| DADDY G: DJ-KiCKS (18th October 2004) | |
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!K7170
CD 01 Philip Levi & Tipper Irie - Intro 02 Willie Williams - Armagideon Time 03 Sound Dimension - Rockfort Rock 04 Melaaz - Non Non Non 05 Tricky - Aftermath unreleased mix 06 Meters - Just Kissed My Baby 07 Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan - Mustt Mustt massive attack remix 08 Les Negresses Vertes - Face A La Mer massive attack remix 09 Massive Attack - Karma Koma the napoli trip 10 Johnny Osbourne - Budy Bye 11 Badmarsh & Shri - Signs dub plate mix 12 Barrington Levy Here I Come - dub plate version 13 Foxy Brown - Oh Yeah 14 Leftfield - Inspection/Check One 15 Massive Attack & Mos Def - I Against I 16 Aretha Franklin - Rock Steady danny krivit edit 17 Massive Attack - Unfinished Sympathy perfecto mix by paul oakenfold |
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!K7170 2x12" LP Armagideon Time Willie Williams Non Non Non Melaaz Signs (Dubplate Mix) Badmarsh & Shri Aftermath (Version 1) Tricky Mustt Mustt (Massive Attack Remix) Nusrat Fateh Ali-Kahn Here I Come (Dubplate Version) Barrington Levy Inspection/ Check One Leftfield I Against I Mos Def Face A La Mer (Massive Attack Remix) Les Negresses Vertes |
Daddy G – 39
Questions
Bristol, August 30th 2004
Interviewer: Peter Kirk
1.) At last a Daddy G “DJ
Kicks" - How did it come about?
So
the DJ Kicks thing is kind of a mmmm…a DJ orientated, it’s
a good little series you know. So I wanted to make a sort of more DJ reflective
thing rather than sort of getting really obscure and picking all these obscure
tracks that no fucker would know, cause it´s not really about that.
I just want to put a nice selection of tunes that you could listen to over
and over again and not have tunes that would date. More of a classical feel
rather than a topical feel.
2.) How did you meet Stefan?
Now
I know Stefan from !K7 and I know some of the Terranova lot. Yeah so it’s basically through the Terranova lot who live in Berlin, that I
know cause I used to DJ with this guy called Kaos from Berlin and he obviously
knows the !K7 lot and he told me that they wanted me to do a series and I
was like yeah great. Never really had the time to do one before you know.
Or the sort of the information really yeah cause we were gonna do this on
our own label called Melankolik for Virgin once…me and [3-] D do a
Wild Bunch stroke Massive sort of all the tunes that have influenced us and
we got a list of about 300 records but that never really happened.
3.) Do you ever see the original Massive?
I
still keep in contact with them yeah but not that much. I think the Wild
Bunch per say circa 1986 don’t really have much to do with each other,
I don’t see Tricky much I don’t see Mushroom at all.
4.) Is the Milo compilation similar to yours?
Nah
this is not really representative, I think Milo was just being quite frugal
with the tunes. Because it’s kind of a weird thing to look at
that and think that wasn’t the definitive thing that the Wild Bunch
was really about. They think it is but we were more things than that we were
mixing up reggae records with hip hop records we sort of predated that mixing
hip hop with reggae years ago you know we have a tradition in Bristol of
reggae sound systems and that’s where we took our sort of ethos from.
5.) What influenced the Wild Bunch?
Oh
God that’s how we all got into it! We were sort of punks and stuff
like that, we used to go to a lot of the reggae things and so there was a
cross pollination of the reggae and punk thing at the time. So it did in
Bristol actually get a lot of punks going into reggae sound systems and stuff
like that. And that was a really big thing to go to a sound system and to
see wall-to-wall speakers and stuff like that it was amazing. We were all
into our sort of reggae at the time, so to have your stomach blown through
your mouth by bass was amazing. Seriously you used to go to these halls and
they literally had 8-foot speakers double speakers you know. You know double
speakers sort of 20 or 30 of them all plastered around a room. Yaeh you do
still get it but not so much now. Everybody in St. Paul’s, years ago
back in the 70s and 80s…well yeah in the 70s and 80s especially down
at St. Paul’s were members of sound systems. So that’s what we
wanted to do when we wanted to get into this sort of thing but in a different
way not as a reggae thing you know, Miles and Nellee [Hooper] and stuff like
that and they ex punks as well… and we started the Wild Bunch. The
main influence at the time was hip-hop, cause hip-hop and scratching and
stuff like that came around and that blew us away.
