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In the second of our Youtubing feature series we talk to Bas Mooy, the uncompromising Dutch producer who’s recent releases on Mote Evolver and Perc Trax have gotten him some well deserved and long over due attention. He sheds light on his influences, current favourites and the Dutch and Rotterdam scene.

Tell us how you got into music, what’s the first track(s) you bought that made you want to get involved in music?

I started buying records after visiting one of the legendary Strictly Techno parties in ‘De Vlerk’ in Rotterdam, which was this sort of small underground concrete ‘bunker’ in the middle of the city. That’s where I first heard banging techno in a time where most clubs were just programming mellow club music. After that weekend I went to a record store for the first time and asked for the kind of stuff I had heard at the party. Got a shit load of records to check out and went vinyl shopping almost every week from that moment on, checking out stores in Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Utrecht and Eindhoven. Was a really interesting period, when you are going through big piles of records, trying to find the direction you want to take it. The tunes below were some of the tunes that got me into techno and that I bought when I started playing records.

Raoul Delgardo & Eddy Masvoodler – Tall Eric EP

Johannes Heil – Die Offenbarung

Jeff Mills – Berlin

Space DJz – Side on

You’ve just had some big tracks out on the iconic Mote Evolver and Perc Trax labels, how did that come about?

Really happy to be part of the catalogue of both labels. I played a gig about one and a half years ago with Luke Slater and spoke with Heidy from Mote Evolver about sending some tunes over. Luke was playing and charting some of my tracks around that time, so decided to send him some tunes. He was enthusiastic about it and was interested in two of them. Mote Evolver has been one of my favorite labels over the past few years, so I can say I was more than pleased when I got an email from Luke about his plans. Also cool that Chris Finke was taking care of the other side of this chapter in the Parallel Series, since he’s a good friend of mine. Regarding Perc Trax, I was already in contact with Ali (Perc) for some time and he had been supporting my label Audio Assault quite a lot with chart and podcast action, so when I finished some new tunes I decided to ask him if he was interested. Ali really has a vision about his label and what direction he wants to take it, think the four tunes that got selected for the release make a nice diverse package. Got a great amount of positive feedback. I always released on labels within my network (Audio Assault, Arms, Planet Rhythm etc.). Seemed like the time was right to approach some labels outside that network and I decided to aim high and focus on the labels that are on my top 10 list of favorite labels. There’s still a small list in my head of labels that I would love to release on in the future, it’s cool that two of them were already interested in working with me so far.

What’s happening for you next, in terms of projects, gigs and releases? 

Working on quite a lot of projects actually. Beginning of 2012 I decided not to take on any new projects for a while. I finished all the releases I was working on and that had a deadline. After that I took some time off, which was really refreshing, made me think about a lot of things and actually got things in perspective a bit more since then. At the moment I am just working on tracks, which might be released on my new label ‘Mord’, but can also lead to an album, which has been in the planning for quite a while. But I am just waiting for things to come together and see where it takes me. Upcoming soon are my new Audio Assault release, with remixes by Pfirter and Developer and my release for Gynoid, with remixes by Xhin and Radial. I’m also working on some remixes again and some projects that I can’t really talk about yet. News on that soon!
Regarding gigs, just had a really busy weekend, we did a Strictly Techno weekender, with Pfirter on Friday and Len Faki on Saturday in Rotterdam’s number one club Perron. Amazing weekend, with two great nights of proper techno. Was playing on both nights myself, warming up for Pfirter and closing down the night after Len Faki. This week I will be spending some time at ADE (Amsterdam Dance Festival), where I will be playing on a Perc Trax labelnight with Perc and my labelpartner Radial. Soon after that I will be back in Prague and a cool warehouse party in Amsterdam. Good things to look forward to for sure!

What’s your top three techno tracks at the moment?

Truss – Hackney

Paul Birken – Acid Youth of Malibu

Rrose – Prism Guard

The Dutch (and Rotterdam’s) techno scene is looking really healthy from over here, what’s it like as an insider?

