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Will Frankie Knuckles’ “Your Love” Hit No. 1?

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The dance music community has been mourning the loss of Frankie Knuckles ever since his untimely passing was announced earlier this week. Several DJs paid tribute the Godfather of House on their social media, radio playlists were changed to include his tracks, several TV stations ran stories about him, and he appeared on the front page of newspapers around the world.

Now a Facebook campaign is hoping to get his big track “Your Love” with Jamie Principle to No. 1 in the UK (and in other territories) as a proper tribute to the legend. As of 9:00am EST, the page has over 21,000 likes, which has been steadily growing since we all heard the sad news. Help support the campaign by purchasing the song on iTunes, Amazon, and more – everything counts!

Listen to Frankie Knuckles on Pulse Radio


Win a Rooftop of Dreams experience with Marco Resmann (Berlin)

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Everyone gets their turn to bid the summer farewell before we all start saddling up for the winter parties, and for the Rooftop of Dreams the NomadiQ crew are bringing out Marco Resmann to headline. It’s been a good run for the summer with R.O.D having brought out several international heavies on the decks to bring life to that 11th floor of The Radisson. Everyone involved with Rooftop Of Dreams have extended their thanks for the support through the summer by putting up 2-tickets for the event on the 12th of April on the roof of The Radisson. Read further. 

Rooftop Of Dreams Season Closer feat. Marco Resmann (Berlin)

COMPETITION: Here’s how WE & YOU say thank you for the parties! 

Write “THANK YOU FOR THE PARTIES!!!“ on the event page above & tag Pulse Radio

Winners will be announced on the 11th of April 2014 on the event page - Good luck!

“You guys have been the light and the love that has made the series of events an absolute pleasure... SO YES THANK YOU!!” –  Rooftop Of Dreams. In the meantime, you can connect with Marco Resmann (Watergate|Upon You| Poker Flat Records) on his Soundcloud page below for updates on mixtapes. Here is a preview of what's to come. See you on the dancefloor! 

Marco Resmann - Poker Flat (Preview)

Listen to Marco Resmann on Pulse Radio 

 

Bespoke Musik Presents Delicieuse Musique

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Following its successful pool party last week in Miami with the likes of Andhim, Daniel Bortz, and Till Von Sein, among other, Bespoke Musik is back in its home city of New York for a special evening of good vibes and great music as it hosts a Delicieuse Musique showcase. The party is set to take place this Friday, April 4th at the sexy Lot 45 in Brooklyn equipped with a D&B Audiotechnik sound system, a gorgeous interior, and a beautiful courtyard which will be perfect for the warm weather.

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Providing the musical soundtrack to the evening will be Delicieuse’s very own Berlin-based Parra for Cuva as well as Belgian artists Stereoclip and Stavroz (be sure to listen to their new Bespoke Musik mix!) and New York-based Nico. It’s a solid lineup – don’t miss out before the crew travels up north for a gig in Montreal. Get your tickets to the event on Pulse Radio today!

Listen to Bespoke Musik on Pulse Radio

PillowTalk: 'Crew Love is True Love'

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Prior to their debut at DGTL Festival in Amsterdam this April, the San Francisco trio PillowTalk sat down with Pulse Radio to shed some light on how such an inspirational musical project was born and where its heading today as part of the Crew Love gang.

Thanks for talking to us guys! So, how excited are you to kick off this year’s festival season with DGTL Festival? Thanks for having us again. We love playing in and visiting Amsterdam. It hosts some of the best festivals in the world and we enjoy a lot. People love dancing and it's a great honor to share our music with such a great crowd of people and artists. 

It must feel like such an honor to be a part of the stellar lineup. Do you guys have any favorites you’ll have to catch playing over the weekend? It's always so much fun playing with Crew Love and we all support and stick around for each other's sets. Besides that, Robag Wruhme is one of our all time favorite friends and DJs. John Talbot and Gui Boratto will be great to see. Both day’s line-ups are not to be missed and will be fun to romp around.

Lets talk about how you guys got to where you are today as PillowTalk. When did it all start to come together for you as a group? 
Ryan and Sammy started free styling vocal ideas and melodies on the piano and when I moved back to San Francisco from LA in 2010. I stayed in the studio for 4 months, and during that time we were able to really establish the direction we wanted our music to go and also design the live show together. When Sammy and Ryan took "Love Makes Parks" to DEMF in 2010 and Seth Troxler fell in love with it and picked it up for Visionquest, we knew then that we had something unique and special on our hands.



Had you guys ever produced together before? No, but Sammy and I were neighbors back in ‘02. He was working on music with Justin Martin and I was producing my own music and remixes on Om Records at the time. I also had a small bootleg project and label for a couple if years called XMP.