6.) How long have you been a DJ?
Yeah
I was DJing years ago very young, in the early 80’s I was DJing
down at The Dugout and that’s where we started playing first, as the
Wild Bunch and The Dugout was this seminal club which was in Bristol where
everybody went. Especially back in ’77 when it was like punks, bikers,
dreads, you know just a whole cacophony of people in this one place. It’s
surprising how so many mixtures of people in that one place don’t actually
erupt…I think a lot of people were into spliffing, so it kept everyone
tranquil.
7.) Was there an influential Record Shop?
Yeah
well I was paid to do it I used to work at Vital distribution. They originally
started in Bristol
and they actually started at a shop called
Revolver Records. Just an amazing shop, they employed me to sell reggae and
hip-hop and stuff like that. That was the first time Bristol really had a
shop that gets all of your imported records and that was really kicked us
off cause I worked in a records shop and I had all the choice of the records,
that was you know was a really good thing for us, cause there wouldn’t
be anywhere at all in Bristol where you could buy records, especially imports
and Jamaican imports and stuff like that. Revolver was the shop now I’ve
been into the sort of DJ thing from 14.
8.) Other influences, sound systems or parents?
Yeah
my folks were kind of into it, we used to throw parties at the house you
know I remember there was
an old geezer we used to know, this guy called
Sunny in Bristol, he had this sound system and at the time sound system wasn’t
about big speakers and stuff but you had the most powerful gramophone. So
everyone had these 1960’s gramophones with amazing speakers that were
imported from the States and they had an amazing sound. What these guys used
to do was drive these gramophones around in a Ford Anglia state. Bring this
gramophone into people’s houses into parties and at the time to have
a gramophone like that. You know it was like a massive Ottoman, four guys
bringing this bloody gramophone; “right where do you want us to put
it. In the corner right”, and we set it up in the corner and play the
records but you know for the 60’s you know cause remember blues parties
originally weren’t like... When my parents came over in the late 50’s
from Barbados and there was a lot of West Indians in Bristol, there wasn’t
anywhere for them to go. The British culture really hadn’t really catered
for the new influx of West Indians they didn’t… there wasn’t
any social infrastructure for them. So they made their own parties you know
what I mean, they which became, called Shabeen’s and Blues parties
and you used to get the whole neighborhood turn up on Fridays and Saturdays
at somebody’s house. Parties would be in the basement where people
played dominoes and stuff like that, there would be a bar on another floor,
just take the whole house over for a party for the weekend this is where
all of these people with their big sound systems used to come and bring them
- bass in your face from the time I was six and stuff like that, it’s
amazing it really was.
9.) Who were Sound Dimension?
Sound
Dimension were the backing band of Sir Coxsone. They came under different
names, in fact they’ve done quite a few covers of JB. All those Jamaican
artists were influenced at the time of what was going on in the states, you
know what I mean so all that stuff was straight from the rhythm and blues
stuff that they took a whole line you know what I mean took as in rock steady
they took that sort of ethos of music and changed it but you know they were
just copying originally, you know the Jamaican original back to Coxsone who
was one of the original sound system guys in Jamaica who started it all off
with Duke Reid. They would just go to America and brought back loads of imports
from the states, in the end it was about economics really. Just fuck it let’s
make our own, that’s how a sort of reggae thing came up really and
it was basically trying to copy the R&B stuff from the states and slowly
but surely they were able to get their own flavor.
