DJ Mag New 08 2012
DJ Mag New 08 2012
DJ Mag New 08 2012
KINETIC ENERGY
BLAWAN AND
PARIAH
jOIN FORCES
TECHNO
SPECIAL!
TECH AWARDS 2012
THE PUBLIC VOTE WINNERS
REVEALED
POSITIVE EDUCATION
The top 100 most
important techno
trax ever!
JEFF MILLS MANIFESTO
FOR CHANGE
DAVE CLARKES
FAVOURITE TRACKS
STATE OF
INDEPENDENCE
THE RISE OF DELSIN
RECORDS
GARY BECK EARNS
HIS STRIPES
WHAT IS TECHNO?
THE GENRE EXPLORED
EDDIE FLASHIN
FOWLKES IS BACK!
DOING IT PROPERLY
MARCEL DETTMANNS
MARATHON SETS
ROBERT HOODS
NIGHTTIME WORLD
TURBO BOOST!
the underground
direction of Tigas label
Plus
172
tunes
Reviewed
09
9 770951 514130
4.50 outside UK & Eire
01.09.12
08.09.12
15.09.12
KINKY MALINKI
SATURDAY SESSIONS
21ST BIRTHDAY
Tom Novy
Marco Lys
Kid Massive
1
B
R
Wolfgang Gartner
Tommy Trash
The Frederik
3
David Jones
Grant Nalder
Danny Quattro
Grant Richards
1
R
22.09.12
29.09.12
SATURDAY SESSIONS
SATURDAY SESSIONS
SATURDAY SESSIONS
MIX CD OUT NOW
Laidback Luke
Sandro Silva
La Fuente
Tim Cullen
0
Patrick Hagenaar
Shane Kehoe
Luke Walker
1
S
Severino
Jordan Wade
Rick Maia
3
S
Basement Jaxx
Breakage
Thomas Gandey
Jordan G
P
Calvin Harris
Michael Woods
Burns
Sheldon
Wookie
Santero
Rattus Rattus
3
N
ministryofsound.com/tickets
ticketweb.co.uk ~ 08444 771 000
residentadvisor.net/mos
ministryofsound.com/club/vip
facebook.com/ministryofsoundclub
twitter.com/ministryofsound
youtube.com/ministryofsoundclub
ministryofsound.com/djacademy
MINISTRYOFSOUND.COM/CLUB
Contents
features
comin up
015
Game Changers
018
Fashion
on the floor
084
086
090
096
100
100
music
104
107
108
Singles
128
Albums
132
Compilations
tech
134
141
054
044
064
144
146
150
070
086
026
Cover Pic: Dan Reid
003
26.09.12
Contributors
Richard Brophy, Alex Constantinides, Paul Clarke, Beth Crockatt, David McCarthy,
Found Sounds, Kutski, Ricky Newson, Jonathan Burnip, Neil Kulkarni, Adrian Kinloch,
Joe Madden, Dan Reid, Mark Gurney, Nicola Elliott, Tom Lea, Ele Beattie, Ben Arnold,
Kristan J Caryl, Jim Butler, Kevin Lake, Kristian Dando, Luke Pepper, Tim Stark, Danna
Takako Hawley, James Kenyon, Cheech & Francos Caf
TECHNO LOGIC
ben murphy
Editor
004
Managerial
Publisher James Robertson
Managing Director Martin Carvell [email protected]
Accounts Patricia Jordan [email protected]
Subscriptions
[email protected]
+44 20 8545 0955
djmag.com/sub
DJ Magazine is published by Thrust Publishing Ltd. under licence.
DJ Competition Rules: To enter a competition you can send your answer by post to [name of competition], DJ Magazine, 91 Brick Lane, London, E1 6QL or email
[email protected] to be received on or before the closing date. By sending your entry you agree to these competition rules and you confirm you are happy
to receive details of future offers and promotions from DJmag.com ltd.The winner will be notified within 28 days of the closing date. Competitions are only open to
UK residents. No employees of DJmag.com ltd. or any of its group companies or the employees of any entity which has been involved with the administration of this
competition or any member of their households may enter this competition. No responsibility is accepted for entries delayed or lost in the post. Proof of postage will
not be accepted as proof of receipt. The prize is as stated and no cash alternative is available. The provider of the prize reserves the right to substitute the prize for one
of equivalent value. DJmag.com ltd. is not responsible whatsoever for any failure by a third party to provide the prize on time or at all or for any loss, damage, costs,
expenses, or personal injury caused by the prize. If you have any query or complaint in relation to the prize, you should contact the provider. If you are a winner of the
competition you accept that DJmag.com ltd. has the right (without additional payment or seeking permission) to use your name, address and likeness for the purpose
of announcing the winner of the competition and for related promotional purposes. All entries must be received by the closing date. No purchase necessary. Details of
the winning entry will be available at any time on or after the closing date by written request from DJ Magazine, 91 Brick Lane, London, E1 6QL.
SEND POSTAL ENTRIES TO:
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THE VIEWS EXPRESSED HEREIN ARE THOSE OF INDIVIDUALS AND ARE NOT NECESSARILY SHARED BY DJ MAGAZINE.
www.djmag.com
Makin
Noise
Game
Changer
Paul Hardcastles
seminal 19 track.
p.012
p.015
Fashion
p.018
STYLISH backpacks to be
stashing all your gear in
this autumn.
006
or less; ditto hard dance? Who will be the Highest House DJ? Will dubstep or drum &
bass get in on the act again? Will any women have been voted into the poll this year?
Anybody voting this year was entitled to a free album courtesy of Trackitdown.net,
the company powering the poll, and over 50,000 of you downloaded this.
The gap now between the poll closing and the announcement of the new Top 100
list is so that the DJ Mag team can finish authenticating and discounting votes,
and then for the team to put the special November issue of the mag together by
contacting all Top 100 DJs for an interview. It also allows time to plan the big
Top 100 parties, which this year will again take place in Amsterdam as part of the
Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE) and also at Ministry Of Sound in London. The poll
winner will play at both parties, flying between the two on the same night, and well
also be hosting a special Top 100 party in Las Vegas for the first time this year. More
details tbc.
For the last five years, we have been extensively analysing the Top 100 voting data
to weed out fraudulent votes, and have always removed votes that have been gained
dishonestly. As DJ Mag went to press, only one DJ had been thrown out this year
Miss Diamond from Switzerland but a number of other reasonably high-profile
DJs were under investigation. This is a lengthy process, as proving that someone has
cheated is obviously a very serious, possibly career-ending activity.
www.djmag.com
DJ Shadow
Afrojack
Tisto
Skrillex
Avicii
David Guetta
Introducing
endtroducing
DJ Mag takes cheating in the poll extremely seriously, and fraudulent votes are always discounted. Its a
time-consuming process behind the scenes looking for irregular voting practices and mapping the wide
number of different spellings that are cast for various DJs from clubbers around the world.
Also, when discounting fraudulent votes or outing cheats, there is no correlation between this and who
has advertised in the magazine. Nor does advertising in the mag buy editorial coverage, as was claimed
in a widely shared blog post recently. The confidential company invoices posted online, obtained illegally,
were for legitimate advertising and CD covermount deals.
So how will the new Top 100 DJs poll look this year? As the tension mounts over the coming weeks, we will
be revealing more about the parties and also which other DJs are being kicked out. Keep checking DJMag.
com for regular updates.
007
ONLY
YOLKING
008
www.djmag.com
ORDNANCE
SURVEY
MAPS
www.djmag.com
Whats on
the office
stereo?
IN ASSOCIATION
WITH
Like a
VIRGIN
Urban
Knights
009
010
FANTASY
ENTERTAINMENT
www.djmag.com
DRUM &
BASS ON
THE TELLY
Monthly Raveology
show is helmed by MC
Magika
We all know that drum & bass is everywhere
these days, but did you know that its also on
the telly? For the last year or so, MC Magika
has been hosting The Raveology show on Sky
Channel AKA 370 at 10pm GMT on the last
Thursday of every month.
Its repeated several times over the following
month, and there are longer special
programmes on events such as the Drum &
Bass Awards, which Magika was instrumental
in setting up himself (He was also one of the
minds behind the Dubstep Awards, too).
The show consists of live footage from some
of the biggest events from around the UK,
with live sets from DJs and MCs and live acts, plus
interviews with some of the biggest or upcoming
artists in the scene and also some fans. Andy
C, Chase & Status, Netsky, Friction, Sub Focus,
Grooverider, Loadstar, Skibadee, Roni Size and
Mickey Finn are just some of those whove featured
in recent months.
DJ MAG ON THE
RADIO
www.djmag.com
011
012
PHONE BOOKED
www.djmag.com
013
ADRIAN SHERWOOD
Adrian Sherwood is a true dub
pioneer. In the post-punk era, his
On-U Sound label brought the world
some amazing alt.dub acts such as
African Headcharge, Tackhead and Dub
Syndicate and hes worked with other
dub legends such as Lee Perry, Keith
Hudson and Prince Far-I.
Over the past few years hes stepped
out from behind the producers desk
to become an artist himself and his
third album, Survival & Resistance,
is a trippy, slightly psychedelic dub
odyssey refracted through a Brazilian
prism. Refusing to rest on his laurels,
he bigs up dubsteppers Mala and
Burial and reveals that hes currently
working with Pinch...
Hi Adrian, what got you into dub in
the first place?
One thing leads to another. When I
was about 12, I liked soul tunes, pop
tunes T.Rex, Rod Stewart and like
all the kids at school I was into Tamla
Motown and James Brown. I had loads
of black mates as well from Jamaica
or St Vincent or other parts of the
Caribbean, and there were lots of good
calypsos around and Carnival winners
from Jamaica Cherry-O Baby, tunes
like Al Capone, I liked all the gimmicky
records from Jamaica at first.
I was on an estate in High Wycombe,
and there was a local reggae club
which was originally a soul club called
the Newlands. I got into records like
Census Taker by Rupie Edwards and
Hijacked by Joe Gibbs, ones that
had funny little intros or tracks that
had spoken word or rude reggae. As
things evolved I started getting into
good songs like Bob Andys Life, and
in those days the B-side of the tune
would have a version on it.
At first I used to feel ripped off by
B-sides with versions, cos they were
boring as if they just took the voice
out. But then they started adding
reverbs and delays and the versions
got madder and madder, and the
whole genre of dub started when UK
record companies realised they could
put out royalty-free dub albums. It
was only people like Augustus Pablo
that put a face on it, gave it a kind of
cohesion. I vividly remember the first
time I heard King Tubby Meets The
Upsetter At The Grass Roots Of Dub or
Ital Dub [Augustus Pablo], and a bit
later Brand by Keith Hudson. They
were really important records to me.
Dub had evolved from the dancehall
demand for versions, for big
soundsystems. Not the little men
in your local pub or the blues dance
in England, but the big players like
Dennis Bovell, they wanted unique
versions of tunes. We liked it cos we
could sit at home and it was a backdrop
to getting spliffed up.
014
www.djmag.com
Paul Hardcastle
19
Chrysalis, 1985
In 1965 Vietnam seemed like just another foreign
war,but it wasnt. It was different in many ways, as were
those that did the fighting. In World War Two the average
age of the combat soldier was 26... In Vietnam he was 19.
N-n-n-n-Nineteen.
Paul Hardcastles anti-war single 19 was a worldwide
smash in 1985, soaring to No.1 all over the world. It wasnt
the first record to use sampling, and it wasnt the first antiwar song to make No.1, but it was the first No.1 anti-war
song to use hip-hop sampling techniques on an electronic
dance track.
Hardcastle was working in a hi-fi shop on the Kings Road in
Chelsea in the late 70s when he thought hed like to have
a go at music. He bought himself a basic Korg 700S synth,
got some demos done and joined a band called Direct Drive.
They had a couple of minor disco-funk hits Time Machine
and Dont Depend On Me and it was during his time in
another band, First Light, with vocalist Derek Green that he
first heard electro.
I heard a track called Planet Rock by Afrika Bambaataa
& the Soulsonic Force, and if you listen and I dont mind
admitting this Rainforest has the same sort of groove,
but Rainforest had a decent melody, Hardcastle says.
With its chiming melody and popping electro beats,
Rainforest became a big hit, knocking Madonnas Like A
Virgin off the top of the 12-inch sales chart in the UK and
doing well in America too.
Just after Rainforest came out, he was watching a TV show
called Vietnam Requiem. I taped it on a Betamax tape for
some reason, and when I watched the programme back I
thought, Bloody hell, these kids were only 19 and theyd
been sent out into a jungle in what mustve been horrific
circumstances. So basically I thought Id try to make a
record out of it.
From the proceeds of Rainforest, Hardcastle had just
bought an Emulator one of the first sampling synths
www.djmag.com
015
FRIDAY28THSEPTEMBER
FRIDAY12THOCTOBER
FRIDAY26THOCTOBER
KATYB/SKREAM/DIPLO/PMONEY
LIANNELAHAVAS/ZINC/KODE9
PLASTICIAN/ALUNAGEORGE/ONEMAN
ARTWORK/PEARSONSOUND
JACKMASTER/BENUFO/ROSKA
JAMIEGEORGE/LOEFAH/JOKER
DISMANTLE/TWILLIAMS/YOUGSTA
ICICLE/MARCUSNASTY/J:KENZO
BRACKLES/BAAUER/ELIJAH&SKILLIAM
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MARKRADFORD/SIANANDERSON
SGTPOKES/TIPPA/SP:MC/SHANTIE
MCCHUNKY
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HUXLEY/TOMDEMAC/ALEXJONES
SHENODA/INDIGO/STEROBERTS
CEDRICMAISON
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APEBIRTHDAY
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PARIAH/ONEMAN/KWES/GIRLUNIT
ROOM3:
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MATTEVERSON&MANYMORE
KRYSTALKLEAR/JONNYDUB/DAMU
25.00/28.50ADVANCE:20:0004:00
MCCHUNKY
25.00ADVANCE:20:0004:00
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22.50ADVANCE:20:0004:00
SUBFOCUSLIVENERODJSET
DOOM/MARKRONSON/BENGALIVE
SATURDAY29THSEPTEMBER
ANDYC/ZANELOWE/SHYFX/CASPA
WELCOMETOTHEWAREHOUSE
TODDLAT/DJMARKY
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MAYAJANECOLES&HEIDIB2B
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MACEOPLEX/FOURTETDJSET
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JACQUESGREENE/ANDREWWEATHERALL MCS:STAMINAMC,TONNPIPER,MCCHUNKY
NUMBERSSHOWCASE:
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DJEZ/JACKMASTER/DEADBOY
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REDINHO/SPENCER
SOLDOUT:18:0005:00
INASSOCIATIONWITHHOYA:HOYA
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19.50ADVANCE:20:0004:00
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COCOON
SVENVATH/RICARDOVILLALOBOS
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KRYSKO/GREGLORD
25.00/28.00ADVANCE:20:0005:00
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10YEARSOFMETROPOLIS
CHASE&STATUSDJSET
DJFRESHPRESENTSFRESHLIVE/SKREAM&
BENGAFTSGTPOKES&YOUNGMAN
BEARDYMAN/RUDIMENTALLIVE/MISTAJAM
MSDYNAMITE/NORTHBASE
ROOM2:
FRICTION/DJHYPE/LOADSTAR
HATCHA&N-TYPE/FABIO&GROOVERIDER
RANDALLB2BBRYANG
B2BNICKYBLACKMARKET/SL2/STEPPA
B2BGARRYK
ROOM3:MADEINMANCHESTER
MARCUSINTALEX/JENNAG
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BROKENENGLISH,SKITTLESCHIMPO&FOX
VIRUSSYNDICATE/MARKXTCB2BSAPPO
MAK/PROPZ&ROWNEY/DAWNRAID
25.00ADVANCE:20.0004.00
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ANIMALCOLLECTIVE/PRINCERAMA
18.50ADVANCE:19:3023:00
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SOULWAX/2MANYDJS
JAMIEJONES/CARLCRAIG
KERRICHANDLER/MACEOPLEX/HEIDI FULLLINE-UPTBA
18.50ADVANCE:19:30LATE(LASTENTRY22.30)
MIGUELCAMPBELL/ALEXISRAPHAEL
DANNYDAZE/RICHYAHMED
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KRYSTALKLEAR/ILLUMSPHERE
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BASEMENTJAXXDJSET/RIVASTARR
DJSHADOWDJSET
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ROOM3:
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SAMGRAHAM/MATTEVERSON
BENUFO/PANGAEA/HOSTEDBYMCCHUNKY DIRTYBIRDRECORDSPRESENTS:
DEVIATION:
CLAUDEVONSTROKE/CATZNDOGZ
25.00/28.50ADVANCE:20:0004:00
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25.00ADVANCE:20:0004:00
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LAIDBACKLUKE
ARTDEPARTMENT/SUBB-AN/AMIRALI
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25.00ADVANCE:18:0004:00
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/BLAWAN
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25.00:19:0004:00
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HOSPITALITY
TUESDAY1STJANUARY
FRIDAY7THDECEMBER:CLOSED
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DANNYBYRDFTGENRALLEVY&MCSEROCEE
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CAMO&KROOKED/LONDONELEKTRICTY SATURDAY8THDECEMBER
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25.00ADVANCE:18:0004:00
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LEWISBOARDMAN/GREGLORD
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MICKEYPEARCE/ONEMAN/PALEMAN
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TWITTER:#WHP12/@WHP_Mcr
22.50/22.50ADVANCE:20:0004:00
FACEBOOK.COM/THEWAREHOUSEPROJECT
Fortwelveweeksthis
cityisours...
