I just came across t his in my email drafts folder.
I was asked to put some words together about Been Lean EPso that my PR guys could put together a press release.
Clearly what I wrote was a little on the excessive side, so maybe this is the best place to post it. :)
The Been Lean EP is in many ways a culmination
of 12 month's work. That's not to say that it took me 12 months to write
these 5 tracks :), more that these are tunes that I've written and put
to one side over the year.
It was almost exactly 12 months ago that I wrote "All my Zeros are
Greater Than Your One" - I'd met up with Don Kreecha and Rob Romor
Morris a few months earlier, who I went on to form Scold with, and this
had really opened my eyes up to the sort quality of sound that I should
be creating. The title of All My Zeros was a thinly veiled dig at
people who sit on the sidelines, mocking those that fail.
I'd really thrown myself into moombahton at this point, and it was
getting a lot of stick from people who couldn't see the potential. The
tune just evolved from a sample of silence taken from an Italian
monastery. I have this whole thing in my head that sound and tunes in
general need to have have an almost 3 dimensional feel. As long as there
is something to guide the listener through, then abstract sounds that
have movement really work for me.
Been Lean came next - I'd started to hear about the whole 'Lean House'
movement - checked out a mix from Brodinski and then Boyfriend dropped
his lean remix of MAW, To be in Love. Dots started connecting for me at
this loin - I'd always liked his production and dropping the Dem Bow,
strippin stuff back and making something minimal really appealed to me.
The general vibe of the track also comes from a day I spent on a beach
in Ibiza, walking up and down with a pushchair trying to get my son to
sleep. Headphones on, with the sound of cars, lightly in the distance,
drifting past. Crickets buzzing and people moving, muffled by sea and
sand.
Bet You Don't was a tune I sat down to write while playing with a
borrowed Oberheim DX drum machine. The same one as used by New Order for
Blue Monday. Funny thing was that it came from a friend of mine who
bought a lot of ex New Order study kit, and the first patterns were the
ones from Blue Monday :)
Anyway - I spent the best part of £40 on cables and plugs, and ended up
using one sample of a clap… which I already had in a sample pack haha.
Still, all was not lost because I ended up with 'Bet you Don't'. This
goes back to my early house and techno days, and I was kind of feeling
the vibe of those original sweat box clubs that I used to frequent. This
is all about jeans and dirty sneakers, black light and bass bins.
Standard Reflex - This is a tune that I wrote back in April - I just
wanted something with a real laid back vibe. I sent it to Dave &
matt - they liked it, but asked me to go back and re-think some of the
sounds I was using and the structure. There must be about 30 versions of
this - it ws worth it though as what I feel I've ended up with is
something that has a great deal of subtlety. This is about setting up a
night. Slowly.
12 months after All My Zeros, I finished "Burning Up' which was written
almost entirely around a sample of the late Stooges Ron Asheton. He was
being interviewed in one of the original halls where they first
performed, expounding on the quality of the sound and I just ran
upstairs, came down with my laptop and sampled it. There's an energy in
this track that seems to come from the bass, but in fact comes from what
he's saying and how he's saying it. In many ways this is one of my
favourites because it evokes a lot of music memories in terms of sound
and emotion
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