Tim Simenon
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Tim Simenon | |
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Born | 21 June 1968 |
Origin | Brixton, London, England |
Genre(s) | Acid House, Electronica, Trip-hop |
Occupation(s) | Producer, mixer, musician |
Associated acts | Bomb The Bass, Coldcut, Kruder & Dorfmeister |
Tim Simenon (born 21 June 1968) is a record producer famous for his work as UK dance outfit Bomb the Bass.
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[edit] Early career
He started off his music career in the late 1980s, DJing at London's Wag Club. From his record collection, and experience on a music production college course, he used a basic music production set up, to produce "Beat Dis". "Beat Dis" was a cut and paste record, fusing old school hip hop, funk including the Jimmy Castor Bunch, and samples from 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly' and 'Thunderbirds' soundtracks.
The record reputedly cost £500 to make, in between Simenon's then work as a shelf stacker in a supermarket and as a DJ.
The record first appeared on the Mister-Ron imprint, a ruse designed to pretend that the record was a U.S. import, fresh out of New York. The record went straight into the UK singles chart at number two when released by Rhythm King records. Its Smiley artwork, borrowed from the Watchmen comic books, influenced much of the imagery surrounding the 'acid house' and 'rave' scenes.
[edit] Success
Simenon went on to follow up the track with three more singles taken from a hastily recorded album Into the Dragon. Into the Dragon acknowledged the debt it owed to the Japanese hip-hop label Major Force, New York producer Steinski, UK artists Massive Attack / Wild Bunch and the 23 Skidoo / Ronin collective.
Alongside production on the album, Simenon also was part of Nation 12, along with John Foxx, a music veteran who had been in various electronic and new romantic bands since the early 1980s. Nation 12's releases enjoyed a measure of success in clubs and raves across the UK.
In the late 1980s Simenon produced the wildly popular single "Buffalo Stance" by Swedish/African artist Neneh Cherry. The song features lyrics which pay homage to Simenon ("Bomb the Bass, rock this place"). The song reached number three on the UK singles chart and number 1 on the US dance chart.
In the early 1990s Simenon changed his sound, to incorporate raw rock guitars, pioneering trip hop on his two albums Unknown Territory and Clear. Unknown Territory was delayed when Pink Floyd refused to allow a piece of "Money" to be sampled on one of the album's tracks. Unknown Territory continued the motif of borrowing from popular culture, with samples from both The Good, the Bad and the Ugly and Death Race 2000 soundtracks, and films like Videodrome. Clear was released on the Stoned Heights imprint of Island Records. It was heavily influenced by the writings of William Burroughs, and featured a number of contributors including rapper Justin Warfield, singer Sinéad O'Connor , novelist Will Self and writer/musician Leslie Winer.
[edit] Later on
Simenon has remixed, and produced, a wide range of artists including Bjork, Massive Attack, Ash, Seal, rap act Consolidated, French producer Hector Zazou, Gavin Friday and Depeche Mode.
He now lives in Amsterdam, and releases records under both the Bomb the Bass, and Flow Creator monikers. A new Bomb the Bass album titled "Future Chaos" is currently being mixed and features collaborations with Toob, Jon Spencer, Jack Dangers from Meat Beat Manifesto, Justin Warfield and Paul Conboy.
Tim was accused of rape in 2004. However, when the trail came to court, the jury found Simenon not guilty in a reported three minutes, and he was subsequently acquitted on all charges.[1]
More recently Simenon has produced the latest album by the Bangkok based electro clash band Futon, remarking that he'd become addicted to the city of Bangkok, enjoying the pace of life and excellent nightlife.
[edit] References
- ^ Former pop star cleared of rape. BBC News (9 June 2004). Retrieved on 2007-12-31.