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Mythodic
Promote Group and Disco Productions are proud to present
a very special Ritual event:

Perfecto On Tour
PAUL OAKENFOLD
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 5 2006
www.pauloakenfold.com

Also featuring:
KENNITH THOMAS
Perfect \ Armada \ Hope \ Aleter Ego
www.djkenniththomas.com
AUS-10
Mythodic \ Ritual Resident
T CRUZ
Ritual
DUCTAPE
Ritual

Paul Oakenfold’s musical career started from admirably
humble beginnings, playing soul and rare groove cuts in
a Covent Garden wine bar in the late ‘seventies with
mate Trevor Fung. By the early ‘eighties, having decided
that NYC was the place, Paul decamped there armed only with
the chutzpah to blag his way into a courier’s job
in West Harlem. At that time, more than any other, New York
was bursting with musical invention: hip-hop was the freshest
street sound around, and Larry Levan – arguably the
first ever superstar DJ, inspiring a frenzy in the crowd
that some guy playing records had never inspired before
- was packing out the Paradise Garage every week with the
revolutionary, hypnotic mixing style that would become the
acid house DJ’s stock in trade.
Returning
to London, Paul became one of the UK’s leading authorities
on hip-hop. During his stint as an A&R man for Champion
he signed the as-then unknowns Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh
Prince, and Salt N’Pepa. Oh yeah, and he appeared
on Blue Peter with a breakdancing crew who he was looking
after at the time.
In 1985
young Paul spent the summer on a beautiful Balearic island
called Ibiza. Ever heard of it? Oakey is as much responsible
as anyone for making it the clubber’s paradise it
is today, as two years after that first trip he, alongside
mates Trevor Fung, Nicky Holloway, Ian St Paul, Danny Rampling
and Johnny Walker, went there for a week to celebrate his
birthday. If the first visit had been good, this one changed
their lives forever. Dancing in the warm night air beneath
stars at the then open-air Amnesia to the oddest mix of
music any of them had ever heard, courtesy of island legend
Alfredo, Paul’s urge to import this incredible experience
– and the Balearic sound – back to England became
too great to resist.
Prior
to his Ibiza trip, Paul had been running a successful soul/jazz
night at The Project in Streatham. On his return from the
white island he persuaded the owner to let him run an after-hours
‘Ibiza reunion’ party. An attempt at a Balearic
music policy had failed Paul one year earlier: the crowd
just hadn’t been ready to hear so many musical styles
mixed together in one night, let alone in one DJ’s
set, but by 1987, and coupled with Paul’s sheer enthusiasm
and showman’s talent for setting a musical mood, attitudes
were changing. The night was a complete success, and led
to what was to be – alongside Danny Rampling’s
Shoom – one of London’s, and England’s,
first major acid house nights: Spectrum at Heaven in Charing
Cross.
Spectrum
grew out of Future, a night held in The Sanctuary, which
annexed the much bigger Heaven club. Many never thought
Spectrum (suitably subtitled ‘Theatre Of Madness’)
would succeed: a 1500+ capacity club on a Monday night?
Forget about it. And at first they looked to be right. For
the first few weeks, attendance was low, leaving Paul and
co-promoter Ian St Paul in dire financial straits. Then,
suddenly, the vibe was out and the queues were literally
going around the block. And a new phase in club culture
had begun.
Spectrum
continued for a couple of years, changing its name along
the way to Land Of Oz. New initiates to the scene (as almost
everybody was) marvelled at the full-on atmosphere of the
place: hands reaching up into the sweat hazed air, laser
lights pulsing and washing over the smiling crowd. Alex
Paterson (later of The Orb) DJed in the VIP chillout area
(the White Room), while Paul created his now trademark fervour
in the cavernous main room.
Alongside
running a seminal club night, Paul’s production career
had also begun by 1988 under the name Electra, working with
long-time collaborator Steve Osborne. By 1990, with his
work on The Happy Mondays’ frugadelic Wrote For Luck
and then Hallelujah (on the Madchester Rave On EP), Paul
had created two of the cornerstone records of the indie-dance
scene, a hybrid that demystified acid house for kids who’d
