Martyn: “What I do is quite risky”

“I was used to drum n bass, you know, 175rpm, and getting more and more frustrated at not being able to make music at that speed because it was too fast to do the kind of melodies that I wanted to do.”


Tell me about the Fabric mix. Much has been made of how house/techno-oriented it is, but I’d actually say it’s less so than the club sets I’ve heard from you recently…

“For me it’s like a summary. I’ve never played as many gigs as I have this year; the other day I had to count because I was giving a kind of overview to my new agent, and I think it was well over 70 gigs. If you’re in London you can basically take your bike to the gig, but I flew to every single one of these, I never played DC in this whole year – and you can imagine what kind of an impact that had on my health and my sanity and all that kind of thing [laughs].

“I played a shitload of gigs basically, so for me the Fabric mix, when they asked me to do one, I just wanted to give sort of a reflection, because I knew I was never going to be able to make a definitive Martyn mix anyway – not in 70 minutes, it’s impossible. So I thought I should just do a summary of what I’ve done this year DJ-wise, just as I think my album was a summary of what I’ve done production-wise. So this is what I did really, and I made a shortlist of tunes – I think about 40, 45 tunes – then the whole licensing process begins and you can see where it’s going to go and who’s going to be on the CD and who isn’t, and after a while you just compile it all and make it into one logical mix. I did want to make sure that a couple of my favourite producers were represented in it – people like Zomby, Ben Klock, Kode9 – I would’ve loved to have had a Flying Lotus track in there too but it didn’t work out in the end. Just all those people together, you know.”

There are a number of remixes of your own tracks on there…

“When I was doing the CD I figured I’d like to have a couple of people remix my stuff, because there are going to be two 12ā€s that will come out at roughly the same time as the Fabric remix, and the two 12ā€s will have four remixes across them. So there’s mixes from Redshape, Ben Klock, Illum Sphere and Zomby and then the Roska one is digital-only. It’s just people I’m really feeling this year – obviously the Redshape album [The Dance Paradox] had a really big impact on me, that was a big album for me.

“Same for Ben Klock who did an album [One] earlier in 2009 – I mean, I really dig that whole sound that he’s doing together with Marcel Dettmann and Shed and T++ – I’ve had the chance to see them DJ a couple of times this year and I just really like their vibe, that sort of minimal warehouse techno. It’s quite brutal what they do, especially live, but it never gets angry, they keep it really funky, and all those songs I’m like this is a big, hard tune, but they way they mix it up, especially at Berghain – the vibe there is just enormous man, it’s really inspiring.

“I’m always quite inspired by locations, you know, I use locations for track titles, I record sounds in certain places just to catch some sort of a vibe, and for me I was just like, well, Berghain in Berlin, I’ll never be able to catch that vibe myself but I can just ask Ben Klock to do it for me [laughs]. So that’s what I did, and he just picked a tune from the album that he really liked and he obviously was inspired by Spaceape’s vocals and, I don’t know, he captured the Berlin vibe perfectly for me.

“That was a really great moment, to hear his version of that song, and to be able to put something like that out, you know, it’s amazing. There are similar stories to all the remixes really – I mean Zomby is obviously a genius producer, and it was really great to see someone taking one of your tracks on and on top of that you can put it out, you know? And then Illum Sphere, he did one of the most difficult jobs, because the original track was just strings, one of the interludes on my album, and he kind of turned it into a whole tune and I think he did a great job.”

I don’t know much about Illum Sphere. What’s his deal?

“Have you heard of a club called Hoya Hoya? It’s not that big, it’s in Manchester, it’s kind of comparable to Numbers in Glasgow. What they do is kind of semi-hip-hop, they have people like Gaslamp Killer and Hudson Mohawke andĀ  Daedalus play there, so it’s kind of an instrumental hip-hop vibe. Illum Sphere does the night together with a guy called Johnny Dub, they’re local DJs. Illum Sphere has done one 12″ on Fat City, he’s working hard and I think he has an album coming out [this] year, also on Fat City. Yeah, I knew him for a while just from playing Manchester and all that.”

You seem to be one of the few DJs who seems to be able to mix up surgically well-produced techno with more rough-hewn house and funky sounds. Do you do much editing to tracks before you play them?

“Maybe I have a little bit of a production ear…but I do think that there are a lot of tracks that I hear and I like but that I’ll never play because I know they won’t sound right. Some of them do sound right – especially the Roska stuff, it’s kind of easy to play, because it’s well-produced and it has a bit of bottom and everything in’s the right place. It’s still a bit more outspoken than, say, your average Berlin track or your average New York house track, but there’s ways to transition between the two, you know.

“Still, there’s definitely a lot of good tracks that I would never play just because they sound shit, and not work in my set – and I know that if I play that track it will be completely overpowered by the Kenny Dope production that I play after it. Just because [Dope's] stuff is much superior in terms of sound quality. So you need a little bit of a production ear I guess, and you just need to be a little selective about what tracks are good and bad not just in terms of ideas but also in terms of production. What I do is quite risky – because I play so many different styles, and if the sound of all these different styles was also completely different then it would just be a big mash-up of nothingness. You want to have it sound coherent, you don’t want to be eclectic just for the sake of being eclectic – that’s just not very interesting.

“But to answer your initial question, I don’t think I’ve ever ‘touched up’ a track – well, I’ve done that actually, but only with the permission of the artist [laughs]. I make tracksĀ  louder and stuff like that, little tiny things like that I can do with EQing, but it’s not like I actually alter the tracks to make them sound better in my sets.”