10.) Willie Williams
Stone
cold classic. The Willie Williams thing was like a tune I always remember
from the old punk days
you know what I mean? I was really quite impressed
that The Clash did a copy of it and it’s really good as well. And it’s
always been sort of a classic Studio One record, cause I wanted to start
this whole thing off with Studio One really cause that’s really my
first love of music you know old Jamaican Studio One music…and also
tribute to Sir Coxsone as well cause ah he died earlier this year…and
it’s good really because I’ve got Horace [Andy] and that’s
where Horace began his sort of musical career. He used to tell us stories
about how Coxsone used to have his Talent spotting days on a Sunday and how
Horace would turn up his yard in Jamaica sit around back in the recording
studio you know, where all the auditions going on in the studio, there where
people in the back auditioning and Horace was like out there one day and
Coxsone was like “right little boy sing, let me hear your voice” and
Horace had to audition and he was like “you in there, in the studio,
I’m going to write something for you and then we’re going to
record”. I think he recorded his record from being talent spotted I
think he was recorded 2 days later. It’s amazing. Every Sunday they
had an audition to sing and if they were good enough you know they would
sort of be taken on and be put with people like Jackie Mittoo and Leroy Simmons
who were the main songwriters and musicians in that studio.
11.) Are you a fan of Soul Jazz?
Yeah
I am, totally. Cause’ eh, actually I’ve got some soul jazz
music; I actually asked them for their permission to license this. Cause
they own the whole Studio One catalogue, which is a really, brilliant thing.
You know, there’s always a great market for the old Studio One stuff.
People still want to know the original roots, cause nowadays you’re
getting a lot of dance hall stuff and a lot of the rhythms you’re getting
now, are kinda just do overs of what were around maybe 20 years ago. So it’s
still a bit like the hip-hop thing, you get a lot of samples, and then everybody
wants to know where that original source came from or whatever. And for reggae
music, you’ll find that Studio One, as with you know the JB’s
or stuff like that is the original source for reggae music. The JB’s
is the original source for hip-hop, JB’s beats first, and it moved
on from there.
12.) Melaaz
With
the Melaaz thing, it was like... that was a brave copy of a Studio One
record, which was obviously
Dawn Penn’s “No No No”.
And when I heard that, I think it was 10 years ago, I was really quite taken
back that they actually attempted to do a version of that, it’s actually
in French, which added a bit of exoticness to it.
13.) Tricky
You
know I haven’t really seen eye to eye with Tricky for years. Basically,
I haven’t seen him in years. He’s always in the papers, so any
time he gets the chance to slag us off he always does which I find funny.
He’s gone a bit a stray now, you know. But I love that Aftermath you
know. I’m not actually sure how I got that, cause of I think during
the Massive thing, Tricky decided he wanted to go off and do his own thing.
And we were like ”yeah all right Tricks, go on then”. But we
never thought he could do it, we used to take the piss out of him really.
And I remember actually getting hold of these white labels, he gave me all
these white labels, and I thought it was shit when I first heard it and it’s
only now I didn’t realize how much of a great record it is. It’s
actually one of the records that I keep in me box. I totally dismissed it,
I don’t know why, I guess because it’s Tricky. I didn’t
realize that he was quite a formidable talent really and he still is you
know. Sometimes he channels his energy in the most negative ways, you know.
I was actually sort of clearing my records out when I found it a couple of
years ago and I thought fuck me this was wicked you know and it’s never
left my box since.
14.) Portishead, Massive Attack, Tricky happened all at once?
It’s a great thing obviously when you have three acts from your own
town which are doing the business, you know what I mean. It’s nice
to have a bit of a force going on. Well the Tricky thing, I tip my hat to
him because he actually went off and did his own thing, he could of stayed
under the wing.
15.) The Meters
You
got the meter’s thing with “Just Kissed My Baby” that’s
just an old stone classic. But also it’s like we sort of like Aaron
Neville as well he’s like one of our heroes you know what I mean. So
we’ve always wanted to work with him, hopefully one day that will happen.
And that one’s for my daughter really, “Just Kissed My Baby.” And
then there’s Nusrat I kind of rate that as one of our best remixes,
because we did that for Peter Gabriel at the Real World Studio.
16.) Massive Mixes
That’s a funny thing actually because those last two remixes are late
to mid nineties. And that was the time we were doing a lot of mixes. We haven’t
done remixes for ages, or should I say any good ones. Not so much now I think
people think we’re too expensive as we don’t asked to do too
many, but I really enjoyed doing all those tracks there because we were asked
to do a lot of world music remixes and that’s what we were all about
at the time, getting with other people from different countries and adding
a bit of flavor.