ADVANCETICKETS
WWW.THEWAREHOUSEPROJECT.COM/WWW.TICKETLINE.CO.UK/01618321111
FASHION
On yer
back
More than ever, the backpack
is an essential accessory
addition to your look. Its a
practical piece of clothing that
will complete your outfit and
garnish you with extra style
points.
01
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05
06
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11
12
WHAT A SITE!
FASHION
Essential Selection
01. SANDQVIST
95
liberty.co.uk
09.HERSHELL
84.99
porteletliving.com
02.WOOLRICH
359
endclothing.co.uk
10.DENIM DEMON
129
denimdemon.se
03.EASTPAK X
WOOD WOOD
191
oki-ni.com
11.KELTY
75
streetcasuals.com
04.JANSPORT
49.99
jansport.com
QWERTEE.COM
Is a US community website where
anyone can submit their design
for a t-shirt and have it voted on
with a view to it being printed up
and sold for a cheap-as-chips 8.
A new design goes up every 24
hours. Were not ashamed to say
that weve tried it out, and by jolly
it works.
WALKINGSTICKS
ONLINE.CO.UK
Its all about walking stick chic.
So hot right now. A gander at this
website will have you wowing and
wondering at the extreme variety
of walking sticks out there on the
market. Our personal fave is the
Knob Stick. Mainly because were
immature.
12.FIRETRAP
45
firetrap.com
07.FJALLRAVEN
55
oipolloi.com
08.PEDALED
250
present-london.
com
TiNi
05.UNIVERSAL
WORKS X
MILLICAN
145
universalworks.
co.uk
06.KARRIMOR
51.99
karrimor.com
FUSSHOP.CO.UK
A delightfully calm shopping
experience can be had here.
Featuring some of our favourite
brands, like Carhartt, Pointer,
Garbstore and Stussy. Their
stationery department has some
fine notebooks, pens, pencils and
midori kraft envelopes.
www.djmag.com
019
FASHION
LESS IS MORE...
BERLIN
BOOT
Pointer
x Civilist =
Perfection
Pointers collaboration
with Berlins uber cool
Civilist store harks back to
when the British Infantry
Brigade was based in
Berlin shortly after World
War 2. They take their
inspiration from an urban
camouflage made up of a
repetition of different
sized squares, that was
used by all British forces
at the time to disguise
the shape of a tank.
Its been 20 years since
the British troops left
Berlin. Pointer founders
Gareth and Greg paid a
visit to the ever so chic
Civilist store and came up
with the idea of a
fraternization a tribute
to the influence of the
British in Berlin.
The collection features
Cyril, a Pointer standard
in black on waxed suede
with a crepe sole, a parka
and t-shirt. Available
from Civilist and Pointer
online.
Pointerfootwear.com
RING RING
VERY
CRAFTY
Soviet launches The
Craftsman for AW12
With 25 years under their belt, this
year Soviet has been preparing to
give itself a gentle dust down and
spruce up. Fresh new designers
have been drafted in and an
exciting series of collections are
lined up. Most forthcoming is their
Autumn Winter range that mixes up
a rustic, easy to wear, cosy but not
lazy capsule. Weve always got a
soft spot for chunky knitwear
their Simon cardi with wooden
toggles hits the spot looking fine
with their Darwin polo and a pair of
Eames chinos (as pictured).
This year its good, but next year it
gets even better. Believe.
Soviet is available exclusively
through usc.co.uk
PELE MAKEOVER
connected
We Own
Not only are We Own connected, but theyre bloody well right in the
thick of it. Party purveyors, celebrators of the good groove and
makers of fine t-shirts and apparel. In their own words, we make
clothes and throw parties. Theyve not held back in the slightest this
summer, with parties going off in Ibiza, Croatia and Scotland.
A brand just two years young, its all about their club-kissed logo and
sassy twist to their vests and t-shirt designs that has held We Own
high in the style ranks.
Brand founder Marty Bell is out there living and breathing the scene
and has hopes to take We Own to the next level. We want We Own to
be the largest brand in the DJ/clubscene. We hope to develop our
events side of the company into a fully fledged fashion line, with wild
party stores in every major city, he explains, adding that a music
festival may well be on the cards.
Weown.org
020
www.djmag.com
Nico Ni jewellery is
currently rocking our
world. Loving the solid
silver and crystal
collections. Inspired by
clubbing it round the
world, Nicole Leech is
crafting something
fabulous here. Nicioni.
co.uk
UNDER UNDERWEAR
Loving this understated brand. Muted colours,
soft cottons, easy on the eye, low on the
logo you get the picture. Underunderwear.
com
LINE UP
MonThThThTh
ThThThThThThThTh
463'5)&$)&33:803-%"5
WeThneThThThThTh
TTheThThThThTh
FrFrFrFrFrFr
SThtThThThThThTh
SThnThThThTh
Machine
dreamers
T
echno is inescapable today.
A truly global music and
lifestyle its popular all over the
world in a myriad of styles and
interpretations. It informs fashion,
film, pop music and culture all over. Its chief
driving force, technology, continues to push it
down new avenues, our increasingly computercentric world affording it new opportunities to
mutate and evolve.
kinetic energy
DOING IT PROPERLY
LADY ON TOP
Flash Back
State of independence
TURBO BOOST!
www.djmag.com
025
KINETIC
ENERGY
Blawan and Pariah two of the UKs most forward-thinking
producers have joined forces to form new alias Karenn.
With their fresh, tough UK sound part of an uprising in new
techno talent and their Sheworks label on fire, it was time
to meet the firebrands of the underground to find out
what the future holds
Words: BEN MURPHY Pics: Dan Reid
club music
026
INDUSTRIAL
www.djmag.com
www.djmag.com
DEFINITIONS
027
SHEWORKS
ANALOGUE
028
Techno 2.0
UNTOLD
At a creative crossroads, Hemlock boss Jack Dunning,
known to bass enthusiasts as Untold, drew upon techno to
turn his creative clock back to zero. Previously pandering
to a dancefloor more hungry for the drop than the more
experimental end of dubstep, he looked to 4/4 styles as a
means of starting afresh toward the latter part of the decade.
It was almost like a blank slate, really, Jack explains.
Writing at that tempo, with that 4/4 beat, is just something
else to chuck ideas at. At that time, people wanted the
chainsaws and there was no point fighting a losing battle.
I made a call. Am I going to try to compete on the level of
dubstep, make these tracks that have got bigger drops than
the next tune? I was like, nah, my stuff has always been
indigo
jon convex
Much like Boddika, the other half of cavaliering d&b duo
Instra:mental, Damon Drama switched focus from 160bpm
breakbeats to the slower pulse of Detroit-inspired machine music
in recent years. Staying loyal to the seething undercurrent of his
earlier work, under his Jon Convex moniker, he has dropped tunes on
Martyns 3024 imprint and has just landed album IDORU onto his
own dedicated techno label Convex Industries. In keeping with the
dystopian 125bpm ideas explored alongside Boddika as Autonomic,
the album sees Damon stir elements of Detroit electro, Krautinformed electroclash and house into the mix.
Its very much within the last few years that Ive really got back
into the 4/4 rhythm, says Damon. I used to love it back in 91/92
with the hardcore mixing up with techno and then fusing together
with breakbeats over the 4/4 structure. I just enjoy layering all the
elements I love over a thumping head-nodding beat.
029
Top 100
most
important
techno
records
words: ALLAN MCGRATH, PAUL CLARKE, RICHARD BROPHY, JOE ROBERTS, ADAM SAVILLE,
BEN MURPHY, BEN ARNOLD
Kraftwerk
Visage
02.
