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(idm) Squarepusher talks

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1996-04-05 15:08Erkki Rautio (idm) Squarepusher talks
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1996-04-05 15:08Erkki RautioTHE FOUR-SIDE SAGA by Tim Barr "Who is he?" Tom Jenkinson "Better known as?" Squarepusher,
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Erkki Rautio
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Date:
Fri, 5 Apr 1996 15:08:35 +0300 (EET DST)
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(idm) Squarepusher talks
permalink · <199604051208.PAA14147@kielo.uta.fi>
THE FOUR-SIDE SAGA by Tim Barr "Who is he?" Tom Jenkinson "Better known as?" Squarepusher, (although he also does a nice line in EP's as The Duke Of Harringay too.) "Where's he from?" Blur country - Chelmsford - originally, but relocated to Harringay recently, thus the _nom de tune_. "He's one of them Hackney types then is he?" Yup, his neighbour Richard 'Aphex Twin' James has been round begging for tracks for his Rephlex label. "Will he get them?" Probably, although Warp, Ninja Tune and R&S are all ready to slug it out over a long-term deal. "Prompted by what exactly?" His remix of DJ Food's 'Scratch Yer Head' in the 'Refried Food' series, a pair of cracking EPs on his tod and a sprinkling of bowel-quakingly good live appearances. "What's does he sound like?" A three-way jam between Charlie Parker, Buddy Rich and LFO. Inside a computer. And speeded up to 45 rpm, natch. "What's he look like?" Baby-faced 21-year-old cherub with the beginnings of an Aphex-style beard. "So why's he the black dog's bollocks?" Because he makes ferocious, dynamic jazz-tinged breakbeat at a time when drum'n'bass is sliding towards washed-out cocktail fusion. 'That whole jazz-jungle thing is just soundbite culture stuff,' he reckons, 'it ignores the complexity and the cerebral input of the music. Jazz has a considerable history and all these incredible pioneers.' He's also the first of a new breed of junglist chopping up his music instead of sampling records. "Musical background?" Played drums and bass in local bands as early as 12, after immersing himself in his dad's collection of jazz and dub albums. 'My old man had a massive record collection,' he says. 'I was listening to shitloads of stuff like Augustus Pablo, Charlie Parker and Miles Davis, and because I played the drums, I was checking Art Blakey and Buddy Rich, too. But I never really liked rock music so it was difficult finding a group to fit into.' "So when did he see the electronic light?" After hearing 'LFO' by LFO when he was 15. It converted him from jazzhead to technohead overnight. The decision to convert his bass twanging into an electronic format was 'a logical progression'. A love of the 'completely inspirational' Carl Craig followed soon after. "What's in his sample store?" Practically bugger all except his own instruments. "Prize vinyl moment?" His latest offering, the 'Alroy Road Tracks' EP, as The Duke Of Harringay. "Future funk foodstuff?" Singles and (possibly) an LP for disc emporium Ambient Soho's Worm Interface, LPs for Rephlex, Warp and loads more. "His musical philosophy in one sentence?" 'I like music that alters your brain in some sort of way, a music that's mindful of the history of jazz, music that takes you somewhere else." (from NME 6 April 1996) --- ERkki TampHexster, pHinland trerra@uta.fi