17.) Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
But
to work with Nusrat was like bloody hell man, you know what I mean. He
was the most famous
Qawwali singer,
and it was a real pleasurable experience
so I’ve always liked that mix. Quite a lot of these records are hard
to find. They’re not obvious records. A lot of people are not really
aware that we have actually done that, except for the inner circle. There
are a lot of people who are not quite aware of these tracks, which is good.
18.) Les Negresses Vertes
Yeah then there was Negresses Vertes, and I think we did a really good job
with that one as well.
I think it was done through Virgin but once again all these remixes were
done away. That was done at Peter Gabriel’s studio, which is a great
place. The Karmacoma was done in Naples, you know.
19.) Karmacoma
Yeah
because that was something we did with a guy called Rino from Almamegretta.
Who are a quite famous
Neapolitan band he was just a friend of [3-]D’s,
not a friend of D’s but of ours really we went to Naples to do a little
ode to D’s roots he’s from Naples and soaked up the whole atmosphere
of Naples and did that with Rino and he added the whole Neapolitan Chorus
to it as well which was brilliant. We stripped it all down we did it with
a guy called Ben Young, we remixed it with him and everything basically re-laid
most of the track.
20.) More classic reggae
Yeah
I wanted to mix it up again I just want to take it for a bit of a roller
coaster ride. Like I was saying
if I had more time I would have started with
punk records and ended with a couple of house records, something like that,
but you can’t do much with 70 minutes. It’s just a collection
of good classical dance records really.
21.) Badmarsh & Shri
Well
Jammy´s was the guy who brought out the first electronic reggae
whish was “Under Me Sleng Teng”. Well I’ve always liked
Badmarsh & Shri really, I know them but I’m not friends really
it’s just sort of musical admiration really. I loved the track and
it’s an unreleased version. I don’t know if you heard the one
on the album but it’s totally different. That was just sent to me,
somebody just sent it to me and I was like bloody hell man they’ve
mixed this really wicked track which I’ve always loved the Badmarsh & Shri
but with an old… Jamaican rhythm and I thought that was really clever,
it works really well, bootlegs and stuff.
22.) Recent bootlegs
Well
to be honest there are a couple of bootlegs that are really brilliant!
My original concept for this
album was to create a bootleg mix album, cause
that’s what I collect. I love collecting bootlegs. Yeah mash-ups and
stuff like that, with a cappellas over famous or good rhythm tracks. I find
that quite quirky I really love that. The original concept of this album
was to do a bootleg thing, but when I talked to !K7 they said it was a minefield,
don’t get into it. Then I changed tact and thought you know I’ll
just put on a timeless selection of records which I think are really good
and that you can listen to at any time but take you on a slight roller coaster
ride through different fields of music that I like.
23.) What about DJ Kicks?
The
one thing about all this Kicks thing is that, the main thing about it is
really bass lines, all of the
tracks have wicked bass lines. And that’s
basically what I’m about, a wicked bass line. Half the records I know
or actually hear, I don’t know the names. I knew the bass lines and
I knew the melodies but I never knew the actual lyrics. I was always drawn
to the bass sound and I’ve always been into reggae. Some of the lyrics
to some of the records I’ve liked are shit!
24.) Too Many DJ's?
I’m totally into all that stuff because at the end of the day all
it is is just a collage of music. I don’t find anything bad about that
or, I don’t want them fucking around with Massive Attack stuff mind.
Quintessentially, all I am is a DJ really, from the heart. I’ve always
made records from a DJ point of view. I’m not really into all this
technology. I’d rather work with an engineer who was totally au fait
with all this technical stuff, I can’t get bogged down in it. So I’ve
always taken my influences from a DJ aspect, If I make a record it’s
always going to be from the thought of I’ll tell you what I really
like that drum sound in that track or I like this or I like this about this
record and that’s going be the basis of how I start a record from an
influence that I know from something else. Then I lead on from there. Maybe
it can change along the way. If I’m going to start doing a structure
a record it will be inspired from another record or a certain thing I like
about it you know.
25.) How do you make records?