Have there been any ‘make-it or break-it’ moments along the road? Not really. Traveling and being away from home and your loved ones is one of the hardest parts of being on tour. Finding the balance has been hard, but makes it very special when we do come home.

So who does what exactly in the band? Do you switch it up sometimes? 
Sammy is the front man on lead vocals. Ryan is the instrumentalist, playing keys, synth, guitar and bass. I run and control the live show from my laptop and also mix and engineer while playing keys, synths and singing background vocals. We're really happy with the flow and dynamic of our show, but expect some surprises in the new album tour.



Explain what it’s like to produce a classic PillowTalk track like Strange Love. How long does the composing process take? 
Either Ryan or Sammy will come to me with vocal melody or track idea and I will throw down a drum beat and record them. Ryan and I will spend allot of time picking the perfect sounds and creating the groove. Ryan writes majority of lyrics and then him and Sammy and I will create the vocal melodies and harmonies. Then we add vocoders, synths or instruments to round the out the track. We all sit down together to do the arrangement and then I'll mix it down for mastering.

You guys produce some of the smoothest, sexiest electronic tracks out there. How would you explain the fuse of sounds that make PillowTalk so beautifully original? 
We each have a vast taste in music and find a common ground when it comes to soul and R&B music. There is something very special and unique about writing and composing songs versus tracks. The lyrics that carry the PillowTalk sound speak to everyone and anyone, they come from the heart and from the soul. It allows us to speak to our diverse, worldly audience in a language that they can all understand and relate to.

 

Are there any artists who have been particularly influential to you?
Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, Beach Boys and Stevie Wonder. There are so many to choose but these are a few of our all time favsies.

DGTL Festival is hosting a Crew Love stage this year, featuring the likes of Soul Clap, Wolf + Lamb, Tanner Ross, and of course you three. How excited are you to be spending the day performing with your closest friends? 
I'll put it to you like this: "Crew Love is True Love".

Crew Love is undoubtedly one of the best parties on the circuit right now, simply because of the beautiful vibes (and tunes) you guys give off while playing as a crew. How did the whole Crew Love alliance come about? 
It all started with Wolf + Lamb, then there is Gadi's label Double Standard. Soul Clap started their own label as well. The common factor was that it featured all the same artists and had similar vibe and vision. It really came together at the shows. No one label or artist wanted to take precedence over the other. The idea of branding everything into one package was brilliant and started as a joke, but then ended up creating these parties into a really tight family.



So finally, when you boys aren’t PillowTalk-ing, what kind of things are you getting into? 
I can't speak for the boys but I stay super busy running my label Touch Of Class Records and working on my weekly Wednesday SF party, Housepitality, and producing music with my other project Signal Flow.

Catch PillowTalk at Sankeys Manchester on Thursday April 17th and DGTL Festival on the Crew Love Stage with Soul Clap, Wolf + Lamb and more on Saturday, April 19. For more info, visit: dgtlfestival.com

Listen to PillowTalk on Pulse Radio.

Township Trauma with New Skrillex Video

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Skrillex dropped a bomb with his new video release dubbed Ragga Bomb feat. The Ragga Twins for the first single of his new EP “Recess” that's soon to be out there on the shelves.  

South African director Terence Neale, who has dabbled in the dark-realms of Die Antwoord, co-creating the video for ‘Baby’s on Fire’ continued to impress as expected, and directed a fantastic watch with the official single’s video release just yesterday (01 April 2014). 

Drummer boys and Puntsula, enraged dogs and adolescent runaways in the township of Alex, JHB with a Skrillex backtrack featuring the Ragga Twins makes for an extremely energetic watch. We’d expect nothing less, really. So whether it is your ‘cup-o-tea’ or not, Egg Productions, Terence Neale and the rest of the team behind the video have done a great job displaying new Skrillex track Ragga bomb on the visual front. 

Listen to Pulse Radio 

 

 

Diddy & Guy Gerber’s ‘11:11’ For “Demented After Hours Minds” Set For Release

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Musicians Diddy (Puff Daddy?) and Guy Gerber’s collaborative album ’11:11’ is finally set for release after it was announced that the unlikely pair would be making an album together a few years back. The two held an intimate listening party at Red Bull Guest House in Miami on Saturday night. Rolling Stone reports that the few tracks that were played from the new album “sounded promising, if you like noir-ish, techno-inflected songs about disoriented millionaires trying to find love amidst international debauchery and intrique”… interesting.

Diddy describes the album, which follows his cult favorite ‘Last Train to Paris,’ as genre-less and made for “demented after hours minds.” According to RBMA, he stated at the event that he orginally wanted to name the album ‘Ketamine’ but settled on ’11:11’ with Guy. “It ain’t for everybody,” said Diddy, especially not for EDM fans who want to “jump up and down like a pogo-stick.”

