Kevin Martin (British musician)

The Bug
Birth name Kevin Martin
Origin United Kingdom
Genres Dub, industrial, dancehall, jazzcore, hip hop, dubstep
Occupation(s) Producer, musician, journalist
Instruments Computers, vocals, turntables, synthesizers, saxophone
Labels Ninja Tune, Hyperdub, Rephlex
Associated acts King Midas Sound, Roger Robinson, Flowdan, Daddy Freddy, Earth, Warrior Queen, GOD, Ice,16-17, Techno Animal, Pressure, Godflesh, Justin Broadrick, Death Grips, Curse of the Golden Vampire. Loefah, Miss Red

Kevin Martin is a musician, record producer and journalist, often known under his recording alias The Bug from England, UK. Martin moved from Weymouth to London around 1990 and is now currently based in Berlin, Germany. He has been active for over two decades, in the genres of dub, jazzcore, industrial hip hop, dancehall, and dubstep.[1]

His projects include GOD, Techno Animal, Ice, Curse of the Golden Vampire, Pressure, and most recently, King Midas Sound (with Roger Robinson and Kiki Hitomi) and The Bug vs Earth.[2]

Early life

Martin first became interested in music as a teenager going to Handsome Dick's, a record store in Weymouth, Dorset, England, UK. At the same time, he was introduced to Joy Division, the Sex Pistols, Captain Beefheart, the Birthday Party, and Throbbing Gristle. He has described his initial interest in music as stemming from his difficult family situation during his childhood, and said, "It seemed like everything that I hated about English conservative monoculture was being burned and turned upside down through music," and, "Post-punk music was tearing up rule books and asking questions of everything, particularly structure in terms of music, art, politics, you know, the law."[3]

Martin first began making music because he was attracted to a do-it-yourself (DIY) aesthetic. He first worked with a four-track recorder and effects pedal, and said, "[I] was interested in everything that wasn't harmony, melody, and conservative musical structure. Dub seemed to tear everything to shreds, burn it up, and rearrange the embers." (referring to dub music). He described his early experiences of music in London as being very influential for his style and appreciation of music, especially experiencing Iration Steppas and The Disciples in the early 1990s. He described his experience in the London music scene as taking a while to sync his ears up to ragga and digital dancehall, two genres of music for which he has become well known.[3]

Musical projects

GOD

GOD was a jazzcore group that was part of the grindcore and industrial metal scenes. Justin Broadrick, formerly of Napalm Death and later of Godflesh, eventually joined. This was the first of Martin's collaborations with Broadrick, Techno Animal and Ice being subsequent. John Zorn also worked with this group.[4]

Techno Animal

An industrial hip-hop and ambient-music collaboration with Justin Broadrick that also collaborated with Dälek, Vast Aire, and Anti-Pop Consortium. John Jobbagy also participated in the group.

Ice

Ice included Martin on vocals, saxophone, synthesizer, and turntables; Justin Broadrick on guitar; David Cochrane on bass; and Lou Ciccotelli on drums. Its first album, Under the Skin, was somewhat similar to the industrial metal of Broadrick's Godflesh, but with a more experimentalist bent, notably via Martin's free jazz-influenced saxophone. By Bad Blood (In Bloom/Reprise/Warner Bros. Records), its second album, the band had absorbed a great deal of hip-hop influence, and nearly all the songs featured contributions from guests well known in underground hip hop, including El-P. However, the experimentalism continued, with singer Blixa Bargeld of legendary industrial band Einstürzende Neubauten appearing as well, often alongside the emcees. According to critic Ned Raggett,[5] the experiments are not always successful, but he credits the band for expanding its sound.

Curse of the Golden Vampire

Originally a collaboration between Techno Animal and Alec Empire in an industrial hip-hop vein. The second album, Mass Destruction, featured only Martin and Broadrick and moved into a more vicious breakcore and digital hardcore style with elements of grindcore, industrial hip-hop, and noise/power electronics.

