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m:ck

About Me

The intent of my site is to preserve the crucial role of the creative presentation of pre-recorded music (what is today called DJing) as a starting point to understand contemporary music and technology related arts.The site was born in 1997, arranging and compiling information based on the culture and sounds that I come from.I was tired about the abuse of terms regarding the so-called dance genres and sub-genres, which numerous people, many of which often involved in the music business, were using in a totally wrong contexts. Another aspect that inspired my website was the implausible lack of a sound-system culture, especially in my country. History has never known of influential music venues that do not promote the quality of sound-systems. Even if today club culture is dominant, I feel that these misinterpretations are still taking place.Not always an artistic practice depends from the value of its past, but it is essential to consider that also the practice of the past can emerge from a contradictory approach that generates a cultural impact. The commonly accepted condition of someone placing his/her creativity on pre-recorded music presentation is not so new. In the mid 30's, pioneer French musician Pierre Schaeffer, founding father of "musique concrète", experimented with the phonograph and sound libraries as a modern artist could do today with a digital sampler. In Jamaican culture, the DJ is the person who speaks at the microphone over the records played by the "selector". For Hip Hop turntablist culture, DJ is the man who scratches, cuts and re-edits with decks (an approach inherited also from the early disco DJs). For other contexts, like club and radio environments, a DJ is a refined playback engineer that has a story to narrate. More than ever, I feel today that I cannot fully embrace any of these visions.I've conceived an hypothetical timeline for the main menu that contains what I consider decisive, focusing on seminal dance music styles like Jamaican dub and Detroit techno, legendary American venues like the Loft, the Paradise Garage, the Music Box, and touching a bit of early DJ mixing technology with a comprehensive section about the vintage Bozak rotary mixer. I'm also planning new sections for the future. I'm conscious that my work is almost infinitesimal and partial. However, I really hope that the site will be useful to understand more about the modern dance scene.
Peace!
~ Michele (September 2005)
The record is contemporary live music, while live music repeats, as dead, that music which was born from the record. So those who want to listen to some live music can listen to a record.
(Manlio Sgalambro - Song Theory, 1998)
Every record is a microcosm, a world of thirty (or twelve) centimeters. A record bin is a range of possible worlds. Take a record, put it on the turntable and this is what will manifest: the world where you have deciced to live for the next hour.
(Evan Eisenberg - The Recording Angel, 1997)
So that it may live and vibrate, music necessitates of new means of expression, and only science is capable of infusing it with a youthful vigour.
(Edgard Varèse, 1917)
www.mickmusicpage.net
Who's warping my time~space right now:
AGF, âme, Amon Tobin, Amp Fiddler, Andy Stott, Boards of Canada, Clark, Deadbeat, Fertile Ground, Henrik Schwarz, Hyperdub stuff, Ibadan stuff, Isolee, Jamie Lidell, Jan Jelinek, Kid 606, Los Hermanos, Martin Buttrich, Mathew Jonson, Meshell Ndegeocello, Midaircondo, Monolake, Murcof, Omar S, Osunlade, Raster-Noton stuff, Rhythm & Sound, Ryoji Ikeda, Sleeparchive, Triosk, Twerk, Versatile stuff ...
About me:

Birth date ~ January 24, 1974
Location ~ Perugia, Italy, Earth
Skills ~ graphic design, realtime visuals

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 4/4/2006
Band Website: mickmusicpage.net
Influences: Everything sounds not generic.

A Certain Ratio, Aphex Twin, Arthur Russell, Ashra Temple, Augustus Pablo, Azymuth, Bill Laswell, Brian Eno, Can, Carl Craig, Chaka Khan, Coldcut, Curtis Mayfield, David Mancuso, David Rodigan, David Toop, Derrick May, DJ Moz_art, Edgard Varèse, Einstürzende Neubauten, Eliane Radigue, Ennio Morricone, Erik Satie, ESG, Fela Kuti, Francis Grasso, François Kevorkian, Frankie Knuckles, George Clinton, Grandmaster Flash, György Ligeti, Herbie Hancock, Idris Muhammad, Jaco Pastorius, Jah Wobble, Jeff Mills, Jimi Hendrix, John Cage, John Coltrane, John Peel, Juan Atkins, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Keith Jarrett, Kool DJ Herc, King Tubby, Kraftwerk, Larry Heard, Larry Levan, Lee Perry, La Monte Young, Marshall Jefferson, Marvin Gaye, Miles Davis, Moondog, Nina Simone, Pat Metheny, Patrick Adams, Pete Namlook, Phil Niblock, Philip Glass, Pierre Henry, Pierre Schaeffer, Pink Floyd, Public Enemy, Quincy Jones, Ron Hardy, Roy Ayers, Santana, Sly & Robbie, Soul II Soul, Steve Reich, Stevie Wonder, Sun Ra, Terry Riley, The Orb, Tod Dockstader, Tom Moulton, Throbbing Gristle, Wally Badarou, Walter Gibbons, War, Wendy Carlos, Weather Report, Yellow Magic Orchestra

MUSIC TECH PIONEERS:
Alan Blumlein, Alex Rosner, Bob Moog, Conny Plank, Dave Smith, Don Buchla, Emile Berliner, George Massenburg, James B. Lansing, Joe Meek, King Tubby, Leon Theremin, Luigi Russolo, Mark Levinson, Miller Puckette, Oskar Sala, Peter Gotcher / Evan Brooks, Phil Spector, Rudy Bozak, Richard Long, Roger Linn, Rupert Neve, Stephan Schmitt / Volker Hinz, Tadao Kikumoto, Thaddeus Cahill, Theo Volk / Fritz Pfleumer / Hermann Bucher, Vladimir Ussachevsky / Otto Luening, Wolfgang Flür
Type of Label: Indie