talk shop, remixes, whatever."

Biochip C: Acid Flashback?

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"Now it is your work to get that germenglish into a real existing language. If you feel that I totally missed the point on some questions, just tell me and I will elaborate."

Thus disclaimed Martin Damm yesterday in a follow-up e-mail regarding our international fireside chat that happened this week - 14 years after the last time I interviewed the man.

Let me be frank straight off the bat here: I love Martin. We've been mates since 1995, when I first rang him in Germany out of the blue, from Melbourne, with a copy of one of Force Inc.'s Rauschen compilations in my hand, and he agreed to an interview without a moment's hesitation.

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I was calling Martin because he made the coolest acid music I'd heard, under the alias of Biochip C, for Force Inc. and DJ Ungle Fever. He also had an array of other aliases, from The Speed Freak to Subsonic 808, that tweaked sounds as diverse as disco house, happy hardcore, and the real, genuine gabber hardcore.

So when it came to organizing our first IF? warehouse rave party back in Melbourne with an international drawcard (Omniglobe 2 - which also happened to be our last big rave party!) in February 1996, Martin was the guy I invited over to perform live.

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We also had him play at Club Filter - Melbourne's top techno club at the time - that same week, and he was dropping tunes at 200bpm with the express intention of clearing the dancefloor.

Anyway, we've stayed spasmodically in touch over the years since, and when I got all nostalgic recently and resurrected my interest in acid and the TB-303 - after dismissing it years ago - and hacked together a vaguely old skool acid tune under a pretentious alias (Psyborg-9), I asked Martin to do a Biochip C remix for the release.

His mix is an acid flashback killer, but it also embraces completely new nuances and directions, making this nothing near a dinosaur remix but something fun, bubbling and cool instead.

So, without ado, enamoured with the mix and mulling over the distant past, I flung a few desperate questions his way, and this what my German buddy had to report:


How did you get inspired to start making music?

"I've always been interested in music. I had a classical piano-education from age 4 to12;
after that I learned to play the guitar, but was always interested in electronic music and sounds. In 1988 I bought my first electronic instrument (a Casio FZ-1 16-bit sampler) and in 1990 I had my first release."


You've been producing music and interacting within the music industry for a long time. What keeps you motivated, and what integral changes have you noticed over the years?

"I don't get any motivation from the music industry nowadays, but from my DJ gigs. The changes the music industry has undergone in the last years (like the digital marketing) are not yet finalized. Still a lot of things have to change, and especially the GEMA (organisation for copyright in Germany) need to adopt their business to the new millennium. They still think and work in old skool ways, which are actually hindering the artists more than helping any creativity."


What gear/software are you making most use of in the studio at the moment?

"Mostly software nowadays. I sold most of the hardware I was collecting in the '90s, but I kept the Roland x0x series and some other "specials". I stopped producing music at the end of 1998 because I'd 'heard it all, seen it all', and I was bored with the (in general) techno scene. The hardware I had used before was over-used, so not appealing anymore. What made me start producing again (in 2001) were the new possibilities when producing entirely on the computer."


Which part of your studio is the most vital facet?

"Well, my studio looks like a true nerd room. You can find action figures of all types
there, starting with Dr Channard from Hellraiser II, Ash from Army of Darkness, Gizmo,
Ryo-ohki from Tenchi Muyo, numerous skulls, and lots of stuff. I guess it's these childish surroundings that make me want to play with and tweak around with sounds..."


What food/drinks keep you fueled throughout production time?

"Hmmm... coffee, cigarettes and ganja?"


Which current crop of artists and labels are grabbing your attention, and why so?

"To be honest, none. I'm doing my own thing, mostly in the hardcore scene, and there are not many artists who really inspire me. Nowadays it's hard to keep an overview on the things going on. Everyone seems to release tracks via digital distribution, and getting an overwiew is not as easy as going to a record store back in the '90s was."


Here's the mandatory inane question: If you were pressed into a corner and forced to confess under great duress, how would you define the sounds/styles you're currently making?

"That would be Cycore. Yeah, it is the term I use to describe my hardcore productions.
I like small elements in the tracks, tiny edits, and lots of elements happening at the same time, so that the listener can find new things every time he listens to the tracks. With my techno productions I'm not that detailed, but I always aim at using lots of different elements in my tracks."


