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The Nextmen

The Best F**kin DJ's In the World- Jimmy Saville

About Me


Cambridge is mainly known for its famous university, an inordinate amount of cyclists, a terrible football team, a river made for punting, a folk festival and being the home of Stephen Hawking, Clive James and Jeffrey Archer. It is not, one must admit, the first place one would look for producers of dancefloor-hardened beats. It is nevertheless, the city that gave birth to The Nextmen, also known as Brad Baloo and Dom Search.

You may have heard of The Nextmen. In fact, unless you’ve been captive in Guantanamo Bay for the most of the Noughties, we’d wager you’d definitely heard of them and more than likely witnessed them at one of their many festival-stopping summer performances or heard their incendiary mixtapes on the neighbourhood ghetto blaster.

Dom (real name: Dominic Betmead) and Brad (real name: Brad Ellis) joined forces when Brad blagged a remix for London Posse and realised he didn’t have any kit with which to do it. In stepped Dom with his Roland S10 and not much else. “The track was called Style,” chips in Dom, “But it put us on the map. Everybody loved it. Radio 1 got hold of it.” “It was 75 bpm and really pedestrian,” deadpans Brad. “Fucking terrible.” Terrible or not, London Posse’s Style had something about it, not least the MCing skills of the posse’s Rodney P, with whom The Nextmen have subsequently enjoyed a long working relationship.

In 2000, The Nextmen released their debut album Amongst The Madness on the revered 75 Ark imprint. Originally intended to be a Mo’ Wax-style instrumentals album, their label began sending the beats out to rappers in the States and before they knew it, The Nextmen were hip hop producers, working with Public Enemy, Blackalicious, The Pharcyde and Morcheeba. Get Over It, 2003’s sophomore album for Scenario, confirmed their position as one of the UK’s brightest beatmakers, although now the boys regret going so far down that road. “Looking back on it, it perhaps wasn’t the best idea to make those hip hop albums…” reflects Brad. It’s not that they don’t love hip hop, simply that it placed them in a neat, but uncomfortable, box. “As a DJ it’s always been my favourite club music. We always played bits of soul, disco and funk stuff but we were 70-80% hip hop. It was nice at that point; there were lots of interesting records coming out. When those records that people were still playing were ten years old, like Pete Rock and CL Smooth, I thought, ‘God this is just so stagnant’.”

The changes in Nextmen direction – if they could even be described as such – grew out of their DJ sets, as they found the space to integrate the outer reaches of their record collections. It was an organic change, but one that was driven by their outlook: “As a clubber, I wanna go out and hear a varied style of music,” says Dom “I don’t want to hear one kind of music all night.”

This shift in approach found an echo in the studio, too. Newly energised by their live work, songs rather than grooves began to form in their heads; fruitful collaborations with Sway, Fat Freddy’s Drop vocalist Dallas, Zarif Davidson, Alice Russell, Chicago’s own Kidz In The Hall, Jamaican legend Niney The Observer and LSK from Faithless were proof that new album This Was Supposed To Be The Future would be a step away from their previous releases. “The new album has been more influenced by our eclectic DJ sets, because it goes right across the board,” explains Dom. “There’s some reggae on there, some dancehall, some soul, and a couple of hip hop tracks. If you look at our DJ sets that’s exactly what we play.”

The catalyst for the new album was a reggae compilation Blunted In The Backroom, which they completed for new label Antidote last year. It was a headlong plunge into the depths of the Trojan catalogue, but re-wired by the Nextmen for the now. It was a resounding success not least because the two tracks made exclusively for the album, Blood Fire (featuring Dynamite MC) and Piece Of The Pie (with Demolition Man) became the starting point for This Was Supposed To Be The Future.

The normally sedentary pair in the studio (“We can be lazy bastards” quips Dom) had taken nine years to produce two albums, although moreover this has been the result of their move towards world domination, constantly rubber banding from London around the globe throughout Europe, Australia, Asia-pacific and beyond, as the first choice go-to DJs for every walk of hype-hot party and festival (think: a sunken indoor swimming pool in Elizabeth Taylor’s private villa in Cannes, a deep dark bunker in Moscow, a mountain-top ski jump in Val D’Isere, a heaving Sydney harbour-side arena, a much loved local pit stop in Shanghai, a heaving New Years natural amphitheatre in Perth, their favourite beats and meats BBQ with Friends & Family in Manchester and you’ll understand). The pair however realised their touring schedules hadn’t paused for some time, so completed the bulk of the new album in four months, working with the uncharacteristic fervour of a pair of Brill Building song mavens, though it should be noted that, unusually for most DJ/producer duos, Brad and Dom are both accomplished musicians, the former a pianist while Dom plays guitar. They appear suitably relaxed and inspired by the experience. “The situation around us for this album has been amazing,” enthuses Dom. By comparison, explains Brad, “the situation around us for the first two albums was fucking disastrous. Nobody did anything right. Including us. It’s a testament to the quality of the records that we’ve managed to last this long and make a living from it.”

This electric jolt to the creative glands has manifested itself in all areas of their careers and, as they prepare for the release of the new set, a new live approach is taking shape, bringing in vocalists and musicians but still retaining the classic elements that make their DJ sets such energetic affairs. “Nextmen is these two guys behind four decks and that’s what people expect and I think we should try and keep that in,” avers Dom. There’s even talk of performing some of the new songs in an ‘unplugged’ environment. “It’s amazing how well tracks translate like that,” he continues. “If I sit with Zarif and do This Is Supposed to Be The Future, which I wrote on the guitar, it’s brilliant. They’re naturally acoustic songs as well as the way they appear on the album. The writing often starts with a guitar or keys and a vocalist.”