Frequency 7
Polydor 1981
01.
www.djmag.com
03.
A Number Of Names
Sharevari
Capriccio 1981
Cybotron
Manuel
Gottsching
05.
E2-E4
04.
Clear
Fantasy 1983
Model 500
06.
No UFOs
Metroplex 1985
Nitzer Ebb
07.
Juan
09.
11.
Robert Armani
Techno Music
Circus Bells
10 Records 1988
Reese
10.
08.
Rhythim Is Rhythim
Strings Of Life/Nude Photo
Transmat 1987
slam
12.
Suburban Knight
The Art Of Stalking
Transmat 1990
Joey Beltram
13.
Energy Flash
R&S 1990
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031
Orbital
14.
Chime
FFRR 1990
KGB
15.
Stark
KMS 1990
Ron Trent
16.
Altered States
SURGEON
032
LFO
17.
LFO
AFX
18.
Analogue Bubblebath
Mighty Force Records 1991
FUSE
21.
Substance Abuse
Plus 8 1991
19.
Second Phase
Mentasm
R&S 1991
Speedy J
Plus8 1991
22.
20.
Evolution
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UR
CJ Bolland
23.
Camargue
R&S 1992
Fix
26.
Flash
KMS 1992
DJ Hell
24.
Age Of Love
25.
UR
27.
Jupiter Jazz
Underground Resistance 1992
Hardfloor
29.
Acperience 1
Harthouse 1992
Vapourspace
32.
Gravitational Arch of 10
Plus8 1993
33.
The Martian
30.
Star Dancer
Red Planet 1993
28.
Eddie Flashin
Fowlkes
31
Time To Express
Laurent Garnier
Wake Up
FNAC 1993
www.djmag.com
Choice
34.
Acid Eiffel
Fnac 1993
033
Robert Hood
37.
Internal Empire
M-Plant 1994
Plastikman
35.
Spastik
Novamute 1993
69
38.
My Machines
Slam
36.
Positive Education
Soma 1993
Dan Curtin
39.
40.
Basic Channel
Phylyps Trak 2
Infiniti
Game One
Metroplex 1994
034
41.
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mICHAEL
MAYER
Planetary Assault
Systems Surface Noise
Peacefrog
If Luke Slater would be the
only techno producer on earth it
would still be a damn fine planet
to live on.
42.
Planetary Assault
Systems
Booster
Peacefrog 1994
DBX
45.
Losing Control
Accelerate 1994
Eat Static
43.
Implant
Planet Dog
1994
There are a million different
interpretations of what techno
actually is. To some, its anonymous
hand-stamped 12s from Berlin;
to others, its the minimal
machinations of Richie Hawtin; to
others still, its the techno soul of
Detroit, or the thundering stay up
forever hedonism of the Liberator
DJs and squat parties. But often
forgotten, or ignored, is the role
of crusty techno in the UKs
early to mid-90s dance culture,
when huge, festival-like events,
like Megadog at Brixton Academy,
were commonplace. Eat Static
(who often played and were seen
as figureheads), former members
of acid rock outfit Ozric Tentacles,
turned to the machines for their
cosmic, alien encounter-obsessed
take on club music, and hit paydirt
with the surprisingly funky, bubbling
acid and galactic synths of this title
cut from their best album.
44.
Patrick Pulsinger
Dogmatic Sequences II
Disko B/R&S 1994
46.
Emmanuel Top
Lobotomie
Novamute 1994
Dave Clarke
47.
Drexciya
Red 1
Bush 1994
Josh Wink
48
50.
Wave Jumper
The Advent
Daft Punk
51.
49.
Badboy
Internal 1995
www.djmag.com
Funk DVoid
52.
Jack Me Off
Soma 1995
035
Dopplereffekt
61.
Infophysix
LFO vs FUSE
53.
Loop
Kenny Larkin
56.
Soul Man
R&S 1995
Plus 8 1995
Sterac
57.
Aux 88
59.
Electro/Techno
Direct Beat 1996
DJ Skull
54.
Lochi
58.
Ken Ishii
55.
Extra
R&S 1995
036
62.
Neil Landstrumm
Inhabit The Machines
Peacefrog Records 1996
60.
Anthony Shake
Shakir
Life Of A Planet Raider
React 1996
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Miss Djax
63.
Mars 303
Djax-Up-Beats 1996
I-f
64.
1997
A member of uncompromising
Dutch collective Unit Moebius,
who started Bunker Records from
a squat in The Hague, I-f an
abbreviation of Interr-Ference is
its most far-reaching member,
running record shop Hotmix in
the 90s and spreading the gospel
of machine music since via labels
Viewlexx, Holographic and Murder
Capital, and his radio show on
24-hour internet radio station The
Cybernetic Broadcasting Systems,
now intergalacticfm.com. Steeped
in techno, electro and Italodisco, his biggest brush with the
overground was this primitive 808
workout of buzzing analogue bass
and vocodered lyrics about Atari
computer game villains getting high
and invading earth.
Jeff Mills
65.
The Bells
Carl Craig
66.
At Les
Planet E 1997
E-Dancer
67.
Heavenly
KMS 1997
Aril Brikha
68.
Groove La Chord
69.
camea
Surgeon
70.
La Real
Counterbalance 2001
Fragile 1998
Regis
71.
Penetration
Downwards 2001
www.djmag.com
top three
techno
tracks
Ricardo Villalobos
Easy Lee Playhouse
This record was a game changer for
me, the first time I heard it was at the
PS1 summer series events thrown by
the MoMa in New York in 2003. Both
Richie Hawtin and Magda played
it that day, and everyone became
fanatical over the album. It changed
my perception of what techno could
be.
037
72.
Kirk Degiorgio
Nairobi
Arpanet
75.
Wireless Internet
Record Makers 2002
Octave One
73.
Blackwater
Legowelt
74.
Klaus Kinski EP
Bunker 2002
038
76.
Ricardo Villalobos
Dexter
Playhouse 2003
77.
80.
Mathew Jonson
Gui Boratto
M-nus 2004
K2 2005
Decompression
Nathan Fake
78.
Andy Stott
79.
www.djmag.com
Arquipelago
Theo Parrish
81.
Audion
82.
Mouth To Mouth
Spectral Sound 2006
83.
Oxia
84.
86.
85.
Delsin 2006
Omar S
89.
Psychotic Photosynthesis
FXHE Records 2007
87.
Lucio Aquilina
Magic M
Shackleton
88.
Bay Of Figs
M-nus 2006
040
91.
Silent Servant
Misc Usage
Domino
Marc Houle
Redshape
Dubfire
90.
Ribcage
Desolat 2007
www.djmag.com
Wax
92.
10001
Wax 2008
93.
Daniele Papini
Church Of Nonsense
Alchemy 2008
Blawan
99.
Bohla
R&S 2011
94.
Heartthrob
95.
Cosmin TRG
97.
Liebe Suende
Rush Hour 2010
Romanian-born Berlin-based
dubstep/garage producer Cosmin
Nicolae turned a corner in 2010.
With a slew of releases on Rush
Hour, TRG swiftly became Cosmin
TRG and syncopation made way for a
ghostly succession of skeletal 4/4s.
More refined than its rambunctious
younger brother, Cosmin TRGs
new eerie and ethereal sound,
which bottom-ended the vintage
classicism of Detroit and Chicago
with acres of brooding sub-bass,
crossed a bridge between garage
and techno. A pre-cursor to todays
wave of panel-beating bass-heavy
techno from the likes of Indigo
and Blawan, the significance
of Liebe Suende shouldnt be
underestimated.
M-nus 2008
100.
Swamp 81 2012
Morphosis
98.
Too Far
Delsin 2011
Signs
CARL CRAIG
TOP THREE TECHNO
TRACKS
Suburban Knight
The Groove Transmat
Sexy dark techno before dark was a
genre.
Lil Louis
Blackout FFRR
Louis made some of the sexiest music
and this is a banger for unbridled
aggression on the dancefloor as well
as in bed.
96.
