layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006

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  • Gatz
    Are you Kidding me??
    • Jun 2004
    • 4679

    layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006

    Layo & Bushwacka;

    "We both believe in the same things, good people, good parties,
    good music. Acid house, basically." Idealists, hedonists,
    prophets, call them what you will, but Layo & Bushwacka!'s love
    affair with music started as teenagers under 1988's strobe lights
    and it's led the both of them through techno, breakbeat, electro,
    dub and electronica, emerging blinking into the light a decade
    later with a sound that fuses all their influences and
    channelling them into 2002's most anticipated dance floor album.
    It's the same outlaw spirit of eclecticism that still informs
    their five hour DJs sets, whether at their spiritual home in
    London's The End, or on a beach in Brazil or a state of the art
    superclub in Ibiza or Argentina. Layo seamlessly segueing cutting
    edge sounds, while Bushwacka! tears the arse out of the
    crossfade, turning nondescript breakbeat battle weapons into a
    compulsive collage of beats and breaks. The same spirit that took
    the "for the fans" thousand-copy only 12" Untitled into a global
    club anthem. It's now 'Love Story' - renamed with the title given
    to it by the fans in Argentina who sit down rather than dance
    through the track as a mark of respect for its majesty. "I
    thought that track was a bit cheesy initially," muses the
    ever-analytical Layo. "Of course now everyone loves it, I've
    warmed up to it a bit." And you can't get much more acid house
    than the legal minefield that is Bushwacka!'s much bootlegged
    remix of Michael Jackson's 'Billie Jean' - surely the biggest
    bootleg mix in a year inundated with white label remixes of
    dubious legality. If only, as Matthew shrugs, he'd done the
    bootlegs himself, as everyone assumes.
    Layo and Bushwhacka! have come a long way from the teenager who
    frequented Clink Street's infamous acid parties and the kid who
    dropped classical music to hang out on the hardcore scene: two
    motor-mouthed refugees from the underground enjoying their
    position as new leaders of clubland's cutting edge. Layo &
    Bushwacka! have both served their time supporting British
    underground music when no-one wanted to know. Layo opening The
    End, a purpose-built club dedicated to breaking new music to the
    right people. Matthew jacking in a lucrative career as a rave
    circuit DJ when the moody music had gone too far for him, both
    taking the emergent strains of techno, tech-house, electro and
    breakbeat and forcing them together with the blues, classical and
    film soundtracks of the last hundred years to create the dance
    floor sound of the new century.
    Matthew 'Bushwacka!' Benjamin has always been into music: as a
    schoolboy in Ladbroke Grove, West London, he was playing
    percussion in the London School Symphony Orchestra." I played the
    Royal Festival Hall, the Barbican. We toured Italy when I was 13.
    It was a magical time of my life." It was 1988, and hooked on
    hip-hop and DJing, his life was about to take a sharp left turn.
    "In August '88 I went to a Rat Pack warehouse party. I left there
    at 11 o'clock the next morning and come home to an angry mum."
    Handing out flyers by night and working in Harrods by day, he
    began working for the Rat Pack. By 1989's summer of orbital rave
    he was DJing for them, as well as on London's legendary 'Radio
    Rental' pirate station Sunrise FM.
    Graduating from a studio engineering course, Matthew - now widely
    held in awe by other producers for his crisp beats and
    heavyweight production techniques - went to work at Mr C's new
    studio "making cups of tea 80 hours a week". The Shaman front man
    had ploughed his pop earnings back into the studio, and he was
    also planning on opening a club with another young protg of
    his: "That's where I met Layo," Matthew remembers. "About the
    same time as the End idea was coming about."
    Layo Paskin had a different upbringing in a liberal North London
    household: the son of an architect and a writer, he was putting
    on funk parties at sixteen while working at weekends in Camden
    Market. "When I was 17," he recalls, "I went to my first acid
    house party, and straight away I was blown away by this thing."
    From then on he too was immersed in underground dance and within
    a couple of years he was throwing warehouse parties with Mr C.
    "We found this site for a party," he explains, "and that became
    The End." The End was designed by his father, and became Layo's
    life... taking in nights from future superstars like Fatboy
    Slim and Roni Size it quickly became the leading underground
    music club in the capital and one of the most influential dance
    clubs worldwide.
    By the time Layo and Bushwacka! started working together it was
    the mid-90s and dance music was changing. The hardcore scene that
    Matthew had been such an integral part of was already shifting
    into drum & bass, while new hybrids - that would later be termed
    tech-house and breakbeat - were emerging out of clubs like The
    End. Matthew had started his own Plank records, and was making
    and playing what he terms "good quality music to go out and dance
    to."
    In 1998 Layo and Bushwacka! released their first album Low Life
    on End Recordings, the label that had begun life the day The End
    opened. A deceptively smooth collection that mashed together
    electro, techno, underground house and old skool breakbeat, but
    stretched into delta blues and dub reggae for inspiration, for a
    trippy down-tempo atmospheric breakbeat sound. It was rather
    brilliant.
    They also started DJing together more often - first at the End's
    Subterrain nights, later across the country and beyond. They make
    a good combination: Matthew tearing his crossfade through
    anonymous tech tunes and electro breaks Layo taking a more
    considered approach to playing "proper" tunes. Now, a year since
    they released the half-jokey 'Untitled' as a 1000 copy only
    Christmas present to their fans, their DJing has gone supernova.
    They can afford to play only clubs that allow them a five hour
    slot, so they can play an hour each at a time, building the
    intensity then dropping the tempo to play the odd vocal or
    hip-hop track.
    Now their second album - add title here - takes their blueprint
    onto a bigger, broader canvas. All the elements we loved about
    Low Life and singles like the breakbeat blues of 'Deep South'
    are still there - there's still the adherence to low end theory
    bass lines, but this time wrapped in a comfort blanket of
    synapse-tweaking soft chords. Once again its edited and tweaked
    into a non-stop collage that lulls you into a false sense of
    security at home, where you can't feel the monster bass lines
    these tracks unleash over a club sound system. Already planning
    to take their live performance on the road, the garrulous odd
    couple are keeping their hardcore fans happy by starting a
    monthly club night (at the End, where else?) where they will be
    the only DJs. Not to mention residencies at Space in Ibiza and
    Sirena in Brazil, two more of the finest clubs in the world.
    "The music industry is an industry where the best business people
    do the best and the most creative people don't," reflects Layo,
    "that's life I suppose. But I'm hungry for that creativity. I'd
    like to be really good at what I do, rather than hugely
    successful. You need to be able to look yourself in the eye and
    say the route youre taking is a good route, be proud of what you
    do, and on the other hand also enjoy it. I'd be much more happy
    if this album had good reviews, rather than sell a million
    copies. Something I can visit in a few years and be really proud
    of."

    layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006 - Part 1



    layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006 - Part 2



    N.joy
  • Oi
    Gold Gabber
    • Feb 2006
    • 713

    #2
    Re: layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006

    thx

    Comment

    • !Flash!
      Platinum Poster
      • Feb 2005
      • 1051

      #3
      Re: layo and bushwacka - live at guerrino beach (roma) line - jun. 1, 2006

      grazie

      Comment

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