Listen to Guy Gerber on Pulse Radio

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Movement Completes Massive 2014 Lineup

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Today, Movement has revealed the third and final phase of its exciting 2014 lineup! 28 artists including Heidi, Lee Foss, Max Cooper, Seth Troxler, Skream, Shaun Reeves, and more will join the already impressive group of over 100 artists announced in the last few months. Detroit techno collective Underground Resistance will headline the festival this year.

Movement festival director Jason Huvaere shared his excitement. “We’re ecstatic to have Underground Resistance performing at the festival. This will be a rare opportunity for fans to experience a profound group of Detroit artists that have been instrumental in revolutionizing dance music culture since the late 1980s.”


Credit: Douglas Wojciechowski

UR founder Mike “Made Mike” Banks, keyboardist Jon Dixon, saxophonist DeSean Jones, and DJ Mark Flash will perform Timeline, “a music chain running from the past through the present and into the future with an emphasis on techno and jazz elements – what is know as “high-tech jazz. Jon Dixon and DeSean Jones have taken UR’s hi-tech jazz sound to a new level. This is the future of jazz!”

Movement 2014 is set to take place over Memorial Day weekend from May 24th to May 26th in Detroit’s Hart Plaza.  Be sure to get tickets on the festival's official website.  Check out the full list of artists announced in the third lineup phase below!

Amp Fiddler - live
Appian
Aran Daniels
Asher Perkins
Ben Negative
Benoit & Sergio - live
Christopher Jarvis
Cold English - live
Deadbeat
DJ Marky
Exhale
Gabi
Heathered Pearls
Heidi
Lee Foss
Max Cooper
May Roosevelt
Monty Luke
Moritz Von Oswald
Nightwave
Rai Knight
Secrets - live
Seth Troxler
Shackleton - live
Shadowbox
Shaun Reeves
Skream
UR Presents: Timeline - live

Header image courtesy of Joe Gall

Listen to Seth Troxler on Pulse Radio

 


Sheik ‘N’ Beik Celebrates “You Can Never Go Home” with Derek Marin & System of Survival

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Our friends at Sheik ‘N’ Beik have something to celebrate – they have turned their passion for cutting edge electronic music in to a label with its first release by none other than Derek Marin. “You Can Never Go Home” was inspired by Berlin techno institution Berghain, and is set for release next week! This Sunday, Sheik ‘N’ Beik presents the official vinyl release party with Derek Marin, System of Survival, and its residents at The Panther Room in Brooklyn.

Derek explains his motivation for the EP: “You Can Hear Your Own Heartbeat’ was inspired by the film Cave of Forgotten Dreams by Werner Herzog and abstractly describes the feeling of dancing in a big dark cave. At a certain moment you will lose yourself and be one with the beat of the drum and your own heartbeat."

“You Can Never Go Home’ is about the first time I went to Berghain actually. It was my first time in Berlin, may have been my second day only and at a certain point I had been there quite awhile. My friend didn't want to leave and she had the keys plus only she knew where were we lived. So I couldn't leave but eventually it turned out I didn't want to go home…”  Preview the release here!

Derek Marin founded his imprints, Faucet Music and Like Button, in 2004 and now heads Subtrak as well. He will be joined at the event this weekend by Circoloco residents System of Survival who have been playing and producing music together since 1989 in Italy. Sheik ‘N’ Beik’s very own Julio, Fong, and Jeffrey Scott will provide opening sets. Be sure to get your tickets to the release party on Pulse Radio!

Listen to System of Survival on Pulse Radio

Will Saul Steps Up For The DJ-Kicks Series

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UK DJ, producer and label owner Will Saul is next in line to mix the esteemed DJ-Kicks mix compilation series.

The past few years have been productive ones for Saul, his Simple and AUS Music labels having gone from strength to strength, the latter of which has focused on the new UK house and bass sounds from artists such as Joy Orbison, Ramadanman and Bicep. He's also been pushing out his own productions, most notably via his CLOSE project which last year gave birth to LP 'Closer' - a home-listening focused effort that flirts with pop and soul with a modern dance music undercurrent.

For his DJ-Kicks, Saul has comprised 24 tracks from himself and artists on his label rosters.

“I wanted the mix to represent how I DJ in the sense that the majority of my sets are made up mainly of my own, or my label’s, unreleased or forthcoming music," he explains. “With this in mind, I approached all my nearest and dearest for some tailor made exclusive tracks. The result is hopefully a mix that rekindles the thing I loved about listening to mixes 20 years ago – that unknown aspect where each new track is a surprise. In a time when all music/track IDs and myriad mixes are accessible at the click of a button, I hope this makes for something a little more interesting.” 