Levon Vincent
Inner City
Good Life 10 Records
www.djmag.com
041
DOING IT
PROPERLY
Berghains most celebrated resident, Berlin techno lord and
DJ/producer Marcel Dettmann lives, sleeps and breathes
his genre like few others. Hes also passionate, warm and
opinionated, as DJ Mag finds out
042
means of production
hand-stamped
www.djmag.com
If Im playing
a really long
set, Ill bring about
300 records and a
lot of CDs. Ill have a
proper breakfast and bring
snacks with me. Its a real
commitment, but you can play
records at Berghain that you
couldnt get away with
anywhere else.
www.djmag.com
resonances
043
LADY
ON TOP
044
www.djmag.com
MANIFESTO
FOR
CHANGE
Jeff Mills is a true techno original. A founder member of Underground
Resistance but now fiercely independent; a radical producer with a
genuine manifesto that extends to his productions, art and performances;
and a lightning-fast DJ with skills to put most others to shame. With a
sumptuous new boxset and photography book looking back over 20 years
of his label Axis, there could be no better time to interview the isolationist
astronaut himself to discuss the positives and negatives of technology, the
art of photography, what he thinks of laptop DJs, and much more
Words: paul clarke
www.djmag.com
SEQUENCE
045
046
www.djmag.com
Technology is teaching
us that we can have
everything we want, so
people wont just want
to listen to a DJ theyll
want to know what being
a DJ is actually like. To
experience what its like
to mix in front of 5,000
people will be more
interesting than just
being in the audience.
People want more out
of life, so the definition
of techno might change
more towards being a
feeling than an actual
sound.
UTOPIA/DYSTOPIA
PERFORMANCE
ISOLATION
www.djmag.com
047
STATE OF
INDEPENDENCE
act as a filter.
Even in the vinyl sphere, the number of labels has
increased, with hundreds of releases appearing weekly.
Its a far cry from when Marsel van der Wielen set up
Delsin in 1996. Back then, the best labels had buy on
sight status and acted as guides for DJs and trainspotters.
Yet despite the digital revolution, not much has
changed on planet Delsin. The Amsterdam imprints
track record in the past few years is enviable,
cultivating new artists like Conforce and Delta
Funktionen who have released EPs and accomplished
debut albums on the label and releasing material by
the current European techno royalty, including
Redshape, Morphosis, Mike Dehnert, A Made Up Sound
and Claro Intelecto.
Everything is going very smoothly last year was a
good year and this year is looking good too, says
Marsel in his laid-back tone.
So how come Delsin has succeeded where so many
labels that started during the heady late 90s have
foundered or shut down? Much can be explained by
Marsels involvement. Although he sounds relaxed and
is a music fan at heart, he takes the label very seriously.
For starters, he works full-time on Delsin and its sublabel Ann Aimee and sells their releases directly online.
048
FRESH
www.djmag.com
THINKING AHEAD
DAM BUSTERS
VINYL FUTURE
Delta Funktionen
www.djmag.com
Claro Intelecto
049
Take 10
DAVE CLARKE
The UK techno don, now residing
in Amsterdam, talks us through
his top 10 tracks from the technoid
vaults...
Words: richard brophy
050
www.djmag.com
www.djmag.com
051
Around
the
World
Deepchilds new album is a
cultural tapestry,
threading together
the sounds of
Saudi Arabia,
Detroit,
Australia and
Berlin into a
dazzling whole.
We spoke to him
about nomadism,
displacement,
and finally
coming to
rest
BERLIN
IMPERFECTIONS
www.djmag.com
053
Keeping
the
motor
running
054
The Resistance
www.djmag.com
Transistor Rhythm
Minimal
Knowledge
Three stripped-back Robert Hood
classics
055
056
www.djmag.com
how to make the best of it. These are the cards I was
dealt, and so I said, Life is what I make it. The keys are
in my hand. No matter what adversity I face, I cant sit
around and feel sorry for myself and have a pity party. I
cant say, I dont have this, dont have that, I dont
have a dad. I cant dwell on what I dont have. What I
should do is count my blessings.
This is the power I have, so let me reach inside this
Internal Empire that I have and pull it out and build on
it, display it to the world. Show that through vision, I
can build new planets, build new worlds, I can build this
Minimal Nation and not have to settle for a
substandard way of life. So we have to look on the
inside for what possibilities there are where there are
no dreams, people will perish.
058
LADY
ON TOP
www.djmag.com
If you got the chance to, what would you say to your
former DJ self?
I guess my advice would be to stay completely openminded, in the sense that everything is a work-inprogress. Its about enjoying what youre doing and
being totally yourself; not for any other reasons. Even if
its hard at times, its important to stick to your guns,
and having the right people next to you and around
you to support you, and you support them back. Youve
got to have very good friends and people you can trust
so you dont get lost in any bullshit.
www.djmag.com
059
WHAT MAKES
IT TECHNO?
Spanning over 30 years and still pushing forward into the
bleeding-edge, techno is arguably electronic musics most
significant and influential genre. We look at where it came
from and what makes it what it is.
Juan Atkins
DETROIT
060
Kevin Saunderson
GLOBAL
MOVEMENT
www.djmag.com
Jeff Mills
061
FUTURISM
CONSTANTLY SHIFTING
062
Dave Clarke
intensity of the
many Hardwax
labels. At the
same time, the
techno sound continues to
bleed into other genres from
all angles. Look into the deeper strains of dubstep and
Autonomic-influenced drum & bass, or even Skrillexs
mentalist machine trickery and modern pop (think
Joey Beltrams Mentasm hoovers popping up in Lady
Gaga records), and its influence is impossible to ignore.
From the edge-bleeding brutality of his Plus 8 label
through the techno uber-geekery of his seminal Decks
FX & 909 album in 1999 (four decks, a 909, an effects
processor, 38 tracks and 60 minutes), to his ongoing
M-nus legacy, Richie Hawtin has watched this
development in full.
Pure techno is the foundation of the now expanding
and growing commercial world of electronic music,
believes Hawtin. Techno is the test-bed of ideas that
will find their way into the musical trends of tomorrow,
like how the 909 hi-hats of Derrick May and early
Detroit records made their way into modern day pop
music, or how early Aphex Twin records paved the way
for successful electronic artists like Skrillex today.
NEW FORMS
www.djmag.com
Flash
Back
063
Turbo
Boost!
Tigas Turbo Recordings
is diverse by nature with
releases that join the dots
between funk, techno and
electro. And now hes putting
out a grassroots techno
compilation. DJ mag finds out
more
Words: claire hughes
ll my ideas and
inspirations come from
other peoples
records, says Tiga
Sontag, the 38-yearold DJ/producer and
owner of Montreal-based Turbo Recordings.
Thats the DJ mentality. You cant control it. Like
when someone tells a joke, you laugh or you
dont. Its the same with a record. You find it, and
it creates a reaction or it doesnt.
The spirit of his latest inspiration, mainly UK
techno, he says, is distilled into a compilation
made up of 10 exclusive tracks and called New
Jack Techno, out this month through Turbo. The
producers whose tracks are included on that
compilation Nautiluss, Gingy & Bordello and
Duke Dumont, to name a few are a far cry from
the output of Turbo artists such as raw techno
soul quartet Azari & III or, from further back in
the labels chronology, the Rick Jamesinfluenced, electro-funkster, white suit-wearing
duo Chromeo. But the thing about the music on
this new compilation tracks made by relatively
fledgling artists and all the music on Turbo, is
that it all has a distinctive, raw-ass edge to it. Its
that steel thread of knife-sharp cool that makes it
characteristically, well, Turbo Recordings music.
I think a lot of the techno coming out of the UK
064
BREAKING BARRIERS
www.djmag.com
SAY WHAT?
NAUTILUSS
TECHNO ROOTS
Anyone who associates Tiga with perfectlycoiffed hair, black eyeliner and snaky-hiphugging jeans might struggle to imagine him
head bent over a mixer, skip cap pulled down
over his eyes wearing a baggy t-shirt and a
serious Im mixing techno face. His productions
are equally schizophrenic in style: take his tech
house stomper Pleasure From The Bass and then
sit it alongside his co-produced Sunglasses At
Night and youd think they were made by two
different people. This split personality applies to
the label output, too.
There are some people who have bought all of
the Azari & III releases who might go and buy
New Jack Techno and absolutely hate it, says
Tiga. When were choosing what to release, we
SAY WHAT?
DUKE DUMONT
The first Tiga record I ever bought was Burning Down. It was around the
time I first started DJing in London. Turbo has helped define techno by
becoming a figurehead of quality. But to me, the term techno represents
the more industrial, and sterile-sounding side to dance music. The only
thing that has changed is, rather than the guys from Detroit ripping off acts
like Kraftwerk and Ultravox in the 1980s, it has switched to European guys
now ripping off the guys from Detroit from the 1980s. Go listen to anyone
playing the Boiler Room to see what I am talking about.
