London Elektricity

London Elektricity
Background information
Origin London, United Kingdom
Genres Drum and bass, liquid funk, electronica, breakbeat, acid jazz
Years active 1996–present
Labels Hospital Records
Associated acts Izit, Future Homosapiens, Landslide
Website londonelektricity.com
Members Tony Colman (production, keyboards)
Past members Chris Goss (production, keyboards, guitar)
Liane Carroll (vocals, keyboards)
Jungle Drummer (drums)
Andy Waterworth (bass)
Landslide (drum pads)
Robert Owens (vocals)
Diane Charlemagne (live vocals)[1]
Stamina MC (rapping)
SP MC (rapping)
MC Wrec (rapping)

London Elektricity is the stage name of DJ and electronic musician Tony Colman, who is best known as a recording artist of five albums, international DJ and formerly a member of the drum and bass act London Elektricity Live.[2][3]

History

The first incarnation of London Elektricity was the duo Tony Colman and Chris Goss. Colman and Goss are also founders of the Hospital Records record label, to which London Elektricity are currently signed.[4][5]

In 1999, they released their debut album Pull the Plug on Hospital Records.[6][7] Although session musicians contributed a wide range of live instruments (double bass, electric guitar, brass section, flute, strings), and jazz singer Liane Carroll provided vocals on two tracks, the LP was essentially a studio work, under the control of producer/DJ duo Colman and Goss.[8]

In 2002, Chris Goss departed to concentrate on managing Hospital Records, leaving it a solo project of Tony Colman. The second album Billion Dollar Gravy was released in 2003. During the making of the album, the session musicians began to coalesce into a band, and Colman decided to take the band live. The line-up included Colman, Andy Waterworth, Landslide, MC Wrec, the Jungle Drummer, Liane Carroll and Robert Owens, amongst others.[9] In 2004 they released a live DVD entitled London Elektricity: Live Gravy.

2005 saw the release of their third album, Power Ballads, using the same line-up as the live band. London Elektricity announced at Pressure (the University of Warwick's drum and bass event) on 2 December 2005 that they had no plans to play live in future. They were joined on stage for the announcement by former member Chris Goss. As of 2006 Tony Colman now DJs drum and bass solo under the name of London Elektricity. Liane Carroll was awarded Best of Jazz Award at the BBC Jazz Awards 2005 and is now pursuing a successful solo jazz singing career. The band's new mixer as of 2007 is Ben Nguyen.[10]

Colman presents the Hospital Records podcast produced by Matt Riley at Hospital HQ. It generally features many releases from Hospital Records, and a wide spectrum of drum and bass from around the globe. The podcast recently won 'Best Podcast' at the BT Digital Music Awards, and has over 30,000 downloads a show.[11] The podcast regularly involves special guests who are signed to Hospital records such as Logistics.

In 2007, London Elektricity won the BBC 1Xtra Xtra Bass award for best live act despite not having played live with the band for two years.[12][13]

London Elektricity's fourth album, Syncopated City was released in September 2008.[14] The month before this marked his Essential Mix on BBC Radio 1. London Elektricity's fifth album, Yikes! was released in April 2011.[15]

Influences

According to his MySpace page, Tony Colman's influences include a large array of musicians, such as Talking Heads, Fela Kuti, Kraftwerk, Brian Eno, Led Zeppelin, and others. Jazz, soul, Latin, dub, rock, and punk[16] are present in many of London Elektricity's songs, such as "Rewind", "Attack Ships on Fire", "South Eastern Dream", "Do You Believe" (and its Dub version, "Dub You Believe"), "Main Ingredient", "Remember the Future", "Round the Corner", and "Song in the Key of Knife" (featuring an Acoustic bass line).

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Singles

DVDs

Other genres

On albums such as Medical History and compilations such as Out Patients, London Elektricity has been known to experiment with other genres, including acid jazz and breakbeat, on songs such as "Incurable", "Round the Corner (Acid Jazz Version)", "Theme from the Land Sanction", and "The Land that Time Forgot".

Other projects

London Elektricity has created several side projects, usually released on Hospital Records and occasionally on other labels, the most notable two being acid jazz group Izit and house music group Future Homosapiens. Both Colman and Goss are also part of the Peter Nice Trio and Dwarf Electro.[18]

References

  1. Friction (2 November 2015). Friction's Radio 1 Show: London Elektricity and Loadstar. Interview with Friction. Friction's BBC Radio 1 Show: London Elektricity and Loadstar. Retrieved 6 November 2015. (35 minutes in)
  2. Kmag (11 May 2011). "London Elektricity Interview". Kmag. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  3. Judge, Jules (25 January 2013). "Judge Jules VS. London Elektricity: The Interview". Big Shot Magazine. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  4. Kmag (29 May 2012). "London Elektricity Interview". Kmag. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  5. Muzu Team (2 July 2014). "Hospital Records: We Are 18 – London Elektricity Interview". Muzu.TV. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  6. Clarke, Paul (4 July 2003). "We examine Hospital Records". BBC. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  7. Brush, John. "Pull the Plug - Allmusic". Allmusic. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  8. "Hospital Records - Shop - Pull the Plug". Hospital Records. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  9. Saw You On The Flipside - Laurent Fintoni's online portfolio and blog. Spinscience.org.uk. Retrieved on 2012-12-13.
  10. Kettle, Paddy (6 January 2014). "The Band-London Elektricity". KCS Electrical. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  11. iZotope. "Stories from a Pro: London Elektricity". iZotope. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  12. Willis, Daniel (23 September 2011). "London Elektricity - Faux". Faux. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  13. BBC (2007). "BBC - 1Xtra - XtraBass Awards 2007". BBC. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  14. Tryggvason, Karl (22 October 2008). "RA Reviews: London Elektricity - Syncopated City". Resident Advisor. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  15. Radio Monash (29 May 2011). "Interview with London Elektricity". Radio Monash. Retrieved 2014-09-16.
  16. Hospital Records – London Elektricity. Hospitalrecords.com. Retrieved on 2012-12-13.
  17. "Chart Log UK: New Entries Update: 07.05.2011". Zobbel.de. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  18. Tony Colman Discography at Discogs. Discogs.com. Retrieved on 2012-12-13.

External links

Interviews

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.