Showing posts with label Pariah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pariah. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 September 2010

XXXY




THIS MUCH by xxxy

The first time I stumbled across the music of Manchester-based XXXY (aka Rupert Taylor), it was like finding a £20 note down the back of the sofa. For those who have yet to turn on to what he does, its like "the mutated child of house, dubstep, garage and techno," which may not sound like anything that hasn't been done before - and really it isn't - but it's one of the finest splicing of genres I've come across in a long while.

Having sprung from the loins of a city that also birthed Autechre, New Order and Oasis, the obvious question for Taylor has to be whether any of this musical heritage has seeped into his psyche. "I'm not sure if Manchester's musical heritage has influenced me that much - I'm no fan of parkas and mid haircuts. But going to nights like electric chair definitely shaped my sound." In terms of the Mancunian music scene as it currently stands, he says "Manchester can be a bit slow at getting things, dubstep took a while to take off and even when it did the more interesting nights were sparsely populated so there was a load of wobbly key nights that sprung up over a short period of time. Thankfully these appear to be dying down and the more diverse nights, such as Hoyahoya & Meandyou, are changing things up for the better."

Taylor produces on "a MacBook pro, monitors, little mixer and a couple of midi controllers powered by tea and biscuits." It’s a set up that has enabled him to bring into the world the joyful two step of ‘Ordinary Things,’ the drum driven funk of ‘Replicate’ and the excellent ‘U Always Start It’, a triumph of warm pulsing synth and old school Todd Edwards chopped up vocals. If Taylor could lure anyone to Chorlton to collaborate with him in future, he says it would be Bjork or Modeselektor, "she has the finest voice I have ever heard and modeselektor are just brilliant producers." Perhaps this wish might one day be granted, given the attention he has been generating - superclub Fabric slapped ‘Sing With Us’ on Elevator Music Volume 1 earlier this year, he's done the August mix for FACT and recently become part of Reprise booking agency family. But despite this growing spotlight beaming on him from outside Manchester's boundaries, for the moment the lure of the capital is not strong enough to dislodge Taylor from his Chorlton base: "there are times when it makes sense like when I've been down [to London] three times in a month and there are others when I feel completely happy being in Manchester. It would be very hard for me to leave Chorlton."

Garage movements of yesteryear have undoubtedly produced some horrendous, highly publicised duds, giving the genre a thoroughly bad – and mostly undeserved – reputation. But, even given the slightly questionable name, the 'future garage' movement that claims XXXY as one of its own is a far subtler, more interesting beast. Taylor appears not to be a fan of labels, seeing himself as something of a lone ranger musically, and he's clearly a believer in musical boundaries not being what they were "there are still definable genres but the lines are blurring which is brilliant, you can go out and hear so many different styles of music, which can only lead to better things." So in terms of his own listening choices, that would logically make Taylor something of a genre chameleon. Or perhaps he’s harbouring a secret mainstream Muse addiction. "I used to be quite into muse but they went a bit OTT. I listen to loads of stuff I'm big into Spiritualized and Mogwai as well as house techno garage etc". He also name checks new blood like Pariah (www.completelytwisteduk.blogspot.com/2010/06/pariah-beats) Jamie Grind, Canblaster, Polish beatmaster Zeppy Zep and the output from labels like Well Rounded, We Play House, Eglo, R2 and Horizontal Ground.

In a time flooded by clumsy, grinding, bastardised dubstep and badly produced ear-bending noise, XXXY's tunes are a breath of fresh air without lacking anything in terms of basslines, substance or imagination. You almost get the sugary hit of a pop tune from some of his music without the unsatisfying formulaic structure and overdone production. The tracks he makes are neat and stylish and completely whole so that you're rarely left wishing he'd added anything in or taken a sound away. Best of all, his music is significant but doesn’t take itself too seriously – the bouncy beats of 'This Much' are completely infectious - and his skills are varied, he's got no problem genre hopping and he does it well.