065
SAY WHAT?
LOCKED GROOVE
No nOSTALGIA
worked in the
reverse. Weve never
focused on one thing.
But were still here.
Turbo released Russian techno DJ/producer
Proxys Destroy in 2006. A year later, the first ZZT
release Tigas collaboration with Zombie Nation
came out on Turbo. Cari Lekebusch, Moby,
Zombie Nation, Jori Hulkonnen and Sei A have all
since released through the label. And then, in
2011, Turbo introduced the world to Azari & III.
Theyre actually from Toronto, says Tiga. So its
nice to add that local element to the label. And
next up, he says, he plans to focus on talent
closer to home; possibly by putting out a
compilation album featuring box-fresh cuts from
Canadian artists. Hell give some attention to all
of this after hes finished recording his third
production album.
Ive been working on that this week, says Tiga.
I was in New York in Matthew Dears studio
recording some stuff for the album. Therell
probably be a track with Jake Shears on there.
As ever, this new album will be diverse. And,
unlike the New Jack Techno album, it wont
SAY WHAT?
GINGY &
BORDELLO
066
www.djmag.com
Beck to the
future
After a fortuitous endorsement from Richie Hawtin, the career of
Glasgow techno master Gary Beck snowballed. Now, with a sizeable
body of work for M-nus, Cocoon and Drumcode, hes about to drop his
debut album for Soma
Words: claire hughes
techno stripes.
His debut production album Bring A Friend, coming
soon on Slams Soma Records, takes in all his techno
sensibilities: shape-shifting from hypnotic, bass-heavy
cuts to minimal soul. Fluid, driving, atmospheric tunes
such as I Read About You sit alongside the militaristic
stomp of Hopkins. The album, Somas 100th release, is
a future techno opus that adds weight to Garys string
of releases on labels including Drumcode, Sven Vths
Cocoon, Richie Hawtins M-nus, Speedy Js
Electric Deluxe and his own Bek Audio.
And while hes one of British technos
brightest young stars, he can remember
all too clearly when it wasnt like that.
Everything changed for him, he says, one
wet afternoon in Glasgow, back in 2007.
I was in the opticians, picking up my new contact
lenses, when my phone went, says Gary. I
noticed it was a foreign number, so I answered
it and the person on the line said they were
Richie Hawtin. At first I thought it was a wind-up. But
he insisted it was him, and said that he loved my track
Consumed, that Id sent him at M-nus, and that he
wanted to sign it.
hawtins influence
Garys currently working on some tech house tunes
with Nic Fanciulli. And hes also excited about some
tunes that Mr G has made for Bek Audio. When it comes
to techno, Gary isnt a purist. He got his first taste
of dance music in the late 1990s, at The Arches, in
Glasgow, when he heard John Digweed DJing. After
that, he started spending hours browsing the shelves
of Glasgow record shop 23rd Precinct, building up his
own house and techno collection.
His DJing reached a new level, he says, after witnessing
Richie Hawtins set during his Dex N Fx tour in 2000.
It was just like nothing Id heard. He was making a
track live out of five different loops, and layering on
loads of effects. It seemed incredible to me at the time.
The energy he created on stage too was incredible.
Even the way he looked: with his bald head and his
glasses. He had a real presence.
When Gary DJs he plays all his own stuff, quite often
playing music he has no intention of ever releasing.
He uses Traktor but also plays with vinyl, too. He plays
regularly, all over the world; at clubs such as Berghain
in Berlin, Cielo in New York and all over the US and
Europe.
I just love the feeling of DJing with vinyl, and the
skill and challenge thats involved in being able to mix
properly, he says. Ive always loved that aspect of
DJing. But its just a shame that vinyl decks in a club
are always so shit.
full-time techno
Before that, Gary had been juggling DJing and making
music with working as a recruitment consultant in the
oil and gas business.
At that time, I spent my days booking people to
work offshore on oil rigs in South Africa, Nigeria and
Aberdeen, says Gary. It was really boring. It was shit.
All I could think about all day was making music. I made
my first release in 2005 and I worked in that day job for
two years after that.
Garys first release Stick To The Reggae was a heavy
slice of tribal techno laced with dub delay. He
made it one evening after work, in the studio
he set up in his mums house. Under
instruction from his friend Andy Graham,
who makes music as Sei A, Gary posted
the tune to US label Worship Recordings.
Andy had already had some releases on that
label, but I was surprised when they said they
wanted to sign it, says Gary.
From that moment, I knew I had to work
towards giving up my day job.
After his surprise phone call from Richie
Hawtin, Garys dream about ditching the
office job came true. Just months after
Richie put Consumed out on his Richie Hawtin
www.djmag.com
067
068
www.djmag.com
HERE WE GO
(ORIGINAL MIX)
09.KNIFE PARTY
RAGE VALLEY
(ORIGINAL MIX)
06.ALBIN MYERS
HELLS BELLS
(ORIGINAL MIX)
HERTZ (ORIGINAL
MIX)
FREAKAZOID
(ORIGINAL MIX)
www.djmag.com
MIX)
13.DENIZ KOYU
BONG
BEATING OF MY HEART
(MATISSE & SADKO
REMIX)
HULK (DILLON
FRANCIS REMIX)
069
VivaLaRevolution!!
Last year we held our annual DJ Mag Tech Awards at BPM, Europes biggest DJ event,
with a judging panel of the great and good of dance music. This time, weve decided
to really shake things up and embrace the future. For 2012, we have a new panel
you, the DJ Mag readers. Youve cast your votes on some of the hottest equipment in
town. Now, lets see who reigns supreme
he annual DJ Mag Tech awards are upon us, but this time weve
decided to embrace technology, with the whole process contested
online. Each shortlisted manufacturer supplied a video of their
equipment in action, leaving the voting to be completed by the
viewers of the worldwide web in our new Facebook voting system.
With over 100,000 votes cast, the new-style awards definitely proved a
hit with everyone who got involved. It just shows that not only is this an
important part of the scene for the DJs and producers, but it is also an area
that is of great relevance to anyone who has a vested interest in the dance
music scene.
The culture has changed and evolved rapidly in just a few short years and
so has the technology. Your votes have been counted its time to find out
who triumphed in the DJ Mag Tech Awards arena. Over the next few pages,
discover which bits of kit have claimed the coveted crown for 2012
Kutski
Magda
The DJ Mag
Tech Awards are
important to me,
as Im always
looking at whats new in technology, whether for my
productions or for my DJ sets.
The techno
doyenne has
always embraced
the tools that
allow her to create
simply sublime
electronic music
James Zabiela
070
www.djmag.com
Regular
Tech Awards
judge Kutski
is an ardent
fan of music
technology.
Here, he gives
his spin on the
importance of
the DJ Mag Tech
Awards
The
fundamentals
of DJing have
never, and will
never change
its about
the music we
play. However, like any art or craft, the better and
more varied tools we have presented to us, the more
creative the possibilities are. The latest generation
of superstar DJs today may never have mixed on
vinyl, and as negative as this is generally perceived,
I think its exciting that there is a new blank canvas
untarnished by the technical restraints older DJs
began with. DJing is no longer just playing records.
There are now countless ways you can broadcast your
sound, from total in the box computer systems,
to midi controllers, time code, CD players, MP3
players... Even apps on your phone that allow you to
DJ at a competent level.
In all this excitement and noise, it can be hard for
hardware and software manufacturers to reach their
desired audience to showcase the next potential
evolution in the industry. Likewise, with so many
boxes of flashing LEDs, it can be hard for consumers
to find the right product for their needs... especially
as none of this stuff comes cheap! This is why Ive
always been involved in the DJ Mag Tech Awards. Its
the much-needed nexus point where each year all
the manufacturers can come together and showcase
their latest and greatest creations, while consumers
get to see the products in action and side-by-side
comparisons to decide for themselves which are
worthy of their hard-earned cash!
Denon
Sixty-Two
1799
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
TECH VERDICT
9/10
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Native
Instruments
Traktor Kontrol F1
195
Hype
Gripe
None
Behringer continue to
dominate the budget market,
but do so by offering quality
products at a price that cant
be grumbled at.
7/10
RMX1000
749
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
No built-in soundcard.
TECH VERDICT
CMD DJ Controllers
various
TECH
VERDICT
Pioneer
Hype
Behringer
9/10
WINNER
9/10
TECH VERDICT
The ultimate players for the ultimate club experience. These decks
can play music from any source vinyl, CD, digital and beyond.