The album drops on June 16th. In the meantime check out one of the exclusive tracks, Bicep's 'Nova,' below.

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Listen to Will Saul on Pulse Radio

Set Times Announced For Nick Warren & Jody Wisternoff Sydney Boat Party

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UK jock Nick Warren is returning to Australian shores for a club tour this month, which includes a set aboard the Soapbox boat party in Sydney on Saturday April 12, where he will play alongside his Way Out West partner-in-crime, Jody Wisternoff. The set times for this much anticipated party have just been released - check below.

With only 100 tickets remaining, you've got just over a week to grab your entry to what will be an epic way to see out the summer. Or you could score a free double pass we have up for grabs by answering the below question.

Name the Way Out West track these lyrics come from: "Can I please have some silence? How about some space?"

Email us your answer and full name here. The winner will be announced at 5pm on Thursday April 10. Good luck!

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Nick Warren 2012 Australian Tour
04.04.14 – Darkbeat Boat Party, Melbourne
05.04.14 – The Met, Brisbane
06.04.14 – Garden Party @ Court Hotel, Perth
11.04.14 – Academy, Canberra
12.04.14 - The Starship w. Jody Wisternoff, Sydney

Listen to Nick Warren on Pulse Radio

Get Lost Miami 2014 In Review

Darkside To Play Special DJ Set In Melbourne Tonight

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Ask anyone who was in attendance at their sold-out Hi-Fi show in Sydney last night and they'll attest that Darkside absolutely tore the roof off (up-and-coming Modular 3-piece Movement were also pretty special in their support slot, too). Melburnians also get their chance to witness some Nico Jaar & Dave Harrington magic when the band plays The Palace Theatre on Friday night, but not before a very special DJ set at the Mercat tonight which has just been announced!

The party kicks off at 9pm with special guests Naysayer & Gilsun in support and tickets are only $22+BF (buy here). For an idea of what to expect, check out our review of last year's set, also in Melbourne. If you want tickets you'd better hurry, as they sold out in mere minutes last year!

Listen to Pulse Radio

Wu-Tang Clan Offered $5 Million For The Sole Copy Of Their New Album

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What's a new album from Wu-Tang Clan worth? $5 million, according to the group's RZA.

The infamous hip-hop posse have pressed just one lone copy of their latest double-album offering, 'The Wu - Once Upon a Time in Shaolin,' in the hope that it will be treated as a unique collector's item and remind the industry that music is art. Wu-Tang Clan plan to auction it to the highest bidder, hopefully for millions, and group member RZA says they've already received multi-million dollar offers for the one-off 31-track record.

"Offers came in at $2 million, somebody offered $5 million yesterday," he told Billboard.com. "I've been getting a lot of emails: some from people I know, some from people I don't know, and they're also emailing other members of my organisation. So far, $5 million is the biggest number."

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Before they auction the album off, though, The Wu plan to tour the silver-nickel case packaged album through festivals, museums and galleries, with punters paying to hear it and tight security so it couldn't be copied.

What do you make of all this? Do Wu-Tang have a good point to make that in this day and age music is heavily undervalued? Or is this just a clever money making scheme?

Listen to Pulse Radio

Sven Vath, Loco Dice Announced for Shindig 22nd Anniversary

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Full details have been announced for Shindig, Newcastle's huge May Bank Holiday 14-hour event, celebrating its 22nd Anniversary.

After last year's 14-hour day and night blowout, Shindig is upping the ante for another day and night outdoor bash on the Tyne. Featuring multiple stages, the lineup for the 22nd anniversary includes some of techno and house's biggest names, including Sven Vath (pictured above), Jamie Jones, Hot Since 82, Marc “MK” Kinchen, Nina Kraviz, The Martinez Brothers, Guti, Catz ‘N Dogz and wAFF, as well as local talent Cristoph, who has been attracting the spotlight with his recent productions.

Also announced, due to demand for night-time tickets, for the first time ever Shindig will host ByNight 002, in association with LOOP, with a special back-to-back set from Avotre label boss Sante and Hamburg-born Sidney Charles at TheCut, with Loco Dice and Robert Dietz playing ByNight 001. 

For more info, visit  www.shindiguk.com.


Make-Believe: Getaway with Afterlife AV

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The Holy Grail of all Make-Believe venues to date will be the setting for a sonic and social full-weekend experience you won’t quick forget. Making it all the more special, Make-Believe has confirmed AfterlifeAV to close the getaway with international heavy on the decks, Siopis. 

MAKE-BELIEVE: A GETAWAY WITH SIOPIS / SHUTTLE-BUS ADVENTURE

Craig Shackleton and Wayne Ellis are Afterlife AV, based in CT with a well-educated 28-years worth of collective experience behind them, in both the music and entertainment industry. These guys were booked by Make-Believe for their last one, Lucid Illusions and completely blew minds. 

