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A Fleet of DJ's:
Arthur Baker, Too Many DJ's, Trevor Jackson. + Slackers
Delight, Chris Read, Del Agua
@ The Medicine Bar, gibb st Birmingham, 9pm til 3am,
£4 b4 11 £5 after, Music policy eclectic,
capacity 550 so arrive early, Info 07754 39 27 10
http://www.arthurbaker.net/
for background information, read on....
Arthur
Launches New Record Label
28/04/2002
Whacked Records is the latest and the last in a long
line of record labels launched from the warped mind
of Arthur Baker . . . Streetwise (New Order, New Edition,
Lolleata Holloway, Dr John, Eartha Kitt, Rockers Revenge,
Colonel Abrams . . .), Criminal (Latin Rascals, John
Rocca, Criminal Element Orchestra, Tina B, Wally Jump
Jnr) and Minimal (Danny Tenaglia, Junior Vasquez, Victor
Simonelli, Jackie 60, Blow Out Express, Diana Brown,
Brooklyn Funk Essentials).
Now located in the UK, Arthur has been motivated by
the punk/electro sounds that have been eminating from
London, Berlin, Chicago and finally, once again, New
York City. "The new music I'm hearing now, along
with the breakbeat stuff from the last few years are
the things i can reallty relate to- having come up in
the early 80s of New York City. With ESG, Liquid Liquid,
Arthur Russell, Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club and my own
stuff like Rockers Revenge and the Soul Sonic Force
breaking down musical barriers - and it's happening
again!"
Whacked is gonna be dirty punk rockin', filters poppin',
breaks droppin', distorted electro, beats shockin' dance
music - it'll be loud and in yo face!
Whacked will be delving into the most cuttin' edge
of remixers to get things mashin' across the board.
There will be Whacked Records nights across the UK
(in the Elbow Rooms of Shoreditch, Leeds and Bristol),
Europe and New York City in the upcoming months featuring
such DJs as Erol Alkan, Soulwax, Tommie Sunshine, Deekline
& Don Letts. Arthur will be playing out this summer
under the Whacked banner at such festivals as Sonar,
T In The Park, Gatecrasher and the New Order Finsbury
Park Concert
SOULWAX
- '2 Many DJ's'
In times where moms give their sons and daughters DJ-courses
for their birthdays and bootlegging has become an Olympic
sport, it is nice to see a record that sets a new standard
in the genre of mix-albums: '2 Many DJ's' from Belgian
groove-gurus Soulwax.
Fans of quality left-of-centre rock music will know
Soulwax from their highly acclaimed album 'Much Against
Everyone's Advice', which made it into the British Top
40 and got rave responses in Japan and Australia. But
there's much more to the two brothers than meets the
eye. Apart from being chairman of the Belgian Carpenters
Association (Stephen) and having a black belt in tae
kwon do (David), they are also masters in blending the
finest products of music history together into a catchy,
hilarious and -above all- intriguing groove exploration.
From politically incorrect prog-rock to funky r&b,
from trendy hiptrop to banging German techno, ja: if
it gets a booty going, the Dewaele brothers have it
in their record collection.
Blending
beautiful tunes is far from new for the Soulwax brothers.
Back in the dark days of 1999, David and Stephen started
a DJ-show on Belgian national radio, called 'Hang The
DJ', where they did exactly that. Years before bootlegging
reached the trendy pages of The Face, they were already
making their own mixes for inclusion on the show. Inspired
by the philosophy of one Grandmaster Flash, they cut
together the best bits of funky tracks into an even
funkier mix. It was then that classic mixes of Blackstreet
with Grandmaster Flash, Beck with Prodigy and Beastie
Boys vs Herbie Hancock with INXS vs AC/DC saw the light
of day. Praise the Lord.
After having wooed Belgian and Dutch crowds for a few
years with these eclectic sets, they went on to impress
the most cynical part of the world, the London scene,
a loud yet harmless species. The British capital, where
approximately 67% of the population (including 17% of
women over 65) owns two decks and a mixer, is used to
a thing or two, but Stephen and David immediately raised
quite a few eyebrows with sparkling sets for London's
independent radio station Xfm, national institution
BBC Radio 1 and appearances at the renowned Trash nights
in London and Arthur Baker's Sunday Sessions in The
Elbow Room.
