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- - Jon Carter -- Dec 9

  • 15-11-2005 1:00pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 47


    Jon Carter

    Johnny Moy

    Scott Macnaughton

    Temple Bar Music Centre

    Friday Dec 9th

    10pm - very late

    If the mascot of acid house is the smiley face then Jon Carter
    emodies its spirit having spent the last ten years out-grinning even
    those on his dancefloors. His dj sets are carnivalistic. It?s like
    you?re walking passed the best soundsystems with fat basslines and
    ragga over house, techno and beats beyond elephantine. Infused with
    the original ethos of acid house - to cross pollinate and embrace
    diversity - Jon has in the past decade: remixed U2 (twice) as well as
    seminal eighties electro; pulled off a Basement Jaxx/Underground
    Resistance nexus on one of his many compilations; played alongside
    both Fatboy Slim and DJ Marky in front of 300,000 on Rio beach, and
    twiddled a 303 in the legendary Gee Jam studios in Jamaica.

    In 2005 Jon is still at the top of his game having remixed number one
    supergroup Gorillaz (?Dirty Harry?) as well as new dance finds
    Lumidee & Speedy and The Drill; he?s residing in the annexe of
    Amnesia this summer ? for the third Ibizan season in a row ? at Cream
    playing alongside Jacques lu Cont and Mylo and continues to raise
    arms, pulses and roofs across the UK from Chibuku in Liverpool to
    Basics in Leeds, Shine in Belfast and Ministry and Fabric in London.

    Jon is also a director of some of London?s most forward looking pubs
    including the Lock Tavern in Camden, which has featured Sunday roast
    rockin? sets from the likes of Mylo, Tom Vek and Rob da Bank. It?s no
    surprise that Carter should get involved in pubs as he rose to
    prominence as part of the basement bar dwelling Heavenly Social gang
    in 1994 alongside the Chemical Brothers and Death In Vegas. Always
    the last man standing Carter brought a ragga, dancehall inflection to
    the emergent big beat sounds of that era and soon pulled together a
    motley selection of talent to produce the beats driven Monkey Mafia
    who released the album ?Shoot The Boss? and supported Massive Attack
    and Roni Size?s Reprazent. He captured his Social sound on
    compilation ?Live At The Social Vol. 2? in 1998 and became a guest dj
    on The Prodigy?s Fat Of The Land tour.

    At the turn of the millennium Carter was in residence at two of
    the U.K?s biggest clubs: Bugged Out at Nation in Liverpool and the
    Boutique in Brighton. He went on to release ?Everlasting Life? and
    compilation ?Viva Bugged Out? with Bugged Out. In 2000 Jon played to
    250,000 at Berlin?s Love Parade and also launched a new imprint,
    Saville Row recordings, to release more trend bucking club music. His
    best loved releases include ?Go Down?, which based on the field
    recordings from the Coen Brothers ?O Brother Where Art Thou?, and
    2004?s rocker ?The Dance?.

    His studio skills have been in demand from some of the world?s
    biggest artists with U2 turning to him for both ?Last Night On Earth?

    and ?Elevation?. The Prodigy, Manic Street Preachers, Stone Roses and
    Happy Mondays have also all received the Carter treatment. In
    addition to his compilations for Bugged Out and The Social his club
    magic has also been captured by the Essential Selection (1999), DMC 7

    (2000) and Minstry of Sound (2003) where he is a regular to their
    Saturday Sessions.

    In 2003 Jon contributed to Wall of Sound?s ?Two Culture Clash?

    project. His collaboration with Patra ?Who Do You Love?? was recorded
    at Gee Jam and is a highlight amongst an album that includes his acid
    house peers Switch, Howie B and Justin Robertson. This was a dream
    trip for one of the pioneers of the sound in the UK. Fusing acid
    house with a dancehall legend in Jamaica? I bet even the Cheshire
    Cat couldn?t hold a candle to his grin.


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