Watching these two individuals work together on stage is a genuine pleasure to witness as they specialise in AV performance, video-mapping, sound-design, all with such a profound understanding of the dancefloor, that they deliver a performance that demands the respect of those there to hear, and see it. It’s no surprise they will be closing the weekend away with Siopis in Mofam. See you on the dancefloor! 

Listen to Pulse Radio 

 

 

Keep the Music Coming – Death by Misadventure (free download)

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The music just keeps on coming with the duo collectively known as Death by Misadventure. If you follow them on Soundcloud you’d easily agree with the fact that these two, Isaac Klawansky and Tamara Dey must be amongst some of the most hard-working musicians in the country. They’ve been pushing out so much good music since its inception into the electronic dance music scene whilst literally paving their way to a place not yet discovered in South Africa.

Here is their latest release available for download. Click play and get to know them just that little bit better. 

Death by Misadventure: DbyM (pronounced dee-by-em) is a 2-piece electronic dance outfit made up of producer/song-writing team Isaac Klawansky and Tamara Dey. They describe their sound as alternative electronica with influences ranging from hip-hop and electro to pop and techno. Fascinated by the excess of human nature, they’ve called their act Death by Misadventure, a term used to describe an accidental death, a slip and fall, or in many cases, the way a young artists have partied themselves to death. 

Website: 
www.wearedbyme.com


Listen to Pulse Radio 

 

 

Axel Boman: 'Loud and Strange and Dangerous'

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Axel Boman and his fellow Studio Barnhus musicians have become staples on the international house and techno scene in recent years. Axel's irreverent style and carefree approach to music, and life, translate through his productions, giving them a life and uniqueness that translates perfectly to the dance floor - and are all Axel.

Because of this, he's regularly invited to the world's top clubs and festivals, including Dimensions and The Garden Festival in Croatia this summer. So we caught up with Axel to chat about the upcoming festival season, the early Studio Barnhus and the early, freaky rave days in his native Stockholm.

Hi Axel, were very happy to have you for a minute here at Pulse. We’re excited to get to hear about your wild ride over the years and a DJ and producer and finish our chat with your take on 2014’s summer festivals in Croatia, namely The Garden Festival and Dimensions. Can you give us a description on your state of mind after your weekend of gigs? Well I’m still trying to piece together the weekend a little bit, it was a very long one, a lot of weird logistical problems and long nights. I was in Paris on Thursday and then Berlin and Cologne on Friday and Saturday with the Studio Barnhus guys. Yeah, it was great, I’m happy and exhausted, so that’s my current state of mine. It was a nice weekend for our Studio Barnhus parties, it’s always a great thing when you get to take care of the whole night from start to finish, you start when there’s no one there, then bring the crowd together for the peak and then back down again, until no one is there. We took care of the whole trip.

Tell us a little bit more about Studio Barnhus... It’s an actual studio located on Barnhusgatan street in Stockholm. It’s kind of in the commercial tourist part of Stockholm near Drottninggatan, where the tourists buy all the commercial shit when they’re on vacation. Yeah, it’s kind of fun. The studio is in a basement; we don’t have window so it’s kind of isolated and cozy. Then you walk out and there’s all the tourist commotion. You never meet anybody that you know over there, which is strange for Stockholm. You have to walk through 3 or 4 doors to get to the studio, so it’s kind of our little secret. Not even the people we share the house with know there’s a studio down there [laughs].

How was the house and techno scene growing up in Sweden? Was there anything in particular that made you think, “Hey, I want to make it in this scene?” When I grew up, Stockholm was kind of a shitty place for clubs and electronic music. Right now Stockholm is in its dancing prime, it’s really amazing right now. A lot of clubs are competing for bookings and there’s a lot of young producers and illegal parties, but when I was young, there were only illegal parties, most live electronic music was played at bars. It meant that the DJs were learning to mix kind of eclectic and fast, it wasn’t a dance floor, so you had to entertain a different crowd. So I guess that shaped me a little bit, in terms of thinking about my music. I guess I thought a little bit bolder, like if you grow up in Berlin you think about your specific style of house music from an early point on, but that wasn’t really possibly in Stockholm in the early 2000’s. I guess that has shaped me in terms of my broad pallet of sounds.

According to you, when was your breakthrough moment as a producer? Well the usual answer would be my release of “Purple Drank” on DJ Koze’s label Pampa Records. But actually there were many moments that define where I am today. The first defining moment was when I bought my sample drum machine, Yamaha RMX 1 groovebox, a very simple machine, but a very good one. The other moment would be when I played with DJ Koze in Stockholm, I got to know him back in the days when people gave each other demos on CDs, and I gave him “Purple Drank.” And then I’d say forming the Studio Barnhus. We’re celebrating our 5th year soon! We were just three guys that needed studio space and we started sharing it, then it turned out to be a very life-changing thing. When you look back at it, it was the start of something that none of us could have expected.

