Mr. Scruff

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Mr. Scruff (real name Andy Carthy; born in 1972 in Macclesfield) is a British DJ, and artist. He is a native of Manchester, England and studied Fine Art at the Sheffield College of Art.

His DJ name was inspired by his trademark loose-lined drawing style. He has been DJing since 1994, at first in and around Manchester then nationwide in the United Kingdom. He is known for DJing in marathon sets (often exceeding six hours), his eclectic musical taste, his love of a "nice cup of tea" and the quirky home-produced visuals and animations that are projected on large screens during his gigs.

Scruff's debut album, Mr. Scruff, was released on the small Manchester based label Pleasure Records. He soon moved to the larger Ninja Tune label, and subsequently released the albums Keep It Unreal and Trouser Jazz.

His most notable hit "Get A Move On" is built around "Bird's Lament (In Memory of Charlie Parker)" by Moondog, and has been used in several commercials ranging from Lincoln and Volvo automobiles to France Télécom and GEICO insurance. The song also samples Shifty Henry's "Hyping Woman Blues" and led to a renewal of interest in Henry's compositions.

All of his albums contain tracks about fish, whales and other sea-life, which cut up recordings of voiceovers from children's stories and nature documentaries to create surreal and silly stories. His album artwork and music videos are noted for their distinctive cartoony style; many of the cartoons are drawn by Scruff himself.

In 2004, Mr Scruff released the first of what is intended to be a series of 4, DJ-mixed compilation CDs, called Keep It Solid Steel. These mixes are designed to recreate the eclectic genres one would expect to hear at a Mr Scruff club night. Volume 1 was released in 2004. In November 2006, Ninja Tune confirmed that the 8th Solid Steel record would be mixed by J Rocc and the 9th would be Volume 2 from Mr. Scruff. Other Solid Steel mixes have been released by fellow Ninja Tune artists including The Herbaliser, Hexstatic, DJ Food and Amon Tobin.

He has a wide array of remixes to his name, and has also produced tracks for others - notably 'Echo of Quiet and Green' for sometime collaborator Niko for her 2004 album 'Life on Earth'. Niko returned the favour, appearing on the track "Come Alive" from the Trouser Jazz album.

Having performed regularly at The Big Chill Festival in Eastnor Castle deer park, Ledbury, Herefordshire, he was asked in 2006 to select the tracks for their compilation album, Big Chill Classics.

Contents

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Collaborations

  • The track, "Get A Move On" was covered by Will Holland's side project, the Quantic Soul Orchestra on the album Pushin' On (Tru Thoughts, 09 May 2005)

[edit] Song appearances

  • Last segment called "Full Circle" from documentary movie Scratch features Spandex Man with various extra samples added.
  • Episodes of the hit UK TV comedy show Spaced featured the tracks "Spandex Man" and "Chipmunk" from the Keep It Unreal album.
  • "Spandex Man" was also used on the BBC series Top Gear and is often used on The Real Hustle on BBC Three
  • The song "Ug" from the album Trouser Jazz is used in numerous Weebl and Bob cartoons, including the very first one entitled "Pie". The pie as a motif later recurred in one of Scruff's videos (Sweetsmoke).
  • "Get A Move On" was used in a Volvo commercial and subsequently used for ads for Lincoln automobiles.
  • "Get A Move On" was used by the BBC for snooker highlights and in The Apprentice.
  • "Get A Move On" was used by the Adio Footwear in the skateboarding video One Step Beyond for Kenny Anderson's part.
  • "Blackpool Roll" is being used in New Zealand by television network TV ONE as background music as part of their branded channel advertising and show listings.
  • "Spandex Man" features in and is used on the DVD Menu of the film SW9
  • "Fish" was used by Nexus Productions for the Virgin Atlantic safety video, which features the voices of Vic Reeves and Dani Behr.
  • "Spandex Man" was used in the film "Gumball Rally 3000".

[edit] Music videos

The music videos by Mr. Scruff have had rather simplified geometry of the characters and props depicted in it, meaning that there is no illusion of 3D graphics and that the characters have very simple shapes of their bodies and sticks as hands and feet.

[edit] External links

In other languages