WINNER
Denon
SC3900
999
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
CDJ2000
1500
Pioneer
CDJ850
769
Hype
Gripe
TECH VERDICT
Pioneer
7/10
Numark
TECH VERDICT
MixDeck Quad
749
8/10
9/10
Gemini
CDMP-7000
859
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
7.5/10
TECH VERDICT
Hype
TECH VERDICT
TECH VERDICT
www.djmag.com
7/10
071
Denon
WINNER
DNS1200
379
Stanton
SCS.4DJ
459
Hype
Hype
Midi-controlled, soundcard,
amazing scratch control, USB
playback of MP3 and Wav, three
effects, loops memo and D-link.
Gripe
Gripe
None
TECH
VERDICT
9/10
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Gemini
CDJ-700
549
Pioneer
Reloop
Hype
CDJ350
527
Hype
Gripe
RMP-3 Alpha
545
Hype
TECH
VERDICT
Gripe
Gripe
Bit of an unknown
quantity in the UK DJing
scene.
A do-it-all player that looks
good, with a nice simple
layout for operation.
8.4/10
TECH
VERDICT
7/10
TECH VERDICT
7/10
Let battle commence. Tough one to call, but its not called
Ultimate Club DJ mixer for nothing
Rane
Pioneer
Sixty-Eight
2099
DJM 900
1599
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
8.8/10
TECH VERDICT
XONE DB4
1800
Behringer
Hype
8.5/10
072
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
TECH VERDICT
Sixty-Two
1799
Gripe
WINNER
Rane
NOX606
250
7/10
TECH VERDICT
www.djmag.com
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Serato
Serato
Scratch Live
499
ITCH
Free with hardware
controllers designed for ITCH
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
9/10
TECH VERDICT
Ableton
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Mixvibes
Traktor
Live 8
399
Cross
49
Pro
79
Hype
Hype
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Gripe
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
WINNER
9/10
TECH VERDICT
8/10
Vestax
Native Instruments
VCI-400
649
Traktor Kontrol S4
650
WINNER
Hype
Hype
Gripe
None.
Gripe
8.5/10
tecH VERDICT
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Numark
4TRAK
799
Hype
Pioneer
DDJ S1
899
Gripe
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
SmithsonMartin
Hype
Gripe
Even though it has been condensed into a more DJ-friendly size, it still
could be considered a gimmick.
An interesting take on the controller, utilizing touch-screen technology.
Looks good on stage if there is a lot going on, but will it actually take off in
the clubs?
8/10
TECH VERDICT
7.5/10
TECH VERDICT
www.djmag.com
073
Its not all about the big guns. These cut-price wonders will
make any budding DJ feel like a seasoned professional.
Reloop
TM4
450
Native
Instruments
Hype
Traktor Kontrol F1
195
Hype
Gripe
Native
Instruments
Traktor Kontrol S2
389
Gripe
No built-in soundcard.
The Kontrol F1 allows DJs to
perform in Traktor as they would in
Ableton. Adding this to your set-up
opens up a whole new world of
performance.
7/10
TECH VERDICT
TECH
VERDICT
Hype
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
8.5/10
Hype
K2
219
8.5/10
WINNER
Gripe
Numark
N4
349
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Denon
WINNER
DNX600
549
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Behringer
DDM4000
299
Hype
Gripe
Hype
Gripe
7/10
TECH VERDICT
074
IQ2+
300
M.207
369
Hype
Reloop
Stanton
TECH
VERDICT
8/10
www.djmag.com
TECH
VERDICT
7.5/10
Pioneer
DJM250
250
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
www.pointblanklondon.com
WINNER
Pioneer
Mixvibes
VFX CONTROL
329
SVM 1000
5699
Hype
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
Video
99
Awesome integration of
audio and visual effects,
bright colourful
touch-screen, built-in
visuals and no
compromise for regular
audio jocks.
Gripe
7/10
No single product
compares to the
SVM-1000, but the price
tag is hefty.
TECH VERDICT
8/10
TECH VERDICT
TECH
VERDICT
7/10
Resolume
Emulator
Hype
VJ
289
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
7/10
Tech verdict
DJ Soundcard
Native Instruments
Focusrite
Scarlett 2i2
119
Audio 2 DJ
79
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
8.5/10
Rane
SL 4
699
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Hype
Apogee
Duet2
402
Gripe
Hype
Expensive.
A feature-rich soundcard that can
now be used on any DJing and
production software, and not just
Serato Scratch Live.
WINNER
TECH
VERDICT
9/10
Native
Instruments
Audio DJ 10
329
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
076
www.djmag.com
Stunningly beautiful to
look at, and the
world-famous Apogee
converters sound as
good as the box looks.
Gripe
TECH VERDICT
9.4/10
Propellerhead
Reason 6.5
250
Steinberg
Cubase
508
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
Hype
TECH
VERDICT
Apple
9/10
Logic
417
Ableton
TECH
VERDICT
8/10
Hype
Live 8
399
Industry standard
production software. Great
performance, easy to use.
Hype
Native
Instruments
Komplete 8
499
Hype
Absolutely massive
collection of everything one
would need to produce killer
dance tunes, and the price
per product value is
unbelievable.
Gripe
Gripe
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
8/10
TECH VERDICT
WINNER
9/10
TECH VERDICT
9.3/10
Propellerhead
Balance
265
Hype
Native
Instruments
Gripe
For users who are only looking for the audio interface,
there are cheaper alternatives that offer better quality
as well as features.
Maschine
329
Hype
WINNER
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Steinberg
CMC Controllers
69 to 104 each,
depending on which
controller is
purchased
Gripe
9/10
TECH VERDICT
Akai
Focusrite
Saffire 6 USB
149
Pro MPC
399
Hype
Hype
Hype
Gripe
Gripe
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
TECH
VERDICT
9/10
078
www.djmag.com
TECH
VERDICT
9/10
Vinyl may be on the decline, but here we look at the best software/hardware
combination for recreating that old school hands-on DJ experience.
Mixvibe
Cross Pack
159
Virtual DJ
Hype
Pro
220
Hype
Native
Instruments
Hype
TECH VERDICT
Hercules
Gripe
Gripe
Hype
Gripe
7/10
Gripe
Serato
TECH
VERDICT
Scratch Live
499
7/10
Hype
WINNER
Gripe
7/10
TECH VERDICT
TECH
VERDICT
8.5/10
TECH
VERDICT
9/10
DJ Tools incorporating FX
Taking DJing to infinity and beyond, here we check out the tools
to enhance your DJing performances.
Mixed in Key
Mash Up
35
Pioneer
Rekord Box
free
Hype
Hype
Gripe
None.
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
7.5/10
TECH
VERDICT
Denon
8/10
Engine
free
Hype
WINNER
RMX 1000
749
Hype
Hype
8/10
TECH VERDICT
Gripe
TECH
VERDICT
Gripe
9/10
8/10
TECH VERDICT
080
Gripe
Pioneer
Korg
www.djmag.com
Native
Instruments
WINNER
iMaschine
2.99
Hype
Gripe
Moog
Animoog
20.99
Gripe
TrakProDJ
Deluxe Edition
9.99
TECH
VERDICT
TECH
VERDICT
7.5/10
A proper
turntable-style DJ app
with effects that is lots
of fun and costs very
little to own.
8/10
Gripe
Hype
TECH VERDICT
Hype
for iPad
13.99
Hype
An authentic-sounding
Moog with MIDI support,
as well as onscreen
keyboard.
djay
Gripe
MixVibes
CrossDJ Remote
7.99
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
7/10
7/10
TECH VERDICT
Headphones
Reloop
AIAIAI
RHP-20
109
TMA-1
159
Hype
Hype
Gripe
None.