been raised on a musical diet of guitar, bass, and drums.
Paul was one of the guest DJs at The Stone Roses’
legendary Spike Island gig, and his work with Osborne on
The Happy Mondays’ classic Pills, Thrills And Bellyaches
LP (NME’s 1990 Album Of The Year) won the pair the
1991 Brit Award for Best Producer.
Remix
galore followed, for Mondays labelmates New Order; Massive
Attack; The Shamen, and Arrested Development among others,
as Paul and Steve began trading under the name Perfecto.
If the name was little known at first that soon changed
with the 1992 Perfecto mix of U2’s Even Better Than
The Real Thing. The track, with delicious irony, attained
a higher chart position on release than the original song,
thus signalling a watershed in the history and growth of
dance music.
1993
saw Paul hired to provide the warm-up sonics on U2’s
Zoo TV world tour, and as a result the de facto arrival
of the superstar DJ. The past decade has seen Paul rack
up a dizzying blur of firsts and foremosts, including, not
least, his being voted the number one DJ in the world by
the readers of DJ magazine, and has heard the name “Oakey!”
yelled hoarsely from clubs, fields (including an epoch-making
set on the main stage at Glastonbury Festival, no less)
and arenas in every corner of the globe.
On the
production front Paul began to release his own tracks as
well as continuing to turn in remixes, while Perfecto expanded
into a fully-fledged label. Its offshoot, Perfecto Fluoro,
became the label of choice in the mid-‘nineties for
the harder, trippier Goa trance sound. Today Perfecto boasts
artists as diverse as Arthur Baker, Harry ‘Choo Choo’
Romero, and Timo Maas on its roster, and has gone from strength
to strength by refusing to pander to only one style of dance
music. Alongside the building of the Perfecto brand, Paul
released a string of superlative mix CD’s, amongst
them his awesome New York set for Global Underground –
still the series’ biggest seller to date. And who
else would have been commissioned to write the theme for
what was certain to be the biggest TV show of all time?
How did you guess? Paul wrote and produced the Big Brother
theme, as Element 4, with Andy Gray.
On the
club front, well, time for a deep breath...Ready? OK, here
we go: Paul undertook a legendary two-year residence at
Liverpool’s Cream that took residencies in general
to another level, from the personally designed DJ booth
to die-hard fans (dubbed ‘the Oakenfolk’ in
the press) who would travel the length and breadth of the
country week in, week out to hear him whip up a magical
musical storm, that would still be ringing in the ears and
exciting the mind in the office or the lecture hall on Monday
morning. Ever keen to push himself further and harder, Paul
decamped in 1999 to become Director of Music at home, the
multi-million pound superclub built defiantly – and,
as it turned out, problematically – in Leicester Square,
the heart of London’s West End. That club’s
immediate downturn in popularity after Paul’s departure
goes to show the extent of his impact and following. There
are but a handful of DJ’s in the world who attract
the fervour and create the excitement that he is capable
of provoking in a crowd. You only have to be there when
he plays to feel the electric charge in the atmosphere,
more akin to the devotional than the merely appreciative.
Leaving
home was a difficult decision for Paul, but he risked his
UK and European profile, not to mention turning down the
certainty of serious amounts of cash, to decamp to America,
one of the few places in the world – ironically, given
that it all started there – where dance music is yet
to be championed and grasped in the way in which it is elsewhere
around the globe. But this was a move typical of the man:
where others would sit on their laurels and bathe in their
hard-won glory, he has always taken the tougher option,
sustained by his belief that greater effort means greater
rewards. It’s this attitude that saw him leave a huge
fanbase in Britain to start all over again in the U.S.;
that has seen him play to crowds in the low hundreds in
isolated Alaska; and that led him to take a pair of Technics
with him when he went on holiday to Cuba, and organise a
free, unpromoted and not strictly legal party, purely to
spread the word of great, life-affirming music and good,
good times. This man lives, breathes and eats his art. |