Ideas
and elements and stuff like that. Essentially that’s how we
made our first record the Blue Lines record, that was completely from a DJ
perspective. We’re gonna make a record of our favorite sounds and influences
and stuff like that and it was quite heavily sample based. It was quite imaginative
the way we did something with it. Whatever you do you’ve got to have
an imagination to take something and do something with it. It can either
be shit or the next step on, do something good with it. I’m totally
into just a sort of recycling, whether it be clothes music or anything really.
26.) Barrington Levy
It’s just an old dance hall record that I remember. When I used to
hear that record I was like wow. It was the advent of dance hall really it’s
an early dance hall record. Now I think the dancehall thing is great but
it’s kind of lost it’s way a little bit. It’s had such
an influence on music it´s such a brilliant thing and it comes and
goes. Reggae won’t die as such, people just think right there’s
a new audience to come to know it. In Germany for instance a massive reggae
scene and Japan. There’s a band in Germany called Seed they’re
just like UB40 but they’re the most authentic Jamaican reggae band
this side of the pond that I’ve heard and they’re German! They’ve
got a few sort of German West Indians involved as well. They are quintessentially
German band and like fuck me man hear them playing they’re amazing.
And they’ve really got a massive Jamaican scene, which is quite weird,
really weird.
27.) Foxy Brown
Everything
here is all what I’m about, which is sort of reggae influenced
so the Foxy Brown thing; I just love the fact that she cross pollinating
the hip hop thing with the old “54-46 was my number” the Toots
and The Maytals song. I thought that was really clever. Old reggae is still
being used in contemporary hip-hop now, and to me that’s what we were
doing years ago.
28.) What do you think of current US production, Timbaland etc. ?
I
love it man because most of those people are all from the West Indian roots
as well. There’s
a reggae influence to what they do in their beats.
29.) Leftfield?
I
just love Leftfield and the fact that they did that record which was one
of my favorite records they’ve ever done. The thing about liking Leftfield
is that when we went to tour last. Last time we were on tour we had this
system right and I remember hearing this system that Leftfield had. It was
making people sick...”oh yeah! we better get that system”. We
tracked it down and had it on our last tour as well, absolutely amazing it’s
the most amazing PA you have ever heard. It reminded us of that old school,
blues, Jamaican bass lines that I used to hear at these things.
30.) Was it more creative in the 90's?
Well
I think to be honest it was so saturated with raves and at that time people
were getting really bored.
It was all about going out and getting
pilled up. And with us when we first started we were like let’s make
some anti-dance music, something that you can sit and listen to rather than
sort of be, you know let’s make something, not necessarily for people
who came home from raves and needed something to listen to but it did kind
of fill that void. There was nothing else around, there wasn’t any
relaxing music going on at the time it was all quite hype and a bit heavily
drug induced. I think people got bored with that and they wanted to make
more experimental music.
31.) Mos Def
Yeah
it was on the soundtrack for Blade 2. We were asked to do that and I remember
having a little pop
at it and not doing a good job on it actually
and I remember [3-]D picking it up and sorting it out. This came about, and
since then he’s done Brixton Academy with us and done a couple of dates
with us and we’re thinking about working with him for the next album.
He’s actually coming back to live in Europe now because he’s
getting asked to do quite a lot of stuff here now and he’s becoming
quite creative, and he sort of likes the European vibe you know he thinks
it’s a bit more cultural. He’s relocating to Europe and we’ll
be seeing a lot more of him, and hopefully we’ll be doing some stuff
with him.
32.) New York House music?
Yeah
I love New York House. I love people like Tony Humphries and Frankie Knuckles,
Dave Morales. I admire
all these DJ’s, there’s a lot
of DJ’s I admire, I still love the DJ culture. Bristol’s a really
weird place, you know we always go for the most extreme sounds. You know
we either like the grave march or we like really fast jungle or trance, which
is big, really big, you know the Nick Warrens and the Paul Oakenfolds and
Sasha and stuff like that. You know I was a DJ like years ago, and you know
I used to play house music before and I think my tastes were a bit more varied.
We used to play at all the raves, all the Universe raves and stuff like that.