Impact
on the trendometer: a fat 9.5. "When we played
our first set for Xfm", says David, "several
club owners phoned up during the transmission to ask
us to come and play their venues." And when an
(unnamed) DJ played Soulwax's classic bootleg mix of
Skee-Lo's 'I Wish', Survivor's 'Eye Of The Tiger' and
The Breeders' 'Cannonball' at a London club night and
pretended he was mixing it himself, it became official:
Soulwax was hot property. Even Jarvis Cocker showed
his appreciation for their skills and none other than
über-producer Felix Da Housecat invited the brothers
to collaborate on his new project: a girlband called
Glamarama. You gotta believe it
No surprise then that '2 Many DJ's' has been in the
pipeline for yonks, but because getting tracks cleared
is a legal war zone, it has taken quite a bit longer.
"Mick Jones from The Clash was very impressed with
our bootleg version of their 'The Magnificent Seven'
mixed with Basement Jaxx's 'Romeo'", explains Stephen,
"but still we didn't manage to secure the rights
to include it on the album". Rumours that two lawyers
have been decapitated since are unconfirmed.
Too bad, but there's more than enough magic material
to keep you intrigued, smiling and shaking. The record
includes already renowned mixes like Destiny's Child's
'Independent Women' with 10CC's 'Dreadlock Holiday'
and Stooges' 'No Fun' with Salt 'N' Pepa's 'Push It',
but it also features new beautiful blends like Röyksopp's
'Eple' with Dolly Parton's 'Nine To Five' and Basement
Jaxx's 'Where's Your Head At' with Emerson Lake &
Palmer's 'Theme From Peter Gun'.
Tongue-in-cheek is the first thing that springs to
mind when reading these names, but if you peel off the
first, obvious layer, you have to admit that these 'cheesy'
mixes actually do work. Mixing 45 songs together in
one hour of music is one thing. But making that hour
a consistent exploration of the history of pop music
is quite another. '2 Many DJ's' makes you laugh, yes
indeed, but it also covers left, right, top and bottom
of groovy pop. Some of the tracks on this album are
obvious classics, some are simply unknown and some will
very soon become hot sought-after gems. From Japanese
geisha Hanayo covering 'Joe le Taxi', 21st century proof
electro from Adult., Finnish disco from Ural 13 Diktators
or sleazy Peaches to classics from The Velvet Underground,
The Breeders, The Residents, Sly And The Family Stone
and Nena. They're all there for a reason.
'2 Many DJ's' proves that 'genre' has never been such
a naff word.
--------------------------------------------
From new york times
Spreading by the Web, Pop's Bootleg Remix
By NEIL STRAUSS
The song may sound familiar at first, thanks to the
unmistakable guitar riff from Nirvana's classic "Smells
Like Teen Spirit."
But, suddenly, the recording changes course when, instead
of the gravelly voice of Kurt Cobain, the smooth R&B
harmonies of a Destiny's Child hit appear on top of
the grunge music. As the recording moves on, it is clear
that the song is neither fish nor fowl; it is a crossbreed
that neither band ever intended, or even dreamed of.
It is something that is completely different, often
illegal and, thanks to the Internet, becoming explosively
popular.
Songs like this one, which combine different hits without
adding any original music, may represent the first significant
new musical genre to be lifted out of the underground,
developed and then spread, mostly via the Web. The songs,
called mash-ups or bootlegs, typically match the rhythm,
melody and underlying spirit of the instrumentals of
one song with the a cappella vocals of another. And
the more odd the pairing the better.
The music industry has greeted them with mixed response.
A radio station in London playing a popular mash-up
with Christina Aguilera belting her hit "Genie
in a Bottle" over the retro-rock of the Strokes
was served with a cease-and-desist order by Ms. Aguilera's
publisher, Warner-Chappell.
On the other hand, in Britain last week, Island Records
released a legal mash-up, which entered the pop charts
at No. 1. It combines music from three different artists
- the new-wave icon Gary Numan, the R&B singer Adina
Howard and the girl-pop group the Sugababes.
The music - there are hundreds of such recordings -
is particularly popular in Europe, where D.J.'s play
mash-ups at parties. But through the Internet it is
spreading not only there but also in the United States.
There are so many bootlegs using Eminem and Missy Elliott
songs (Missy mixed with the 80's group the Cure, Eminem
with the fey pop of the Smiths, and Missy with the heavy
metal group Metallica, for starters) that some practitioners
refer to making a bootleg as "doing a Missy"
on a song.
The growing scene is a result of two technological
forces that have been revolutionizing music-making and
the record business: cheap computer software, which
makes it possible for a teenager with no musical knowledge
to create professional-sounding productions at home,
and Internet file-sharing services, which provide a
quick way to gather and share music. Naturally, the
music industry is concerned about this, because in most
cases the tracks are being used without permission.