The Bug

The Bug's music is influenced by dancehall, noise, grime, and hip hop. More subtle influences include dubstep and the dubtronica and broken techno of Basic Channel and Pole. The Bug's first album, Tapping The Conversation, was released in 1997 on the seminal Wordsound label. The album was conceived as an alternative soundtrack to the 1974 Francis Ford Coppola film The Conversation. In this incarnation, The Bug consisted of Kevin Martin and DJ Vadim, and existed in more of a downtempo and trip hop vein. From 2001–2004 The Bug collaborated with UK reggae soundsystem veteran The Rootsman on a number of limited edition 7" singles, released on the Razor X label. These releases were characterised by their harsh, aggressive nature both musically and vocally (vocal artists including Jamaican MCs such as He-Man and Wayne Lonesome).

The Bug's second album, Pressure was released on Rephlex Records in 2003. It included a number of more ambient, dub-influenced tracks alongside the ragga-tinged onslaughts. The Razor X singles were compiled on the Killing Sound album (along with newer material) which was released by Rephlex in 2006. Bug projects have included collaborations with a number of singers and MCs including Cutty Ranks, Flow Dan, Warrior Queen and Ras B. In 2005 he collaborated with Mark Stewart and Keith Levene and has released records on Rephlex, Tigerbeat6 and Klien Records. The Bug produced some radio sessions, including a clash with Soundmurderer on John Peel and a 2006 Breezeblock session with 10 MCs.

In 2006, The Bug launched a monthly London-based reggae club night entitled BASH, in collaboration with dubstep producer Loefah. 2008 saw the release of London Zoo, the third full release from the project, on Ninja Tune to critical acclaim.

After a 6 year hiatus, The Bug returned with their fourth effort Angels & Devils, again to critical acclaim. In October 2016, The Bug brought their new project 'Sirens' to London for a special performance.[6]

Pressure

A dub project, with releases on the Hyperdub label.

Black Chow

Reggae-dub/ trip hop collaboration with Kiki Hitomi, now, under the Jahtari record label (previous releases with Hyperdub). Black Chow incorporates Lo-Fi elements into their music, which is typical of artists on the Jahtari record label.

King Midas Sound

King Midas Sound is a musical crossover project, composed of Martin, London/Trinidad poet Roger Robinson and Japanese artist and singer Kiki Hitomi. Their first 12" release "(HDB014) Cool Out" and debut album Waiting For You... are both released through Kode9's Hyperdub label. "Meltdown" also featured on the 5 Years Of Hyperdub CD release in 2009. Their latest 12", "Aroo," was released on Ninja Tune in 2013.

Compilations

He also compiled the Macro Dub Infection (parts one and two), Ambient 4: Isolationism and Jazz Satellites CDs for the Virgin Ambient series.

Influences

Kevin Martin has discussed his admiration for Jah Shaka, Adrian Sherwood, King Tubby, Lee Perry, Swans, Public Enemy,[7] and Thomas Koner.

Journalism

He has previously written for music magazines such as Muzik and Jockey Slut.[8]

Partial discography

God

Techno Animal

Ice

Albums
Singles & EPs

Curse of the Golden Vampire

The Bug

Albums
Singles (incomplete)
Remixes (incomplete)

Black Chow

King Midas Sound

Albums
Singles & EPs

References

  1. Clayton, Jace (Winter 2011). "Kevin Martin in Bomb Magazine". Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  2. London Zoo review, The Wire, July 2008, p. 44.
  3. 1 2 "BOMB Magazine – The Bug by Jace Clayton". Bombsite.com. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  4. "Possession – God – Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  5. "Bad Blood – Ice – Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards – AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  6. Murray, Robin. "The Bug To Bring 'Sirens' To London". Clashmusic.com. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  7. Archived 16 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Martin, Kevin. "Aesop's Fable". Mushrecords.com. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
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