Had you three played together before you got the studio? Yeah, me and Petter played together, we were friends before. Kornél we knew as the prince of techno in Stockholm at the time; a very famous underground phenomenon at a very young age.

Do you remember the first time you really feel in love with electronic music? The first time I really fell in love with music was when I went to this legendary rave-place, back in 1994. I remember this place didn’t even sell alcohol. They opened at midnight and were opened really, really late. I guess a lot of people took drugs, but I was a little bit too young to kind of see that part of it. For me it was just such an exciting moment to be there, in a room where Adam Beyer and Jesper Dahläck were playing. There was this huge, huge shipyard that they used for the club – it was this amazing space. I was like “Wow, I’m so happy this kind of thing exists, where you were totally welcome just the way you are!” You could be the person you wanted to be, nobody was looking at you even though you’re young and weird. It was a welcoming world for a person feeling a bit outside and lost. All of a sudden you’re like, “Oh, there are other people like me!” The music was loud and strange and dangerous.

Lots of DJs and producers have a certain seriousness and structure when they produce and play music live. Your structure seems to be a bit more un-analyzed and creative than most. How would you say this is expressed in your music? (Laughs) Well I think I really try to make techno, and this is what comes out. A lot of people tell me that it’s really different and eclectic or naive and fun. These are words I hear a lot about my music, but I honestly try to make techno. My sound isn’t very intentional, but of course I’m aware of its playfulness. I like the fun in other people’s music, like Matthew Herbert and DJ Koze and even Four Tet and Caribou. I totally love serious, hard music, too, but it comes out another way for me I guess. When I sit down and try to make a really strait song, I get halfway through the process and go ah, fuck this. When I stop having fun with it, I change it up. I think I’m also a guy that over analyzes things, so I need to keep it more fun.

 

Have there been any artists who have inspired go beyond the traditional boundaries of genres? I think what still shaped me the most was when I was listening to hip-hop. People like DJ Mugz and all those guys. Hip-hop has a very close relationship to playful things, it’s all for fun and not taken so serious. They just don’t care about anything; they don’t give a fuck. I like this punk attitude of using whatever is around, you don’t have to limit yourself to certain sounds and machines. This is still very inspiring to me. Since then, of course, electronic producers like Herbert and DJ Koze, and the Beatles and Beach Boys… stuff like this really shaped me.

What do you think of the current hip-hop scene? Very confused (laughs). There’s not a lot of stuff that I feel at the moment in hip-hop. What I enjoyed about hip-hop has gotten lost a little bit. It’s now living in other styles of music. It has new homes. Also the relevance of hip-hop has changed, it was the voice of young, rebellious people trying to express their frustrations through music. It was a sort of distraction from reality, similar to what techno was for me when I was younger. Hip-hop used to be about dancing, graffiti, good beats and expression. There’s still a lot of cool stuff coming from Chicago, but I don’t keep my ears to the ground as much as I want too. But I don’t want to come off as a music snob or anything, when I’m at home alone I listen to pop on the radio.

You’ve previously said that your debut album, “Family Vacation,” was a blend between tracks you produced a while ago and recent edits you’ve made as you’ve grown as an artist. How has your sound evolved with experience or releasing your first album? I’ve learnt a little bit more about how to make sounds sound like I want them to sound [laughs]. I’ve been better with dynamics and technical stuff. Some of the early tracks on the album were made in the days when I didn’t really know if my music was going to be released or not. And now, I’m in a position where maybe all the music I make might be considered for potential releases. I don’t know if that is necessarily a good thing for the creative process. I used to make music for me, not for a potential audience, so the awareness that the music you make could be considered – I don’t think its good for an artist to know that all their music will be judged, priced and be a part of a musical catalogue. If that’s in the back of your mind, it changes your creative process. So on “Family Vacation,”| some of the tracks were made free and young and some of the later tracks were done with an awareness of commercial possibility. It’s a strange blanket that you put over yourself.

What do you find the most challenging aspect of producing your own music? The most challenging thing is to feel that you’re still doing relevant things and that you’re not producing boring and repetitive music. Using the same tricks, while trying to be innovative, is hard, but there are definitely methods to keep fresh ideas flowing. Also, recording everything you do is a good thing. Right now I’m very excited by the thought of going to the studio and plugging new things in and getting different machines to work together. Of course, I use my laptop and Ableton like a lot of producers, but I also have a collection of analogue machines to mix sounds together in a unique way.

