Perhaps it is our well-documented mutual antipathy, or maybe it is our well-documented ignorance, but Britain's perception of French music is plain wrong. On the surface, it is indeed the land that listens to Europap and still loves to jive badly to La Bamba ' but scratch beneath the surface and you'll find a wealth of talent gasping for air. It has a long and noble tradition of fine singers, musicians and producers, from y y to Guy Cuevas, from Jacques Dutronc to the Saintly Serge Gainsbourg and Jean-Claude Vannier; from Ze Records to Africanism! and from Cerrone to, yes, Martin Solveig.Martin Solveig has been involved in music since he was knee-high. As a boy, he studied classical music. By age 13 he had acquired his pair of decks and began DJing, although it wasn't until 1992 that he discovered electronic music. His schooling came courtesy of a sales job at the vaunted Parisian record store Champs Disques on Champs Elyses. Martin's big break, at the tender age of 18 and thanks to the encouragement and support of mentor Claude...
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Perhaps it is our well-documented mutual antipathy, or maybe it is our well-documented ignorance, but Britain's perception of French music is plain wrong. On the surface, it is indeed the land that listens to Europap and still loves to jive badly to La Bamba ' but scratch beneath the surface and you'll find a wealth of talent gasping for air. It has a long and noble tradition of fine singers, musicians and producers, from y y to Guy Cuevas, from Jacques Dutronc to the Saintly Serge Gainsbourg and Jean-Claude Vannier; from Ze Records to Africanism! and from Cerrone to, yes, Martin Solveig.Martin Solveig has been involved in music since he was knee-high. As a boy, he studied classical music. By age 13 he had acquired his pair of decks and began DJing, although it wasn't until 1992 that he discovered electronic music. His schooling came courtesy of a sales job at the vaunted Parisian record store Champs Disques on Champs Elyses. Martin's big break, at the tender age of 18 and thanks to the encouragement and support of mentor Claude Monnet, came when he landed the residency at prestigious Parisian nightspot Le Palace. A move to Les Bains Douches, a legendary club in the city, and then Solveig's own Pure parties at Queen cemented his growing reputation as one to watch. But simply being a DJ has never been enough for Martin Solveig and his production ideas soon began to filter out on to vinyl, as he always knew they would. If Heart Of Africa, on his own Mixture label, drew admiring glances, it was his contribution to the Africanism series (with Bob Sinclar and DJ Gregory), the stunning Edony, which turned heads. Originally intended purely as a club track, Edony shot to the top of club charts and from there launched itself into mainstream arenas. Martin's debut album, Sur La Terre, was the work of a young man bursting with ideas, styles, and experiments. Over the next few years Solveig hit hard with one killer cut after another, abetted by some frankly brilliant mixes by the likes of Pete Heller and Mousse T. Rocking Music, with its echoes of Prince and Michael Jackson, was an instant anthem wherever it was played and transferred from underground floors to Radio 1 playlists with consummate ease. The follow-up, I'm A Good Man, voiced by legendary growler Lee Fields, was a plaintive cry from a wronged man and in Mousse T's Breakbeat Mix brought a taste of Noo Orleans funk to modern electronic dancefloors. 'The new album probably has a slight flavour of the '60s and '70s, which have always embodied a certain freedom for me, being a child of the 80s, the economic crisis, the condom generation?! Then I'm into wine, parties and low necklines, so I feel quite in tune with the title.' So says Martin of his latest album, Hedonism, which amply showed the maturation of his productions, moving effortlessly from the familiar terrain of four-to-the-floor rhythms, to take in the sub-R&B of Black Voices or the audacious modern reading of Requiem Pour Un Con. 'Serge Gainsbourg is a master and I wanted to pay humble tribute,' says Martin. 'The song provides a little break in the album's progress, as well as a French touch that I'm attached to. I think the best songs are made to last and be covered. New versions always have something new to add, even if they never achieve the magic of the original. 'This cover version, defiantly electronic, compared to the sparse and organic original, ably demonstrates the Solveig modus operandi, producing music that is simultaneously synthetic and natural, warm and glacial. 'I use both electronics and live musicians, sometimes with classical instruments like keyboards, horns and any piano instruments,' explains Solveig. 'Most of my drums are programmed, but what I really love is using classical instruments with an electronic device. For example I used a big B3 Hammond organ, recorded a whole session with a musician and then took bits from it and made it sound almost like an electronic sample. You still have the good quality of the instrument, but with the ability to make it a bit faster or more repetitive or whatever. That's what I like ' to get inside an organic sound and make it electronic.' Martin Solveig is not prolific, but everything he makes is worth waiting for. He has always eschewed the remix treadmill, not because he disapproves of it, but it is simply not his path. Solveig's destiny lies elsewhere. His life is good. Fulfilled. 'Even if I sometimes grumble a bit from tiredness, I'm a child blessed by fortune and very happy in his everyday life,' chuckles Martin. 'I should quote Karl Lagerfeld: 'Holidays are for people who work'.' And all work and no play would make Martin a very dull boy indeed.
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Miami Conference is over, new DJ's have been exposed, new music revealed and everyone is looking forward to the summer. Tilllate has teamed up with M8 magazine to ease you into the Ibiza season with some insights into your fave DJ's. Deep, soul-searching questions... integral facts of life... like who will win the World Cup?! There will be more to come next week. Many thanks to the team at M8 - now go, enjoy...
Who is Martin Solveig? Most people assume from the name that he is Norwegian! Another DJ myth we have to lay to rest. The quiet Frenchman is famous for a string of legendary, chart-busting, floor-filling house tracks - Most recently "Everybody" and "Jealousy"... but did you know that he is trained in Judo!? Read on for more...
Favourite Club?
Shindig, Newcastle
Vinyl Or CDs?
CDs
Preferred Style Of Music To Play?
House and eclectic up-tempo cuts
Favourite Country To Play?
Australia
Tune That Killed Your Dancefloor?
Mish Mash ‘Speechless’
Your ‘Get The Dancefloor Back’ Tune?
Blaze ‘Most Precious Love’
Best Clubbing Moment?
Sunrise at Caveau Paradise, Mykonos
Worst Clubbing Moment?
Sunset at Defected party Miami 2004 when the police switched the power off
Favourite Tune?
The Roots ‘The Seed’
Favourite Movie?
Blade Runner
Favourite TV Programme?
24
Favourite Food?
La Sole Meunière
Favourite Drink?
Perrier
Favourite Book?
Shakespeare - ‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’
Favourite Holiday Destination?
Bretagne, France
What’s your ideal night chilling?
Sipping a glass of wine reading Shakespeare and watching an episode of 24
Favourite Computer Game?
Grand Theft Auto
Album Always On Your Ipod?
Stevie Wonder ‘Inner Vision’
What Sports Do You Follow?
Football but not very accurately
What Club Team Do You Support?
Paris Saint Germain
What Sports Do You Play?
Clubbing, tennis, golf
Hobby?
Press economics
Got Any Medals?
I had a judo medal at six
Favourite Aftershave/Perfume?
Aqua di Gio
What Mobile Phone Do You Have?
Nokia
Favourite Trainers?
Le Coq Sportif
What Car Do You Drive?
Scooter Piaggio
Who Will Win The World Cup?
I think England has a chance
Martin Solveig recently spun at
Defected Miami @ Nikki Beach Club and Discotech of Bob Sinclar @ Turnmills


Many thanks to M8 Magazine pick up this months edition from all good Newsagents 