Altered Natives, introduce yourself.
âMy nameâs Danny, I produce under the guise Altered Natives, but I’ve also become known to all as Danny Native.â
Where are you from? Whatâs your background?
âI’m from London, I grew up in Hackney now i live in North London. I’m half Trinidadian, half Italian but British born which is what bore the name Altered Natives.â
How would you describe your sound to those who donât know you?
âMy soundâs undeniably London based, my music is kind of pinned between genres. It embraces every bass orientated music out there, new and old. My music is very personal like a diary, it all has relevance to the ups and downs in my personal life.
âI battle my demons through my music with intent to channel whatever negative into a positive, in that environment I feel free, unstoppable. Life and the world in general is restricted by so many rules, I’ve spent my life breaking rules and paying. So really you could say my sound is the sound of rule breaking.â
âI do and can make your in the (genre) bracket music, but my passion is blurring the lines and I guess thatâs what people have come to like about what Iâm doing music wise. âRass Outâ is a example of blurring lines. When I first played it, it was in a Broken Beat dance and it done its rounds there, then the House guys picked up on it, then the UK Funky lot anthemed it off. When you look at that track, it is all of those elements. Broken, House, UK Funky.â
Yeah, most people know you from âRass Outâ â whatâs the Altered Natives story to date? What were your early forays into music?
âWell predominantly I became more known in the Broken Beat scene which is where it started for me in ’99 under the name âDa Altered Nativesâ, then I dropped the generic âdaâ pretty much after my first release. I joined a minor crew I wonât mention for a few years where I did fuck all except stagnate in my own frustration at its poor business dealings.
âPlus to be a crew you need to be tight, I liked the idea but you can’t be a crew within a crew.
âTil I left, which is where the name of my last album A Thousand days of Patience came from. Ever since I’ve been doing my thing, breaking rules. My earliest forays into music was tapelooping, making loops on double cassette recorders.â
How long have you been producing for?
âOver 15 years now, indirectly and directly in various genres. And 7 / 8 of that more hands engineering on with my own production.â
What stuff have you been up to lately â releases in the pipeline, etc?
âI’ve just finished a remix for Ikonika’s next release called âIdiotâ on Hyperdub due out in March on vinyl. From myself on my digital label EYE4EYE this year Iâm releasing two album
projects from myself, one more on the brukk out broken flex and the other my house based album project.
âThe first release is Ceramic’s âBodyshockâ EP, which is a remix EP featuring remixes from myself, Jonny Miller, Stealth (from Stealth & Stylus), Funksta and Ceramic, due around first week in March. Also my follow up release featuring Sacha Williamson called âBelieve in Meâ on Freshminutemusic who released âRass Outâ, due March/April. There are a few other âlabelsâ Iâm in talks with, but itâs all talk âtil you come correct really.â
Thereâs some serious madness going on with the drums in your tracks â like âTomorrow is the New Todayâ is proper stuttered, then it has the live-sounding fills. âWhere your Heart Isâ has that rattle to it. Is there a specific way you treat your percussion to make it sound that way?
ââTomorrow is the New Todayâ is brukked out to fuck. That’s the essence of what i love doing in that particular style. Drum wise itâs all just in the moment of however I was feeling at the time.
âI’m a serious lover of finding drums to hack up, I personally like using drum samples as opposed to drum machines kits. I like dirt in my tracks.
âItâs great that people are still finding my back catalogue. On âWhere your Heart Isâ itâs all traditional African percussion, plus the shitty mike probably gave it added ambience on the original recordings. I like that track, it has an odd comforting vibe to it, till it drops. I just love chopping up drums and reforming them like them nasty mechanically pressed chicken nuggets.â
You said on your myspace lately that youâre looking for a regular vocalist to expand the Altered Natives sound. You had any luck?
âNo not really, I have had the honour of working with some fine vocalists so far. But in regards to finding a real vocalist to work with, Iâm still looking. I do however really want to find a good MC too.â
Tell us about the mix youâve done for FACT.
âI’ve tried to represent a partial overview of a few handfuls of strong UK productions which Iâm personally feeling and a few exclusives from myself for your mix.
âAll of the producers in this mix are pulling off some neat tricks in their productions, and are just a few of the many names that i could fit in this mix in terms of names to watch new and old. Â From seasoned pros Black & Spanish (Phil Asher [Restless Douls] & Orin Walters [Bugz], Zed Bias to new younger producers like Shane Blitz, Funk Butcher and Smooth Kriminal, the tracks I included from them stand out a lot for me. Tracks like DVAâs âNattyâ I love, the drum rolls give me this mental image of Godzilla sized wind-up toy bunny drummers crashing through London crushing Japanese tourists.
âAll the bits from myself will be released over this year very soon. I hope you really enjoy the mix, itâs an unconventional connection of dots and line blurring.
âBut ultimately this is all UK niceness.â
Tell us something we donât know about Altered Natives.
âI have shares in Rizla. 16 years ago, I was once described as âthe future of UK hip-hopâ â he gave up A&R to be a landscape gardener. ErâŚand you can hear me every Thursday 8-10pm, vulive.co.uk.”
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