But, today, when the Internet seems to loom larger
in many music fans' heads than lawyers' threats, bedroom
musicians on both sides of the Atlantic are undeterred.
All they need to do is download or buy software programs
like Acid (which automatically synchronizes the rhythms
of different tracks). Then they can scour a file-sharing
service for a cappella versions of songs, which record
companies sometimes include on promotional singles for
club disk jockeys. Using a program like Acid, they can
combine their source material into a new song.
Afterward, the creators upload their musical patchworks
back onto the same file-sharing service they grabbed
the source material from.
The mark of a good bootleg, fans say, is that it doesn't
sound at all like one song superimposed on top of another,
but a new song in itself. Among the most popular bootleg
artists are Freelance Hellraiser (responsible for the
Aguilera mix), Osymyso (who combines more than 100 songs
in one mash-up), Kurtis Rush and Richard X. The more
popular acts create their music through sampling their
own records and then spread the mash-ups through white-label
(i.e. anonymous) singles or playing them on the radio.
But the music can also be accessed on file-sharing sites
like Kazaa and Audiogalaxy.
"If you take two or three or four great records
and mix them together, you should end up with a superior
product," said Steve Mannion, a co-editor at Boom
Selection (www.base 58.com), a Web site dedicated to
documenting the do-it-yourself remix, bootleg and sampling
movements. "The best bootlegs don't sound like
bootlegs; they work at a profound level, and actually
sound like they are the original record."
Completing the circle back to the record store, an
illegal CD collecting the years best mash-ups, "The
Best Bootlegs in the World Ever," recently appeared
on the shelves of some underground music retailers in
England and the United States. It was created by profiteers
who simply downloaded the songs from a file-sharing
service and then burned them onto a CD. "It is
a case of bootleggers bootlegging bootlegs," said
David Dewaele, who, with his brother, Stephen, make
up one of the most accomplished and long-standing teams,
known alternately as 2 Many D.J.s and the Flying Dewaele
Brothers.
Last year, the Dewaele brothers, Belgians who also
play in the popular rock band Soulwax, created a legal
mix album, but not without a lot of difficulty. It took
the brothers two weeks to make the album, released as
"2 Many D.J.s: As Heard on Radio Soulwax Pt. 2"
- there is no Part 1 - but nine months to license the
music (which includes songs by Dolly Parton, Sly and
the Family Stone, and many others). And, even then,
they were only able to clear the music on the CD for
release in Belgium, Luxembourg and Holland.
Pirated copies of the album have been circulating in
the United States, and some music executives who have
heard it cite it as not only the remix album of the
year but the best album of any kind released so far
this year.
"It's my favorite record of the year so far,"
said Steve Greenberg, a former Mercury Records executive
who now runs the independent label S-Curve Records.
"It looks at music in a fresh and original way,
and breaks down walls in ways that are particularly
exciting considering how categorized and fragmented
music is at the moment."
One of the Dewaele brothers' first mash-ups was a combination
of the rapper Skee-Lo's light-hearted "I Wish,"
Survivor's anthem "Eye of the Tiger," and
the Breeders's rock song "Cannonball."
From the opening track of their album, there is a distinct
style and aesthetic at work. Often, the songs are cut
up by computer, so that an introduction can be shortened,
a verse removed or a section repeated to maintain the
set's fast pace. "It has to be something that has
some sort of edge to it, something weird that makes
you go, `What is this!' " said David Dewaele.
Making new songs out of existing works, of course,
is nothing new. There are precedents in everything from
20th century classical to cartoon music, and it is the
cornerstone of hip-hop, be it early pioneers like Grandmaster
Flash or later innovators like Dr. Dre. In the 80's
and 90's, avant-garde sound artists like Plunderphonic,
Negativland and the Tape-Beatles (as well as the pop
pranksters the KLF) challenged copyright law with collages
made of everything from found sounds to top 40 hits.
But many musical observers trace the official beginnings
of the British bootleg scene to the Evolution Control
Committee, which in 1993 mixed a Public Enemy a cappella
with music by Herb Alpert.
Today, there is a glut of such artists, and Mr. Mannion
said that his Web site, Boom Selection, may receive
as many as dozen new ones a week. Does that make it
a fad or something here to stay?
"I dont know what will happen next," Mr. Mannion
said. "When people hear this stuff so much, they
can get bored of it. But to me, I'll never get bored
with this stuff, because that's like getting bored of
music itself."
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