33.) Danny Krivit
Well
Danny Krivit, he edits, he’s a bit of a cheeky bastard really,
and he re-edits quite a lot of stuff, but he does a really great job because
he knows a lot of good old disco records and a lot of old records which are
really brilliant, but you know times are changed and you know the production
on those records are slightly, uh, lacking and you know a lot of these records
had a lot of orchestration like salsa orchestra and stuff like that so you
know, he chops out all the shit really and just gives you the direct thing.
You know he’ll chop a record for the dance floor take out all the shit
bits put all the powerful bits in, and you know reconstruct it. Of course
you know I’ve done a few things like that.
34.) CD or Vinyl?
I
don’t even know how to use CD decks you know I’m a Luddite
when it comes to technical stuff. Turntables are great. All someone’s
got to do to mess me up is chuck me a CD to play and I’m like “How
do I do this?”
35.) Paul Oakenfold
Yeah
because I see Paul, he’s played on a couple of Creams after us,
on tour we’ve done Creamfields and he’s played after us and you
know I’m a little bit shocked sometimes, he’s a great DJ, but
I’m quite shocked because he’s got all that power, but sometimes
he doesn’t play the best records. I think sometimes when people start
pandering to the crowd, that’s when it all goes wrong because you’re
supposed to edu--, well not, I hate the word educate, you know sort of entertain
people. That’s exactly why I like the whole thing.
36.) Back to bootlegs
The revamp of old a cappellas on new rhythms keeps the whole thing fresh you know. There’s still a load of records, and that’s why when you hear all that 1980’s stuff and when I hear it now I’m like “Oh no, please not this again.” I’ve done it already with the Wild Bunch and that stuff really, digging out those old records. We were playing those records so when you hear someone doing copies of Mantronix you kind of think???
37.) Were you into ESG, Liquid Liquid?
I
loved ESG, loved em. Liquid, Liquid, all that stuff is amazing. Good underground
stuff you know what
I mean? Well the funny thing is what I keep forgetting,
I’m 45. I’ve been collecting records for thirty odd years or
so. So for me to look back, my old school, is 1970s 1960s. If I were looking
for records to sample maybe ten years ago I would look for those type of
records. So that was my old school so you can’t knock it because the
young kids who are like in their twenties their old school records are records
that they heard when they were little kids and they are records I heard when
I was a young man so I can’t really knock it, in a way, but everything
has its fashion and it’s all sort of recyclable. You know sometimes
fashion and records go hand and hand. People regurgitate things for a reason
because there’s a market that wants it and hadn’t had it before
so they do the laziest thing and just regurgitate it.
38.) What didn't make the album?
I
saw the guys the other day and I said to them “hey! I can’t
get your fucking tune”. It was a track from the Chemical Brothers with
Method Man and they wouldn’t let me have it. It was quite shocking
really, because I got the other thing from Def Jam which was Foxy Brown.
39.) Do you play out much?
You
know I play all over the place. I get asked to play here there and everywhere.
Well I tell you what; I’ve actually been to this club called Lux in
Portugal. It really is an amazing club, the way it’s done, it’s
a family thing they totally enjoy it, they love it, and its so welcoming.
It’s fucking amazing you know. Fortunately I’ve done a lot of
good things you know; Massive Attack, the DJing thing, it’s all been
brilliant really. DJing’s my first love really. The whole thing with
DJing nowadays like I say, with the Wild Bunch you can play anything. You
can be experimental, you can play reggae, you can play punk, you can play
hip-hop, you can play old soul records. In a whole night we would play everything,
you know what I mean, a whole span of records from different time generations,
genres, everything. And it’s a really weird thing that DJ’s now
aren’t really DJ’s as such, their just guys that mix. They just
have one slot of records, like house DJ’s, I think it’s all-great,
but it’s so boring, and they’ll play four hours of house. You
know years ago as a DJ you never played that. You sort of mix it up, and
you know there’s a lot of music about, and it’s a shame that
DJ’s don’t take on creative power, that they can do whatever
they want, and play records that they want. Because I’m sure that a
lot of DJ’s if you actually took them out of working hours and they
were in their house playing records to you, it wouldn’t necessarily
be what they play to people. It’s a shame that people don’t really
take on that power, that they could actually do that and say, “Now,
I’m going to play a varied selection of music.”
Thanks to Tom Nieuweboer at K7