Well, of course we have quite a lot of stuff going on in Holland, but Rotterdam was off the map for a while and totally is back on track now, mainly because one amazing underground club, called Perron. There were some years that there were only clubby tech housy programmed clubs, no room for dirty driving underground techno at all. Now there seems to be a new generation that is really openminded and actually looking for some darker more banging stuff instead of the ‘high-heel house’ beats, I am really pleased about that. It was so frustrating for quite a while: living in a city that has this Industrial vibe and no small parties with banging underground techno. Viva Perron! The last year there were so many great artists playing at Perron: Speedy J, Ben Klock, Jeff Mills, Marcel Dettmann, Ben Sims, DVS1, James Ruskin, Oscar Mulero, Perc, Tommy Four Seven and the list goes on and on. Proper banging quality techno all the way. Besides Perron there’s still not a lot going on techno-wise, accept some parties every now and then at Maassilo and a couple of small local initiatives. We got a great festival season in Holland, with a lot of amazing festivals, such as Awakenings Festival. But the club scene seems pretty healthy, when you compare it to some other European countries, most cities got their own clubs and nights that usually work well, Amsterdam has some really cool concepts, but also more outside the center of Holland we got parties like the legendary Planet Rose nights in Nijmegen.

What other producers and/or productions do you really admire from the technical side of things?

Planetary Assault Systems and Speedy J. I think they are the two artists that have influenced me most from the start. So many great productions and never afraid to reinvent themselves.

Speedy J – Pannik

Planetary Assault Systems – Sucktion

There are lots of new producers and fans coming into techno now, what tracks should they listen to to educate themselves with history of the genre?

Almost impossible to pick, but here’s a couple of tracks that really inspired me personally and have been important for me from the start and I think they should check out.

Robert Hood – Minus

Public Energy – Three O Three

Polygon Window – Quoth

F.U.S.E. – Substance Abuse

Surgeon – Optic

Jeff Mills – DNA

Dave Clarke – Red 2

Planetary Assault Systems – In from the Night

Fix – Flash

What’s your favorite three non-techno tracks of all time?

Joy Division – Disorder

The Cure – Faith

Stone Roses – I wanna be adored

If you were going on a long drive tomorrow, what tracks would be essential for the car? 

When I am in the car I prefer to listen to loads of different styles of music, Ipod-shuffle mode…might be something like this:

Sonic Youth – Teenage Riot

I-F – I do because I couldn’t care less

Pennywise – The Unknown Road

Lastly, what’s your guilty pleasure, the track you love, that you really shouldn’t?

Well, I guess some of the people checking out the non-techno tunes I selected for this interview probably already think I answered that in some of the previous questions, hehe. I have always been honest about what I like and don’t like, without caring about what people think of it. The stuff I like outside techno is mainly stuff I was listening to when I was a teenager and I still like a lot of that kind of music. Will probably have something to do with all the memories that are connected with it. Besides that raising a 4 year old girl gets me in touch with music I would usually never really listen to, but I even catch myself humming a cheesy billboard tune every now and then, I confess…Anyway, used to be really into Eek-a-Mouse when we were still smoking trees for breakfast. Is that a guilty pleasure or still acceptable? ;)

Eek-a-Mouse – Ganja Smuggling

thanks to Bas Mooy for this, more info on the mnn and him music at :

http://basmooy.com/

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Bas-Mooy/423279349447

http://soundcloud.com/bas-mooy

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In the first of a new features series we talk to Atomic Jam’s resident Chris Finke as he drops a joint EP with Bas Mooy on Luke Slater’s ever impressive Mote Evolver label.

what’s the first track(s) that made you want to get involved in music?

The first time I consciously thought about it in any way was when i first heard “We are i.e.” by Lenny De Ice. It was a total game changer for me. When the break drops for the first time with that vocal sample and baseline its carnage:

how did you get in to techno and what was it about it that made you want to take DJing seriously? and do you still see that in the scene today?