Gripe
Sennheiser
HD25
159
Hype
TECH
VERDICT
Gripe
8/10
TECH
VERDICT
8/10
Allen & Heath
XD 253
159
TECH
VERDICT
Pioneer
8/10
HDJ 2000
229
Hype
Hype
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
WINNER
Gripe
8/10
TECH VERDICT
www.djmag.com
081
Denon
SC3900
It is always going to be
a difficult task when it
comes to any process
where there is a public
vote to determine what
can be considered the
best. Sometimes it
comes down to a plain
and simple popularity
contest. There are times
when a piece of kit is
technologically far
more advanced than
the obvious winner,
but hasnt quite caught
the imagination of the
mainstream public. It
is with this thinking
that we have decided
this year to award
one standout product
with the editors
Choice Award. This is
recognition for a product
082
www.djmag.com
WHITE PASSION
funk it up
p.086
We get that Sofrito feeling
JOCKEY
JOURNAL p.093
Matthias Tanzmann takes on
the world
HIGH FIVE
p.094
Top September nights
BEACHSIDE
HEDONISM p.096
p.100
We lose ourselves at
Hideout 2012
GLADE
ON THE FLOOR
The on-the-pulse guide to the deep, down and dirty gyrations of global clubland
Wheels in Motion
In:Motion flexes its musical muscles with the biggest line-up to date
hile Bristol has long been revered as a hotbed for UK-born dance
music, the scene steeped in soundsystem culture hinged
traditionally on bass music over the years, ruling as the nations
second city for d&b and dubstep.
Over the past 12 months, however, the groovier, more melodic styles of the 4/4
emerged as another dominating force, much down to the pioneering force of the
Futureboogie imprint alongside house heads such as Julio Bashmore, Waifs & Strays
and former d&b junkie Eats Everything.
None of this should go without raising a glass to In:Motion. The South Wests saving
grace for the citys house music enthusiasts, annually residing down in the depths of
Bristols Motion Skatepark since 2010 in a similar vein to Manchesters Warehouse
084
Project for four months at a time, its catalysed the fresh wave contributing to the
citys ongoing facelift.
Launching on 29th September, this years In:Motion season is destined to be the
deadliest yet. Running until December, big names like SvenVth,Seth Troxler, Fatboy
Slim and Josh Wink share the bill alongside more subterranean talent such as Ben
UFO, Huxley and Paul Woolford thanks to promotion teams such as Cocoon (30th
November), Futureboogie (23rd November) and driving force Just Jack, which will
launch the series on 29th September with Jamie Jones and Dyed Soundorom/Dan
Ghenacia b2b. Thats not to say the original sounds of Brizzle have been forgotten,
though. Breaks, d&b, hip-hop, bass and all its dubby derivatives have found a place,
www.djmag.com
IN:MOTION
WHEN? Saturday 29th
September Tuesday 1st January
WHERE? Motion, Bristol
HIGHLIGHTS? SvenVth. Jamie
Jones, Seth Troxler, Dyed
Soundorom & Dan Ghenacia, Josh
Wink, Claude VonStroke, Eats
Everything & Justin Martin,
Scuba, Paul Woolford, Disclosure,
Todd Edwards, Lee Scratch
Perry, Mosca, Huxley, Public
Enemy, Grimes...
HOW MUCH? 16.50+
WEB? bristolinmotion.com
LPG closure
London Pleasure Gardens goes
into liquidation
Newham Council announced London Pleasure
Gardens would enter into a voluntary
administration process on 3rd August.
The company operating the LPG site a
30,000 capacity event location built on
industrial wasteland at Pontoon Dock in South
East London ran into financial difficulties as
a result of insufficient funding.
The Gardens, which played host to the well-documented failure of Bloc 2012 early last month, were originally
scheduled to launch in April this year; however, delays meant the official opening didnt take place until 30th
June.
In April early this year, the location was far from ready to open, so therefore the whole project had to be
slightly rushed, said Make, Moore & Grooves Dan Perrin who, while not directly involved with the logistical
direction of the project, took charge of bookings for the site. Their initial intention was to build slowly
towards bigger events through a series of industry, cultural and community events, but this was not possible
in the time available.
Following Blocs cancellation at 9pm on its first day, which resulted with the liquidation of the events
holding company Baselogic last month, LPG struggled to retain the promotion teams booked for the rest of
the summer while limping to satisfy its projected financial forecasts, resulting in staff redundancies. Adding
to this, while the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) projected
the footfall for the site to be around 30,000 a day due to the sites accessibility as an official pathway for
attendees of the games, only a small percentage of this was realised, Perrin explained to DJ Mag.
On 2nd August, Secretsundaze announced it would pull its Go Bang! party planned for August Bank Holiday.
The resignation of a director at LPG Ltd promptly followed; then the decision to go into administration.
Club colossus Warehouse Projecthas served the billing for its 12-week stint at
its new home at Victoria Warehouse, Trafford Park. And, yes, as usual, its MEGA.
Entering its seventh year of sonic supremacy over the Rainy City of the north,
this seasons all-star cast features names old and new to the series, starting
on Friday 28th September. Bugged Out!, Hospitality and Crosstown Rebels will
return for another bout of bass-ready trouble, while Hot Creations (presents
Paradise), Red Bull Music Academy (RBMA) and DHP Concerts join the ranks
with WHP debuts. As usual, therell be regular curation from individual artists,
with TEED, SBTRKT and Laidback Luke joining seasoned regulars like Annie Mac,
Pete Tong and The Chemical Brothers throughout the autumn/winter months.
And, of course, the end of season finale (line-up TBA) will take place on New
Years Eve to make sure this epic series of parties receives the gargantuan
celebratory culmination it rightly deserves. thewarehouseproject.com
YEASAYER
02 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE,
LONDON
with Hessle Audio (5th October), STB (19th October), Funk
From The Trunk XL (20th October) and Tokyo Dub (26th
October) hosting events.
High Contrast, Netsky and Nicky Blackmarket will be there to
jiggle internal organs alongside the Hospitality crew on 6th
October. Plus, digital dance pop icon Grimes is live on Tuesday
13th November, as are hip-hop giants Public Enemy as part of
their 25th Anniversary tour on 28th October. Better get those
wheels in motion, then. Make some plans.
www.djmag.com
085
ON THE FLOOR
FUNK IT UP
SOFRITO
LONDON
DANCE OFF!
TWO UK DANCE FESTIVALS WILL SIGN OFF THE SUMMER IN A HAIL OF GLORY
THIS MONTH. WHICH GETS YOUR VOTE?
ROB DA BANK
Bestival is the only way to end our summer because its the
ultimate non-stop, hedonistic, knees-up, morris dancing,
tequila shooting, insane raving, Mr Motivatoring, Stevie
Wonder loving festival out there. Simply the Bestival!
Bestival takes place 6th-9th September at Robin Hill
Country Park, Isle Of Wight with Stevie Wonder, New Order,
The xx, Friendly Fires, Soulwax, Justice, Orbital, Totally
Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, SBTRKT, Azealia Banks, Kevin
Saunderson feat Inner City (live), Grimes, Little Dragon,
Drums Of Death, Gold Panda and many more...
VS .
GRAEME STEWART
086
www.djmag.com
EVOLUTION UK TOUR
SEPTEMBER 29
O2 ACADEMY
GLASGOW
OCTOBER 5
O2 ACADEMY
LEEDS
OCTOBER 6
CREAM, NATION
LIVERPOOL
OCTOBER 12
THE EMPORIUM
COALVILLE
OCTOBER 13
ELECTRIC BRIXTON
LONDON
OCTOBER 20
WAREHOUSE PROJECT
MANCHESTER
O2ABCGLASGOW.CO.UK
THEEMPORIUMUK.CO.UK
GOODGREEF.COM | DIGITALSOCIETY.CO.UK
ELECTRICBRIXTON.COM | PVDLONDON.COM
CREAM.CO.UK
THEWAREHOUSEPROJECT.COM
ON THE FLOOR
Mark Knight
Sonny
Wharton
(resident)
088
www.djmag.com
DANNY HOWARD
(RADIO 1)
I absolutely loved
Evoke! A huge club
packed to the brim with
state-of-the-art
lighting, a thumping
soundsystem and an
amazing crowd who
know their music.
$* \ 02/$5#%2 \ 2%-)8%2
3HOGUN WISHES TO THANK ALL HIS FANS FOR THEIR SUPPORT DURING $* -AG
VOTING SEASON #HECK OUT HIS UPCOMING ORIGINAL RELEASES AND REMIXES
PLUS NEW TOUR DATES TO SEE IF 3HOGUNgS COMING TO A CITY NEAR YOU
.%7 2%,%!3%3
s 3USANA
/NLY 9OU 3HOGUN 2EMIX
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-UST "E 4HE ,OVE 3HOGUN 2EMIX
s 3HOGUN
5&/
s 3HOGUN FEAT %MMA ,OCK
&LY !WAY
4/52 $!4%3
s TH !UG
s TH !UG
s TH !UG
s RD !UG
s TH !UG
s TH !UG
s ST !UG
s ST 3EP
s 3EP
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