This Was Supposed To Be The Future has clearly been a cleansing process of the Nextmen, the studio equivalent of a spot of Botox and a nip and tuck behind the lugholes. “We’ve started on the fourth album already,” chuckles Dom, painfully aware of the four-year gap since the last. “There’s loads of stuff going on and definitely some of these artists will be on it again, because it’s been such a successful working relationship.” Suitably chastised by their dismal productivity levels, Brad announces his Chairman Mao-style plans: “I think we should do at least another five albums in five years. We’ve got to step the studio workload up!”

Brad drops his voices slightly and adds, more seriously, “What we’d like from this album is for it to shift perceptions of the Nextmen.” “It would be really nice to be seen as producers who make music rather than a hip hop act,” adds Dom. “That’s what we are and what we’ve always done, but we’ve just made a couple of hip hop records.” The pair sits back contentedly and contemplate the next five albums. Then Brad adds: “Anyone for a cuppa?”


The Nextmen's Videos

THE NEXTMEN feat. ZARIF 'Something Got You'
Released 01/10/07


Myspace Bus acoustic performance of The Nextmen's new single 'Something Got You' feat. Zarif


The Nextmen Myspace Interview @ Global Gathering


My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/30/2005
Band Website: thenextmen.com or right here...
Band Members: Just the two of us. Dom Search and Brad Baloo.
Sounds Like:

Quotes:

"It's eclectic, slick, funky, summery, and they're one single away from being the new Groove Armada".
4/5 Independent On Sunday

"They've really upped their game on this new LP, its sounds like now."
4/5 HHC magazine

"This new LP is nothing but a sun-kissed, smoke-stacked sack of engaging grooves that explores the realms of soul, boogie, dancehall, reggae, house, hip hop and many other delights this LP offers. You won't regret it"
5/5 IDJ Magazine

"This LP is an absolutely essential acquisition".
Notion Magazine

"One of the UK's best new dance acts!"
The Sun

"A superb album!"
CNN online

"Killer Beats!"
Blowback

"These guys have so many dancefloor bombs in their crates, George Bush has them pegged up in his axis of evil".
London Lite

"This is slick hop electro ragga fusion and an effortlessly cool booty anthem for the bass fiending club massive".
DJ Mag

"This is a 14 track jump-a-thon record".
Metro

"Dom Search and Brad Baloo carve out a slice of striking, scything soul".
One Week To Live

"This LP takes in jaunty hip hop, glowing reggae, grimey dancehall and glorious soul".
Time Out

"So much talent to enjoy, makes this album almost overwhelmingly loveable".
Harlow Star

"Big bashy reggae ".
Mixmag

"Record of the week".
Blues & Soul

"A welcome return from the UK mixtape masters, an excellent LP".
DMC Update

"A cracking piece of Dancehall with bone crushing beats and a fuzzy bottom end".
Touch Magazine

Support by...
Zane, Lowe, Ras Kwame, Annie Mac, Semtex, Namone, Craig Charles, John Kennedy, DJ Sneak, Derek May, Cuban Brothers, Joe 90, Stereo MC's, Morcheeba, Commix, Mr Scruff, DJ Yoda, Fort Knox Five, Stanton Warriors, Groove Armada, Andy Smith, Skitz & Rodney P, Rob Luis, Robert Elms, Unabombers, Joe Ransom and many more


Record Label: Antidote Records/Custom Records/Fat City Records
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Newsflash!: A new home for The Nextmen and more...The Remix Ep is about to drop.

Greetings.A new summer, a barrel load of festivals and a brand spanking new record deal with Universal will be taking us through the rest of 2008 and further. It's that embryonic stage where we're rif...
Posted by The Nextmen on Fri, 30 May 2008 09:45:00 PST

Nextmen Artwork Up For 2007 Award

The Nextmen's single 'Let It Roll' is up for a 2007 Vinyl Artwork award. The illustration is by Alex Young and the layout by Filthy Media. If you get a minute please vote for us HERE.Thanks!...
Posted by The Nextmen on Mon, 05 Nov 2007 02:13:00 PST

Pacha Ibiza. More of that, please!

We thought it was all puke and shagging in shop entrances? Live sex in the clubs and pilled up chavs? No, Ibiza has not lived up to its name. Disappointing. Instead it was flight over on the Headkandi...
Posted by The Nextmen on Thu, 23 Aug 2007 11:26:00 PST

Videos & pics from our ALBUM LAUNCH party @ Cargo

Check the video below and pics from our 'This Was Supposed To Be The Future' album launch party @ CargoWicked night, nice and rammed and full of good vibes for the album. We performed live for the frs...
Posted by The Nextmen on Thu, 28 Jun 2007 03:41:00 PST

BBC London accoustic performance with Zarif

Check it below oh and make sure you check the below links for new video's and updateshttp://www.youtube.com/mumsthewordmusichttp://www.mum sthewordmusic.blogspot.comword up... now go cop the a...
Posted by The Nextmen on Mon, 11 Jun 2007 06:22:00 PST

What's the 3rd album all about then?

Where are our Jetpacks? Our Time Traveling Machines? Our Flying Cars? Hmm? Huh? They're not here and we thought we ought to point this out. Alright, so it may have taken us 3 years, a lot of toilet hu...
Posted by The Nextmen on Tue, 29 May 2007 07:48:00 PST

Koko Saturday.... Mental...

Thanks to everyone who came down on Saturday night to Kokos. It was a great success!! Special Big ups to Tom for all his hard work, Jon and Marc, PTH crew, Yoda and Antidote massive, Kwasi, Kes and Si...
Posted by The Nextmen on Mon, 26 Mar 2007 10:14:00 PST