Do you play many gigs in the States these days? How has touring impacted on your DJing style?

“I think the ratio is about 80-20 Europe-America, maybe a bit more like 75-25. I play a decent amount of gigs, it’s not like I’m actually touring, but I’m flying in and out, I play a bit in New York and LA and San Francisco and places like that, and sometimes the odd other city. It’s also quite a variety of gigs which is what makes it interesting and is probably why I’m still doing it – it’s a lot of fun to do touring in Europe, for instance on Friday you play with Flying Lotus and Hudson Mohawke and then the Saturday you play with Skream and Benga and Rusko, and Sunday you play with Marcel Dettmann – that is really what keeps me going, just the variety of things.

“It’s not just that you play with these different people it’s also that you play to different crowds, people that are expecting different things from you, and that makes it a challenge to play. And that’s the same in America: especially now, I have an agent that kind of knows what I want, and sometimes he books me in a pure dubstep show, and sometimes he puts me on a house night, sometimes it’s kind of like an everything thing, with people like Daedalus, something like that. It makes it interesting, to hear all this different music and also to find your own spot in it as well.”

Your recent remix work has surprised a lot of people – you’ve worked on more “indie” acts like Maximo Park, Detachments, Fever Ray. Tell me a bit about that.

“It kind of sounds a little bit odd, I guess, that I started doing remixes for those sort of bands. But then if you look back at all my other remixes, hardly any – or maybe only one – is actually in the same sort of scene that I’m in. Really only the TRG ā€˜Broken Heart’ remix, that’s a dubstep tune that I turned into a dubstep tune; all of the others are different styles. So for me it wasn’t that much of a transition – I must say that when I was gigging this year, obviously I wanted also to get away from my music when I was travelling or when I was just sitting in the hotel or being at home, at these times I couldn’t stand hearing dubstep or anything like that. So I kind of reverted back to David Bowie and Talking Heads, The Human League, stuff like that – I used to be really into all that music, and I have the vinyl, and I started listening to that again, and I don’t know – for some reason that revived my whole interest in indie.

“So when I heard the Maximo Park album and also some of the earlier Detachments stuff it just really sparked my interest again, and I’ve always loved working with vocals, so for me I thought it might be quite a challenge to take this tune with guitars and crazy synths and then some vocalist over that and then just try to turn it into something that sounds like me. That was my reasoning, and it’s funny because actually the three remixes that we’re talking about – the Fever Ray, the Detachments and the Maximo Park – I approached them to do the remix, and not the other way around (which is how it usually goes). Because I love these tunes and I really wanted to do something with it, and for me it was a challenge, so yeah – they were interested, that’s a good thing as well…[laughs]”

How as it to work with vocals and the umpteen parts that come with tracks like those?

“You can learn a lot about production when you remix a tune like that [Fever Ray's 'Seven']. You get so many parts – recording a band is such a different story to just playing around with Logic. Lots of microphones, they record instruments from lots of different angles, and they do a lot of compression, and other stuff to make it sound like it’s a band that’s playing in the studio, which it really isn’t, you know? So much work goes into it, it’s incredible – it’s funny, I have another remix project going now, which I still have to start on, and it’s like a Latin band; they gave me 50 gigs of parts, you know, a guy on the piano recorded with four different microphones so I have all the four different versions, all the same playing but just recorded from different angles in the room. And all the percussionists have been recorded with multiple microphones and everything; so I’m just wading through all these tracks to find that one bongo that I’m going to use! [laughs]

“But it’s interesting, you learn a lot about how a real studio works, and you see how they record it and stuff, it’s cool.”

Did you record Great Lengths in a long period of concentrated studio time, or was the process more fragmented? Have you started work on a second artist album yet?

“The first album I did in about four months of concentrated work. That was the last four months of 2008; I didn’t have any gigs because I was in a sort of paperwork mill because of moving to the US, you have to wait for visa and all that. So I had four months, I couldn’t work officially, so I thought I might as well sit at home and make an album.

“I’ve actually already started on album two – I started about three weeks ago. I took the last two months of 2009 off gigs to concentrate on getting this Fabric mix CD done and just sketching away for my next album. This will be a much more fragmented record I’m afraid -Ā  I’m going to be working on it till mid-January, so about a five or six weeks from now, then I’m going to have tours and weekends that I have to play gigs and stuff. So it’s going to be a very different album, that’s for sure, just because the timeline is going to be so different. I do really want to try to get it done as soon as possible; I really want it out in May 2010, which is a pretty hardcore deadline. That would mean that I would have to finish the music by mid-February latest – two months from now [laughs].”

Shit. You better go off and get on with that.

“Yeah…”

Martyn’s Fabric 50 mix is out now. The launch party takes place at Fabric in London on Saturday 16 February, with Martyn heading up Room 1 alongside Pepe Bradock, Actress and Kode9. More info at fabriclondon.com.

Kiran Sande

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  • Jim Skreech

    Martyn & co's Redzone nights in Eindhoven were awesome – Eindhoven is not the same since they stopped.

  • azxtlx

    well done interview…depth on all the bases

  • http://twitter.com/thebig0 shortstack / Owen R

    Thanks for sharing this FACT, big ups to Martyn. Great Lengths was probably my favorite full length of 2009. That year I was also fortunate enough to see one of his few American appearances, very few people showed up which is a shame because his set was absolutely flawless and one of the most eclectic selections of music I've heard from any DJ recently. Always excited to see what's going on in the 3024 realm!

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