Richie Hawtin

Richie Hawtin
Background information
Birth name Richard Hawtin
Born June 4, 1970 (1970-06-04) (age 41)
Oxfordshire, England
Origin Windsor, Ontario
Genres Techno, Minimal, Detroit techno, Ambient
Labels Plus 8, M-nus, NovaMute
Website richiehawtin.com

Richard (Richie) Hawtin (born June 4, 1970, Banbury, Oxfordshire) is an English-Canadian electronic musician and DJ who was an influential part of Detroit techno's second wave of artists in the early 1990s and a leading exponent of Minimal techno since the mid 1990s. He is best known for his abstract, minimal works under the alias Plastikman, a pseudonym he still uses today.

Hawtin is known for DJing minimal techno sets making use of laptop computers and digital mixing equipment. In May 1990, Hawtin and fellow second-waver John Acquaviva founded the Plus 8 record label, which they named after their turntable's pitch adjust function.[1] In 1998, Hawtin launched Minus records.[2]

Contents

Biography

Hawtin was born in Banbury, Oxfordshire, England,[3] but moved when he was aged nine to LaSalle, Ontario, a suburb of Windsor, Ontario, and just across the river from Detroit, the birthplace of techno. His father worked as a robotics technician at General Motors, and was a fan of electronic music, introducing his son to Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream at an early age. He has one brother, Matthew, who is a visual artist and ambient music DJ. Hawtin attended Sandwich Secondary High School in LaSalle. He began to DJ in clubs in Detroit at 17, and his early style was a mix of house music and techno.[4]

With Canadian DJ John Acquaviva he formed the label Plus 8 in 1990 to release his own tracks under the name F.U.S.E.[4] He spent part of 2002 and 2003 living in New York City, and has since moved to Berlin, Germany. He said, "I’d always wanted to move to Europe. I needed somewhere that was inspiring and where there were like-minded musicians and artists, somewhere you could still experiment with music and with life. Berlin is so liberal in so many different ways; there’s an amazing club scene, there’s a great development software tech scene, there are so many resources here."[4]

Career

Hawtin has recorded music under the aliases Plastikman, F.U.S.E., Concept 1, Forcept 1, Circuit Breaker, Robotman, Chrome, Spark, Xenon, R.H.X., Jack Master, Richard Michaels and UP!. He also recorded and performed, in combination with other artists, under group names such as The Hard Brothers, Hard Trax (with his brother Matthew Hawtin), 0733, Cybersonik (with Daniel Bell and John Acquaviva), Final Exposure (with Joey Beltram and Mundo Muzique), Just For Fun (with Holger Wick), Narod Niki (with Akufen, Cabanne, Dandy Jack, Daniel Bell, Luciano, Ricardo Villalobos, Robert Henke and Thomas Franzmann), Two Guys In The Basement (with John Acquaviva), Spawn (with Fred Giannelli and Daniel Bell) and States Of Mind (with Acquaviva).

He was the mastermind of huge raves in the Detroit area, he ran several club nights, a yearly party at City Club and a crazy one at The Necto (nightclub) Additionally, Hawtin and Pete Namlook collaborated to produce the From Within series of albums which blend minimal techno and ambient. He has also released an album Sounds of the Third Season with Sven Väth.[5]

In 2006, Hawtin collaborated with choreographer Enzo Cosimi on a composition called "9.20" for the Winter Olympics opening ceremony. He said, "Enzo and I are very much interested in pushing boundaries, both as artists and for our audiences. Working together for the Opening Ceremonies of the Winter Games delivers the creative endeavor to not only entertain a huge audience, but to also introduce them to sights and sounds that they may have never experienced before."[6]

Slices magazine launched a series of biographies in 2007 called "Pioneers of Electronic Music"; their first issue was a 60 minute biographical documentary on Hawtin. The film follows his career from his early days crossing the border to Detroit to his current life in Berlin, and contains interviews with many colleagues and family members.

2011 saw the release of Arkives 1993 - 2010, a massive box set containing everything Hawtin has released under his Plastikman moniker, as well as a new mixed set and previously unreleased material. The collection includes CDs, vinyl, digital downloads and a DVD.