Do you like to play vinyl often? Of course! I’m a huge vinyl collector and I’d love to play only vinyl if possible. But you have to be careful that you don’t get disappointed. If you bring records to a party you might be disappointed because their setup is made for playing digitally. Sometimes the record players are put right next to the speakers and your records jump or you get feedback and you think, “Fuck, it’s not worth it.” So I try to rip and record all my vinyl. If you’re playing at a festival, it’s usually not good to play vinyl. But if you’re playing at Robert Johnson in Frankfurt or Panorama Bar or Zukunft in Zürich, it’s the absolute best for playing vinyl.

This summer, we’re finding your name on some of Europe’s top festivals, including The Garden Festival early July in Croatia and Dimensions late August in Croatia. What was it about playing both festivals in 2013 that made you want to come back? Both The Garden Festival and Dimensions are absolutely amazing festivals and very, very different at the same time. You could say they’re each other’s opposites, but both spectacular. The Garden Festival is intimate and small.

You get to hangout with all the artists playing, and after a few days you get to know them all, and the crowd as well. It’s a weeklong festival, so you really become close with everyone and you feel at home the whole time. On the other hand, Dimensions Festival is massive. You have to queue up for these spectacular stages and hang out with fellow ravers. But it’s also a festival where you can see every DJ you love, the lineup is absolutely crazy, you can make your own schedule of stuff that you want to see, and after a few days you’ve heard sets by all your favorite artists. It’s hard to get that at any other festival.

What are you looking forward to most at The Garden Festival and Dimensions? I’m very excited to see some of my best friends. Literally everyone that goes to play at The Garden Festival comes back, they tell their bookers, “Hey, we need to play there again. Doesn’t matter how much they pay me, please book me again.” I’m looking forward to playing with my Swedish friends, Genius of Time. We’ve played there together before. I’d say my favorite part of Dimensions is the location. It’s such a cool place to play. It’s located in a large old fort. It’s such a breathtaking location; you can’t even imagine it without being there. The first time you see it, you’re like “Fuck, it’s so big.” You get lost, and then find a new spectacular corner of the festival. It’s like an amusement park for electronic music lovers. While at The Garden Festival you lay on an air mattress between the water and the stage, where some DJ you wouldn’t expect is playing the best set you’ve ever heard. Everything is warm, friendly and cozy. Both festivals have very different energies, but both amazing.

We can’t wait to see you in Croatia, Axel! Lastly, if you could thank anyone in the music industry for giving you the inspiration to get where you are today, who would it be and what would you say? Well I’d have to say my older brother, for bringing all those acid house records back from London in the 90ies. Thank you Tobias!

Catch Axel at Dimensions Festival, taking place at the abandoned Fort Punta Christo from 28th August – 31st August near Pula, Croatia, and The Garden Festival, taking place in Tisno, Croatia from July 2nd – 9th. 

Festival photos credit www.timertl.com and Dan Medhurst.

 

Listen to Axel Boman on Pulse Radio.

RBMA presents A Discussion with Nina Kraviz

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Red Bull writes what’s key to everything Kraviz does is her own unique expression, her transmission of real and often raw feeling, you certainly can’t argue with that. She’s not constrained by genre when producing or DJing, also she is totally capable of crafting pop as she can techno and ambient. 

Now, ahead of her playing this weekend in both JHB and CT, Red Bull Music Academy has given her fans the opportunity to chat to her. You are cordially invited to meet Nina Kraviz, as she shares her thoughts on House and Techno, and the world of an internationally touring artist at an intimate gathering at the new Red Bull Studios on Friday night. Seating is limited so make sure to arrive early to secure your seat. 

RBMA presents a discussion with Nina Kraviz
Future Gods present Nina Kraviz Cape Town
Future Gods present Nina Kraviz JHB

Listen to Pulse Radio 

 

 

Roman Sergey: SoPsyety in the City

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Pulse Radio sat down with Roman Sergey aka Manifesto to hear all about his career as a DJ, event organiser/promotor, and Record label owner. We chat about how he first got started to make a breakthrough for the Psy -trance scene in Johannesburg; his record label – Mansion Recordings; and his driven passion for the industry and how it has evolved.  

Roman started his career as a DJ at the tender age of 17. He grew up listening to alternative music, with artists like Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, and The Cure to name a few, and soon found an interest into Techno and other genres within the electronic music scene. What drew him to Trance music was more the sacred part of it. He attended his first festival back in 2000, and being an outdoor person, had an urge to get out of the dirty warehouses and bring people away from the city to experience underground music in the great outdoors. He has now built a reputation and a successful career as an event planner/organiser/DJ/Record label owner and promoter for the Johannesburg scene and has worked alongside international acts such as Freedom fighters, Biogenesis, and Captain Hook. You can expect creative mixes with powerful progressive bass-lines, with tribal kicks coming through his psychedelic melodies.


