Under the Current
Under the Current
Wavetable
#3 - Dave Clarke: The next chapter for the electronic music scene
1 hour 4 minutes Posted Dec 18, 2020 at 3:00 am.
: The current mood in Amsterdam, and the Dutch approach to tackling Covid-19
: Dave’s shift in focus in 2020, and taking the time to recover
: Engineering as procrastination
: Working with classical musicians
: Professional environments
: Long-lasting relationships, and staying consistent over a long period of time
: What does punk does and doesn’t - mean
: What happens next for electronic music
: The path forward for the younger generation of artists
: The draw of radio
: Following technology, and improving the work
: Managing the balance of introvert and extrovert
: Untangling hard work, skill, talent, and luck
: Hope for the future politically-driven music, and shifts in social media
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Show notes
From his first release on XL Recordings in 1990, through to being called 'The Baron of Techno' by legendary BBC Radio 1 presenter John Peel; to his most recent project with classical musician Mathilde Marsal, and continuing to eschew trends in an industry that has a new flavor of the month almost every week - you can't pin down Dave Clarke as just another dance music producer and DJ.
Shaped by punk, rap and acid house in a youth where he ran away from home, sleeping in car parks and on beaches, today he plays techno with the flair and ferocity of a hip-hop turntablist, hosts his own stage at the enormous Tomorrowland festival, and is close to publishing the 800th episode of his White Noise radio show that has dozens of FM partners around the world.
He's opinionated, erudite and - by his own account - has an anarchist streak a mile wide. All of which shine through in this wide-ranging conversation.
We get into what punk represents, building long-lasting relationships, what the future looks like for new artists in the electronic music scene, and why he's maybe a little misunderstood.
Show notes: