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Although few might admit it, we musicians/artists/performers are, to a greater or lesser degree, narcissists. As such, the offer of my own monthly column with free rein regarding content should excite me wildly.
In many ways it does and I'm looking forward to it. There is no chance of being misrepresented, no chance of being misquoted, I won't have to discuss things I'd rather not discuss and I can edit and re-edit every word I write. However, having accepted the offer, the thought that this might be something of a Faustian bargain hit me.
With me being the source of the articles, every word I write my own and with everything online being archived I realised with some apprehension that I may have been given just enough rope with which to hang myself.
With that in mind, I make the following promise: I'm going to open myself up a little, in the knowledge that it could all go horribly wrong. If I hang, I hang but hopefully we'll have a little fun a long the way and I will particularly encourage interaction via comments or even twitter.
And so, let's move on to the topic I'd like to mention today...
I recently traveled to Japan to appear at the Labyrinth festival. The line-up was fantastic, the weather beautiful and the food exactly what I wanted: ramen, gyoza and katsudon, amongst other things. The festival spanned three days with my performances happening on the first and third days.
On the second day, I stayed at the hotel for the morning to do some work. Then, a delicious late lunch of katsudon.
After, I headed down to see the last hour of Daniel Bell's DJ set. I wish I had arrived earlier as I haven't enjoyed a DJ set so much in many years. Dan was playing indescribably great house records and, for a little while, I danced like no-one was watching. It felt good.
Watching him play was an education, the set was all vinyl and executed respectfully and expertly. He simply chose a record, cued it, mixed with little fuss or fanfare, and continued in this way record after record. I say he played "respectfully" because he allowed each record to do its own thing before introducing the next with subtlety and again allowing it to do its own thing.
Aye, excellent stuff. Really well written too.
Great article alright, he's spot on too!
nice article!
Great read.
Great points made, I for one am currently spending a fortune on vinyl having just got my first set of decks... about 20 years late!
Utter tosh, MP3's sound way better than vinyl!


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Superb read there, a few really interesting and stimulating questions!