Roman started off with intimate parties at the Psychedelic Mansion, and from then, decided to take it further and step it up a notch with his first big outdoor being the Tswaing Crater Gathering back in 2009. His intention was to bring together the psychedelic aspect of the décor, music, dancers, and visuals that he recognized from overseas festivals, as well as Cape Town. Roman says “This was an incredible risk, but we managed to pull it off with over 1000 people attending. From then on, it grew with each year bringing in 150 more people.”

This marked a new era for the outdoor psychedelic music festival in Johannesburg. The immense passion he had for throwing parties finally let him to developed Orbit Productions which is a collective of everything he does, but brands everything separately as individual entities: 

The psychedelic mansion
Tswaing crater gathering
One festival
Revolution NYE
Moksha 
Taste

“I love music, I love dancing, and I love expressing myself through music and seeing people going on a journey and taking them to places they have never been.” – R.S

Roman is not only an inspiration to others, but says he has been fortunate in his journey to have influential, like-minded individuals in his career from the very beginning. He mentions that Christopher Dowding and Caren Dickson have been big vital players, creative wise. He says “They create what you see and are big influences on what we do.” Other powerful players from the beginning have been Karen de Waal, Andre Van Wyk, and Kalahari Chris. Roman continues to say “They have supported me through times when I was investing in me, always believing in my vision.”

In 2007, you started the Psychedelic Mansion parties. What was your vision back then? In those days the scene was very small, so to get the perfect venue, you needed something that didn’t cost too much. It was feasible to do from my home base, place where I stayed. It was very manageable to do events of 200/300 people. My cost was much smaller. Originally when I started, my vision was to have a place of my own, like my own farm, space, sound. In those days we weren’t dependent on making much money at the door, so if something fails, I wouldn’t be that bad in trouble. So I started small, and the mansion was a great stepping stone to create a family. The mansion will always be a home for the psy family.

Tell us about Mansion Records? Mansion records started as a non-profit organization to help create a platform to establish upcoming artists in JHB to help get their sound through to the audience this side. I wanted to showcase their local talent. These artists were making all these tunes with no one to feature it for.

How do you go about selecting a venue for a party? This has always been a tricky part. I’ll take drives out to places, ask around, gut feeling will take you there. I lived in Mpumalanga for 5 years and discovered the venue locations and sacred sites like the – Adam’s calendar. There were so many magical places. So by 2011 I was driven to have a festival so far out that people can experience the true outdoors and appreciate how it actually is to get out of the city far away, and be there for 4 days to enjoy nature to its fullest. It wanted to create different platforms of dance floors and genres, coming together and sharing the same conscience of being one. It was a collective mind set having one fest on the 11-11-11.

I like the Crater venue in Soshanguve so much, because it is a pure African location. It has the wild bushveld, it is close to a rural area, and has the meteorite site. This is where foreigners can see the true essence of South Africa. How did you come up with the name Manifesto? When I was DJing vinyl back in day, one of my favourite labels was called Manifesto. I also believe in the power of manifestation. To start a party you need a manifesto. I am a manifesto.

What are the obstacles you have faced in your career journey, and how have you overcome them? Believing, staying strong, and focusing what’s important to keep going forward. Obstacles that come your way are just challenges. There have been too many good incidents in my life for one hiccup to make me stop. I have been very fortunate in my journey. I cleverly plan my parties. 1 out of 100 might lose money. When I did have a downfall is when I got over-inspired and did too much. You want to give back and show what’s there to offer - new beautiful ideas, but you need that driving force to make it happen. 

I am definately passionate about what I am doing. I will live on bread and peanut butter for a month just to make sure my next event is a success, and will bring in international artists rather than buy a new car. Passion is my driving force, life is short, it’s important to express yourself and make life as enjoyable as possible.

Johannesburg outdoor festivals bring in something different from Cape Town or overseas. They offer an Alternative floor as well as the main Psy floor. What are your views on this? The Alternative floor brings something special to the parties. It brings in a new crowd, showcasing the trance and catering for all needs. It makes for a more festive feeling, and is also great to have a breather into something more charming.  It should be music and people that both complement each other. 

Top 3 Dj’s at the moment? Freedom Fighters, Major 7, Ace Ventura.

Who would you like to collaborate with in the future? I would love to work with Ace Ventura.

Ideas for the future festivals? I would love to do a shebeen run for Crater, as well as feature Hot air balloon rides at upcoming parties. I am also keen on a theme park at parties.

Thank you for your time Roman. It was great chatting with you, and look forward to what you have planned for us in the future. Catch Manifesto at his next gig at Twilight Open air festival this weekend! 

Listen to Pulse Radio 

 

 

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