The first time I interviewed you, way back in 1995, you said: "if I want to do Biochip C. now, for example, I have a certain style and I have some limits that I won't cross with that concept." Is this still the case with Biochip C a decade and a half on?

"Well, let's see: Biochip C started with breakbeats and acid in the early '90s, did some techno and house, later electro and "strange techno" and is back now with doing acid again. I guess the concept of this project is quite....flexible..."


In that same interview you also quipped that "I won't get too hard and I won't get too ambient, and of course I won't get too trancey, because all trancers are my enemies! (we both laugh). Let's put it this way: I want to do different things but in no way will I do trance stuff." Does the antipathy towards trance continue to this day?

"Ha-Ha, I said 'enemies'....Ha-Ha-Ha... What a '90s thing... Well, does it tell you enough when I mention that when I'm booked for outdoor festivals to playing hardcore, I spend most of my time (except for my set) in the Goa areas? When i mentioned "trance" in the '90s I was referring to the typical Frankfurt trance, with cheesy melodies and gated pads. I still do not like that much, but tracks with a trancy-repetitive effect (without the cheese) can really be good."


You've worked extensively in the Biochip C, name, of course, but also under aliases like Subsonic 808, Search & Destroy, 909 Disco Babes, Chicks With Dicks, The Speed Freak, Steel, and DJ Fistfuck, etc, etc. Which aliase(s) are you continuing to use these days?

Only The Speed Freak, my main project for hardcore, and Biochip C for techno stuff are still used - and sometimes Biobreaks, for drum & bass-like stuff."


You've also run labels like Anodyne, Ozone, and Napalm. What's afoot with these?

"I've parked all my '90s labels, but am running 3 labels for Audiogenic (France) these days: Absurd Audio for hardcore, Off Bits for techno, and Subconnexion for drum & bass.
I've been thinking about relaunching some of my old labels, but somehow it feels wrong to me. They were part of the '90s with their sound, their artwork, their everything. For
a relaunch they would have to undergo changes, which might (in the end) not
be good. Look at the relaunch of Mokum or DJ Ungle Fever; both labels failed
big time and should have better remained a part of music history rather than forcing
them into a relaunch."


What new Martin Damm releases can we look out for?

"New Speed Freak records on Absurd Audio, plus some Biochip stuff on Off Bits and Industrial Strength."


You have a huge history, having released your music on vinyl and CD, as well as releasing 12-inches through various labels like Force Inc., DJ Ungle Fever, Analog Records, Mille Plateaux, Shockwave Recordings, Mokum, Anodyne and Industrial Strength. CDs seem to be a disappearing facet of the electronic music industry, and a fair amount of people are cutting back on vinyl production these days because they say it just doesn't make back the money invested. How do you feel about this? Do you agree?

"As much as I do not like that, I have to agree. The times are hard for vinyl sales.
Being a DJ, I was able to avoid using CD-decks so far, but I see my chances of not using them disappear in the near future. Currently I'm thinking about leaving out the whole CD-thing and becoming a notebook-DJ... but still, I prefer vinyl."


Is vinyl dead? Or just becoming more of a select option?

"It is becoming a select option as long as labels still have the money to produce vinyl at all. I will stick with it for as long as possible."


You have a decent, growing presence on online digital carriers. What do you make of the digital download phenomenon?

"To be honest, I never cared much about that. I don't buy tracks online, as I want to be able to hold something in my hands for the money I have spent - yes, I am old skool in that way. Also, on my royalty statements, I can see that the money made by online sales is still nothing compared to the vinyl I sell. Of course, this is the future, but if I have to stick with online sales entirely, I'd die of hunger in the first months. On our upcoming website, cycore.de, I will offer nearly all of my old productions as digital downloads, but that is just a side-project for our "real" vinyl shop."


Back to rthat interview in '95, you said: "It's strange, because when I started [in 1990] we sold more copies of each record than we do now, because there were not so many labels and it was easier to sell more. But that's okay - it's better now." Do you feel the same way in 2009, with the proliferation of digital labels?

"I'm a DJ, raised with vinyl. Seen for the DJ point, digital labels are (in my area of music) of no importance. Of course, it is good and fantastic and whatever that digital labels are easy and cheap to handle, but most of the digital labels lack quality-control; in my point of view it is kind'a essential that a label owner has to invest money and take a risk, because then he cannot afford releasing shitty productions. Nowadays the web is flooded with them, and none of the DJs I know take the time to listen through the output of digital labels, but goes for vinyl or CD."