2010 for XXXY holds "more releases, more gigs. There have been suggestions of an album but I don't feel capable of writing one yet," which is a brave admission in an industry where if you can't be creative on tap you may as well sign up at the job centre. But then Taylor still has a day job so for now his only musical motivation is the love of the beats. And a desire to be "happy until my times comes." And if you don't understand that then your heart is a bagel.


Monday, 14 June 2010

Pariah Beats


Arthur Cayzer may have chosen the moniker of an outsider but he's unlikely to end up a music exile. With comparisons to J Dilla and Flying Lotus, Radio 1 airplay, remixes for the likes of The XX and a Myspace as frequented as a vuvuzela horn shop at the World Cup, there's an exciting vibe about the twenty two year old student at the moment.

His output is a Frankenstein of haunting, hanging dubbeats, meets Detroit, meets smart two-step, meets a cloud of cut up samples. It's good, very good, and rather refreshingly it avoids the clichés and pitfalls of copycat production. Cayzer is signed to the recently reinvigorated R & S Records whose current roster also includes James Blake and Delphic. The label released the Pariah tracks 'Orpheus/Detroit Falls' in March of this year, the former a melodically haunting slice of smartly formed beats and the latter big listening dubstep with original detailing and a vintage vocal. Then there's the gentle, synthed up remix Cayzer produced of 'Basic Space' by The XX, one of the biggest success stories of the last two years. Not a bad start then.

Who's Pariah and where did he come from?

I'm Arthur, I'm 22 and originally from Scotland but I moved down to London about four years ago.

What is the Pariah Sound?

I'm not really sure to be honest. I guess pretty much all my tunes have an emphasis on melody and use a lot of sampled vocals. Recently, because I've been DJ'ing a lot more, my productions have been far more percussive and geared towards the dance floor but they do still have extended melodic sections.

What's been the story so far with the tracks? [I especially love 'Don't Go' - it's gorgeous, haunting like the best of Burial] How do you start a tune and where's the inspiration?

Thanks very much! That was actually the first tune that I ever made and I never got round to finishing it properly. I'm glad you like it.

I usually start a tune by sitting in front of my keyboard and finding a good chord progression. I always have to get the melody first and I've never actually finished a tune that I started with just a rhythm.

You've been compared to Flying Lotus, Joy Orbison and Bullion. Which producers do you rate right now?

I find that very flattering and I guess some of my tunes have similarities to those artists because they certainly influence me. At the moment, I can't get enough of the Hessle and Hemlock outputs. The new Joe 12" on Hessle is ridiculous.

What kind of set up do you have?

I make my tunes on a Macbook Pro with Logic 8 Express and use Genelec 8020a monitors. I also use an Alesis Micron. It’s pretty basic.

You've been mentioned in the same breath as J Dilla and Burial - were they an influence? Who are your musical heroes?

Both those artists influence me hugely! I'm indebted to them. My musical heroes are people and bands like Brian Eno, Godspeed! You Black Emperor (and anyone/anything affiliated with them), Burial, Boards of Canada, The Smiths, and Jacob Bannon.

What's been your highlight so far? (pretty early to ask but still..)

Having my debut single come out and having my tunes played on Radio 1.

Whose the best DJ around - is it you? What's your DJ style?

Haha... definitely definitely not me. In my opinion people like Ben UFO and Oneman are the best DJ's around. I like to have as wide a range of genres as possible. I play a blend of house, techno, UK garage and general UK bass music. I like to start at 120bpm and work my way up to 140bpm.

Pint of Stella or something sweet and fruity?

I get ripped on by all my mates because I don't drink beer. I've never really liked it. Give me a glass of wine anyday!

What have you got in the pipeline for this year?

I've got a 6 track 2x12" EP called "Safehouses" which is forthcoming on R&S. After that I've got another 12" on R&S which feature a Berlin meets Detroit influenced techno tune and then a 3 track EP for Black Acre.

What sound do you think is running music at the moment?

I think that, right now, there is so much interesting music coming out across all genres and especially so with electronic music. What's great is that there is no single sound running dance music at the moment. When you go out to a night now, you hear so much music that takes its influences from so many different places that it becomes unclassifiable which is a truly great thing.

www.myspace.com/pariahbeats