Hawtin dismisses speculation as to the demise of dance music. In an interview he said, "In the last few years, the interest in electronic music has gone back up, the quality of the music has gone back up, there’s a buzz which reminds you of the early days,” he insists. “From where I’m sitting right now, dance music is more vibrant than ever. In some countries you’ll always have the press saying it’s going down and writing it off, but somewhere else the interest level is soaring and people are discovering this music for the first time, like in South America, where it’s completely kicking off – it’s unbelievable down there. There are some great festivals and parties in Europe, and over the last five years I’ve seen Ibiza go from complete cheesy shite music to the resurgence of a number of different types of progressive electronic music."[4]

Selected discography

Albums

DJ mix compilations

Awards

YEAR COMPANY RANK AWARD COUNTRY LINK
2011 MixMag 02 Greatest DJ of all time UK Website
2010 DJ Awards Nominated Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2010 DJ Awards Nominated Best International DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2010 Resident Advisor 02 Top 100 DJs of 2010 Worldwide Website
2010 Raveline Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany Website
2010 Golden Gnome Awards (ADE) Winner Favorite International DJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands Website
2010 DJ Magazine 31 Top 100 Best Djs of 2010 UK Website
2010 KlubTerapia Winner Best International DJ Poland
2010 KlubTerapia Winner Best Live Act (Plastikman) Poland
2010 Resident Advisor Winner Best Live Act (Plastikman) Worldwide Website
2009 DJ Awards Nominated Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2009 Resident Advisor Winner Top 100 DJs of 2009 Worldwide Website
2009 Raveline Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany Website
2009 DJ Magazine 28 Top 100 Best DJs of 2009 UK Website
2008 DJ Awards Winner Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2008 Resident Advisor 02 Top 100 DJs of 2008 Worldwide Website
2008 DJ Magazine 15 Top 100 Best DJs of 2008 UK Website
2007 Resident Advisor 05 Top 10 DJs of 2007 Worldwide Website
2007 DJ Magazine 19 Top 100 BEst DJs of 2007 UK Website
2006 DJ Awards Winner Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2006 Resident Advisor 03 Top 10 DJs of 2006 Worldwide Website
2006 DJ Magazine 33 Top 250 Best DJs of 2006 UK Website
2006 International Dance Music Awards (WMC) Nominated Best Global DJ Award Miami, USA
2005 DJ Awards Nominated Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2005 Raveline Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany Website
2005 DJ Magazine 12 Top 250 Best DJs of 2005 UK Website
2004 DJ Magazine 44 Top 100 Best DJs of 2004 UK Website
2004 Groove Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany
2003 DJ Awards Nominated Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2003 DJ Magazine 33 Top 100 Best DJs of 2003 UK Website
2003 Groove Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany
2002 DJ Awards Winner Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2002 Groove Magazine Winner Best International DJ Germany
2001 DJ Awards Nominated Best Techno DJ Ibiza, Spain Website
2001 Wired Magazine Rave Awards Nominated Most Wired Musician San Francisco, USA
2000 DJ Awards Nominated Best DJ Innovator Ibiza, Spain Website
2000 Musik und Maschine Congress Winner Best International DJ Berlin, Germany
2000 Detroit Music Awards Winner Outstanding Electronic Musician Detroit, USA
1999 DJ Awards Nominated Best DJ Innovator Ibiza, Spain Website
1999 Prix Ars Electronica Honorable Mention Digital Music Austria
1998 DJ Awards Nominated Best DJ Innovator Ibiza, Spain Website
1998 Festival du Cinema et Media Winner Best New Media Work Montreal, Canada

References

  1. ^ Reynolds, Simon. "Generation Ecstasy". London: Routledge, 1999. 225-226. ISBN 0-4159-2373--5
  2. ^ "ten weeks of silence". richiehawtin.com. Retrieved on March 6, 2009.
  3. ^ Gregory, Andy (ed.) (2002) International Who's Who in Popular Music 2002, Europa, ISBN 1-85743-161-8, p.224
  4. ^ a b c d "Richie Hawtin: Biography". Mute records. Retrieved on April 5, 2009.
  5. ^ "Richie Hawtin & Sven Väth". Mute Records. Retrieved on March 6, 2009.
  6. ^ "Richie Hawtin creates 9:20 for the XXth Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony". Resident Advisor, January 16, 2006. Retrieved on April 5, 2009.

External links