What do you think of the Japanese producers like Captain Funk, Toshiyuki Yasuda, Co-Fusion, HIFANA, DJ Warp, Shufflemaster, Merzbow, Alone Together, Gadget Cassette, et al? Do any of these people stand out for you, and why do you think the Japanese scene is so vibrant and charismatic?

"I only know Merzbow from your list, and I have quite a collection of his stuff here. What I like about the Japanese audience in general is that people are very open for everything. They can deal with all the music you play for them, and they obviously have fun with it. That is very different in Germany - here it's hard to motivate the audience at all. I'm working with artists from the underground hardcore scene in Japan, and every time they book me the parties are fantastic. The hardcore scene there seems to be mixed very much with the cosplay-scene, so we always have dozens of colourful people
in the audience..." (laughs).


Have you heard any of the music coming out of Australia?

"The only person i meet quite regularly nowadays is Mark N. from Nasenbluten. In my opinion, he is the best DJ of all, and a really nice person, too."


Finally, how would you define your remix you've done for us, in a nutshell?

"At first an element of a track has to 'jump at me', so that I want to make
a remix of it. In our case it was the acid-line. I took this element, jammed with the software, and then there was the remix. I don't like forcing a track or remix into a certain direction, but prefer jamming and seeing where the track wants to go. This time it turned into a trancey thingy, gripping you by the balls and not letting you go until it is over."

I recently did a track in which I had the eerie feeling I was channeling vintage Underground Resistance or Suburban Knight, but with about 1% of the talent of those people--and even that's claiming some unwarranted kudos. It was around 4:00am and I was chronically sleep-deprived at the time I finished hacking the beast together.

I somewhat pretentiously called the track Compulsion, more likely because of the vast amounts of chocolate and strong coffee consumed during the process than any twee philosophical intention, and in a fit of equally faux-iconoclastic thinking, that same night I emailed Luke's Anger--of Tigerbass Records fame, the label run by Kid606--out of the blue, and asked him to do a remix.

Thank god he said yes. In fact it flipped me out when he replied at all, and the subsequent Luke's Anger remix is a brilliantly cut-up, eclectic, funked-up, appropriately glitchy interpretation.

"I had a bash at it and it all flowed really nicely!" he told me after finishing the mix last month. "Pretty happy with it; whaddya reckon?!" The remix was subsequently dropped at the next Luke's Anger gig, at the Bloc Festival in March.

"5,000 ravers going mental in a very traditional English holiday park--was very surreal, but lots of fun!" I was chuffed to hear straight after.

"I opened my set with the remix and got lots of cheers and shit, was a good set to play as all the other arenas had closed, so it was at capacity with a massive queue to get in at 6:30am."

It goes without saying that I was an out-of-order fan of Luke's Anger before requesting the mix, and have been lucky enough to get the guff about a lot of his records otherwise difficult to come across (at least here in Japan) right here on Fun in the Murky.

The guy seriously blows my brains out in ways I'm still coming to grips with, and that's exactly how I like my tunes. Hyperactive, quirky, kinky electronica that defies gravity, yet still--somehow--retains the funk. A wee bit like what Neil Landstrumm was doing on Peacefrog 14 years ago, but more gung-ho 2009. If that makes any sense at all.

So, as is my usual selfish bent, when we talked remixes, I also brought up interviews, and fired off a swag of queries. I thought it best here to leave these babies as a simple Q+A. It's easier on the eyes, I'm lazy, you get to see how inane I can be, and the respondent's actual responses are often pocketbook classics.

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Read on...

Where in the UK are you from?

"Norwich, famous for its vibrant Colman's Mustard scene!"


Yawn question. How did you get inspired to start making music?

"Sometime in the late '80s, me and my brother got an Amiga 500; I was amazed and intrigued at what he could do with tracker software like OctaMED and Protracker, so--me being the impressionable younger brother--I wanted a bash, too!"


Luke's Anger is a spin on Luke Sanger, right? So... who dreamed it up, and when?