To cut a long story short(ish) I started getting into techno as a ‘genre” when rave was splitting off into dark/jungle stuff, techno and happy hardcore. Derrick May, Dave Angel and Laurent Garnier were incredibly influential to me and going to the first Tribal Gathering where there was a techno tent was a big eye opener. Fast forward a few years to 2001 when I changed my career and wanted to DJ, so I started the Flux parties with Andi purely to get some gigs, started getting booked outside of the UK and and it just went from there. For such a long time nothing has come close to what things were like when I started out, but in the last year or so things have started getting exciting again.

 

what track(s) most represent the Atomic Jam at the Q Club to you?

Atomic Jam has a pretty knowledgeable crowd and when you drop tracks they surprise you sometimes with their reaction which is good. There are so many but classic tracks like Dave Clarke’s “Red 2″, and the ridiculously heavy Mike Dearborn’s “Birds On E” never fail to smash it. On the personal side of things, my “Petrolbomb” track always does the business which is nice.

what’s next for atomic jam?

Onward and upward – after leaving the best venue in the UK we are going to be coming back somewhere new which I think is going to be perfect for us. We are looking at putting together a tour as well so lots happening. Im going to kick start the “Chris Finke pres. Atomic Jam Podcast” series again soon as well.

 

You dj around the world, what’s the craziest place you’ve djed at, and what are the new scenes to look out for?

Japan is a totally mental place – I’ve never been anywhere else like it, its bonkers. For a traditionally reserved country they love letting go in clubs it’s just brilliant. As for new scenes, the UK bass/future music side of things is really interesting, I’m doing a few of those clubs these days and they are pure party people, I love it. For someone like me who plays a mixed bag its like Christmas day!

 

what tracks never leave your bag/hard drive?

My current favourite which will be in my sets for a long time to come is Dense & Pika’s “31″. And no techno DJ should ever leave home without James Ruskin Work (Steve Rachmad Remix)

I’ve noticed you drop a few non-techno tracks in your sets, what’s your current 3 favourite non – techno tracks you play out?

Yeah I reckon i play anything up to 50% non “techno” tracks in my sets these days. Hmm 3 that immediately spring to mind are Helix “Honig”, Kodiak “Stereo Superbus” (best track of the year so far IMO), and I:Cube’s “Transpiration”

and please name a track you own but really a techno dj shouldn’t admit to having?!

Im not too proud to admit that my first record was Shakin’ Stevens “Green Door”. Its a stone cold classic from a fantastic turn, well overdue for an edit. Love that guy! He made crazy acid house tracks after his 80s pop heyday under different pseudonyms by all accounts.

as a producer, what other producers and productions do you really admire from the technical side of things?

I always struggle to answer these. Off the top of my head, Paul Woolford’s stuff is incredibly well produced, i’m really blown away with what he is doing these days. Blawan is wicked, he has a totally different sound, love his stuff. Sorry I always go a bit blank when I get asked specifics!

what’s your favourite studio plugin? synth?

Sound Toys are amazing plug ins and i’ve just got the Omnisphere synth which is utterly incredible. I’ve not even started looking into it and finished 2 tracks using it, both of which have been signed. Thats going to be my best friend I think.

 

there are lots of new producers and fans coming into techno now, how important it is to you that they understand the history of the genre? what tracks should they educate themselves with?

This’ll be controversial to the purists, but most of the best music coming out at the minute is made by producers who haven’t got any sort of clue about the history of techno and don’t even think about pigeonholing their music as anything in particular. Techno is the one genre above all others that has suffered terribly over the years from being too insular and obsessed with the past which is ironic as the very essence of it is it is music of the future. So at this stage in the game, looking ahead and spending time creating is far more important for music than educating.

Rob Booth’s Electronic Explorations recently featured a mix by Chris: http://electronicexplorations.org/?show=chris-finke

more on Chris at:
Soundcloud: http://www.soundcloud.com/chrisfinke
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chrisfinkedj
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chrisfinke

Chris’ Mote Evolver release is out now but at Beatport here


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