"When spamming various record labels with CDs, I got a reply from Jerome Hill (Don't Recordings), saying he dug the tunes and wanted to release them, etc. He misread my e-mail address scribbled on the CD as 'luke's anger', so I thought, yeah, I'll go with that..."


You've been producing music and interacting within the music industry for a relatively chunky period of time, right?--how long exactly, and what integral changes have you noticed over that period?

"Er, well, the first vinyl release was a track on Don't Recordings in 2005, which I wrote in 2004... So, although I'd been writing tracks for a lot longer, that would be the first 'Luke's Anger' release. I don't really need to keep motivated as I write tracks to keep me sane! The only change I could note would be that it's getting harder to shift vinyl; it's a shame, 'cos I've always been a vinyl junkie. I teach music tech at a college, and most of the younger students, age 16-18, don't have the same attachment to records as I did when I was that age."


What gear/software are you making most use of in the studio at the moment?

"Software-wise, I've been using Ableton since Version 1, and it always gets used, seems to be getting better all the time. My hardware is ever-changing, as I seem to buy and sell a bit more than I should, but the main players are: Minimoog, Elektron Machinedrum UW, Elektron Monomachine, and x0xbox--a homemade TB303."


Which part of your studio, or completely unassociated facet to music production, is the most vital facet in there?

"At the moment, my cat keeps me amused by jumping around and trying to sharpen her claws on my Minimoog--oi, bad cat!"


The foodstuffs that keep you fueled throughout production time?

"Absolutely shitloads of tea, I drink buckets of it. Also booze, yeah, beer... mmmm..."


Which current crop of artists and labels are grabbing your attention?

"New stuff? Hmmm, on the techno tip Ben Pest and Paul Birken can do no wrong in my eyes. I saw Egyptian Lover at Bloc Festival last week, and he blasted my face off with just an 808 and a mic, but then he's not very current, I suppose [laughter]. Got sent a promo from Tigerbass of an artist called Doshy, sounded a bit like jacked-up early Mr. Oizo, that was right up my alley, oo-er."


What do you think of veteran British producers like Neil Landsrumm, Tobias Schmidt, Dave Tarrida, Cristian Vogel, Subhead, Tubejerk and Si Begg?

"I love all of those producers and have bought and played records by all of them, especially Subhead and Si Begg. Was a very sad day when Phil (of Subhead) passed away."


Here's the mandatory silly question: If you were pressed into a corner and forced to confess under great duress, how would you define the sounds/styles you're currently making?

"Spangfunk, probably. My mate called it 'bashi bashi techno'..."


Better question to possibly make up for the last one: You've released stuff through Tigerbass and Don't. What's your relationship like with them?

"Both labels are great, Don't is weird and wonderful, Tigerbass is straight-up club bangers, a win-win situation. Oh yeah, and they both release actual vinyl records!"


You also have your own brilliant label that personally I'm loving, Bonus Round. What's happening in that department?

"Ha-ha, cheers, you must be one of the three people who bought the records! Got Bonusround005 nearly ready, it's a track by me with remixes from Michael Forshaw, Paul Birken and Dzaxy, and it's gonna rock! All the back-catalogue is available digitally now, and I'm considering starting up a digi-only bastard-offspring-ugly-cousin label to cater for the stuff that doesn't fit into Bonus Round's strict regime."


Biggest influences on your music?

"Everything, my girlfriend, my cat, other people's music I can nick ideas from--I mean, be influenced by..."


What new Luke's Anger releases can we look out for?

"A new Bonus Round EP, a split-12" with the ever-awesome 3d!t on Kitty Corner, a remix for Håkan Lidbo on Tigerbass, and a remix for your good self, I do believe!"


CDs seem to be a disappearing facet of the electronic music industry, and a fair amount of people are cutting back on vinyl production these days because they say it just doesn't make back the money invested. How do you feel about this?

"CDs are horrible nasty things; I fucking hate them, always have done. It's a shame about vinyl, but like I said before, if the kids aint into it then I suppose it's not gonna make profit anymore."


Is vinyl dead?

"Not in my eyes. CD's can die though, the little sods."


Do DJs really need to continue to use vinyl? Or can they instead construct entire sets out of stuff they've downloaded off the Internet?

"I suppose not. I do love the feel of vinyl, and although Serato is the bollocks, you still need to stare at a laptop which takes a bit of the fun out it for me. I'm still amazed at what DJs (like Jerome Hill for instance) can do with two record players; maybe I'm easily pleased? Either way, if it's rocking the party, then I won't complain."


Have you heard any of the music coming out of Japan?

"I saw the Shibusashirazu Orchestra from Japan in the UK, that was probably one of the best live performances I've ever seen! Cornelius is great too."


Gotta ask, as I'm struggling to define it myself: How would you define the remix you've done of Compulsion for me, in a nutshell?

"A tasty little roller."

DJ Warp / Takashi Watanabe

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"The good thing about Warp--unlike a lot of other producers, and of which I have been guilty and not guilty enough--is that he doesn't seem to be over-obsessed with the breakdowns; he works them to efficiency, and focuses hard on his loops. He makes all seven minutes work, rather than 30 seconds work out of seven minutes."

So observed a good friend of mine, Ben Mill (aka Melbourne-based producer Bitch Shift), late last year, when we were talking about Japanese tech-house producer, Takashi Watanabe--better known as the blossoming DJ Warp. And Mill was absolutely spot-on in his assessment.

Funnily enough, Watanabe has other things on his mind when it comes to interviews about his prowess behind an array of rack-mounted machines in the grounded environment of a studio setting. His mind lives instead on the edge in the cockpit of an F-14 Tomcat.

"Sometimes I sing 'Danger Zone' in the bathroom," he muses.

"I like the music from Top Gun. When I was a child, I dreamed of becoming a fighter pilot, and to this day, Top Gun is my favorite action movie."

First up, a quick history lesson, with subliminal notions of geography on the side: Watanabe kick-started his DJing career as a student in Fukuoka, in Kyushu - my wife's hometown, and the the origin place of insanely delicious tonkotsu (pork bone) noodle soup.

Watanabe acquired his moniker - DJ Warp - thanks to the Warp label t-shirt he was wearing the very first time he spun records. In the intervening years, he's developed a taste for what he calls deep, hard techno, and - after a stint in Okayama, near Osaka - DJ Warp moved back to Kyushu, where he now spins, makes music and runs the infamous Missile parties, in Kagoshima.

For a long-time professional DJ, Watanabe also shares an interesting observation on the use of records. "Vinyl is too bad to the waist," he feels. "I used to play vinyl, but now play CD."

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And funnily enough, despite his extensive back-catalogue and ascendant popularity (Dave Clarke has recently been dropping one of tracks), Watanabe has only been making tunes since April 2008, and says he's influenced on a lot of levels by many different things, from the crowds at the Missile parties to an array of musicians--and from consuming vast amounts of Nodoame candy, and occasionally beer, to keep up his concentration.

"I love Jeff Mills' music and DJing," Watanabe enthuses, and in the same breath refers also to fellow DJ/producers Paul Mac, Dave Tarrida, and DJ Wada from Co-Fusion, as well as tech/electro labels like Drumcode, Sublime, IF? Records, Warp and Tresor.

Then there's the double-whammy of Elektrax Recordings/Hypnotic Room, the twin Australian labels through which Watanabe is currently releasing his music.

"I love Elektrax, and DJ Hi-Shock [who runs the label]," he declares. "He found me and he made me into a techno creator. He is the best label manager, and also my best friend. There are many artists there with great talent and their tracks stimulate my imagination; I have great mates at Elektrax."

The previously released Takashi Watanabe/DJ Warp releases to check out include Fuga, Deep 2, To Go, In the Still of the Night, and Psychic Attack.

Look out for the appropriately-titled Tonkotsu Factory, through Elektrax, on 7 April 2009.

While making his own music, Watanabe has also been tweaking a wad of remixes of late, for people like his label-manager, Hi-Shock, Bitch Shift, Gayle San, Jungle Taitei, three of my Little Nobody tracks, and a new Melbourne artist called Alkan--which we asked him to do for IF?

12 hours later he'd finished, and the remix purrs.

"It's deep tech-house, like a speedy Basic Channel," Watanabe reckons of the Alkan remix, due for release via Juno Download on 30 April 2009.

"The deep and dark sounds make you feel alone, and possibly you'll fall inside yourself. I did it because the original mix is great, and I enjoy remixing!" Watanabe declares with a grin. "Good original source material leads me to make good music! It's like cooking."

VIEW "FUGA" VIDEO

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