Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

515 PRESENTS DAVE CLARKE FRIDAY 13TH NOV @ TRIPOD

  • 05-11-2009 2:10pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 384 ✭✭


    POD + 515 Presents
    Dave Clarke
    Support:Sunil sharpe
    Bar:Conor G
    Fri 13th nov @ Tripod
    Advance tickets €19.50
    Advance Tickets from usual outlets. Phone/internet bookings subject to extra service charges.
    www.ticketmaster.ie
    /24hr Hotline 0818 719 300
    More info
    www.pod.ie
    Dave Clarke biog
    “I have an unbridled passion for this,’ he enthuses boyishly, ‘Yes, I suppose I’ve never grown up”.
    Dave Clarke is holding forth as he drives back to his West Sussex home from a photo-shoot in London, interrupted occasionally by the bland feminine robot tones of the Satellite Navigation system offering traffic tips. The make-up still visible round his eyes makes him look a little like his post-punk musical heroes, while the futuristic route-finder reminds of his ceaseless passion for new technology.
    ‘I bought my first Damned album because I thought they sounded like they’d be really evil,’ he declares, ‘and even now their album ‘Machine Gun Etiquette’ is one I keep coming back to. I like the attitude, the free reign of it, and on an artistic level I see my music as in the alternative genre rather than dance music. Techno and electro is an alternative that happens to be on the peripheries of dance music.’
    Clarke has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best techno and electro DJs in the world but he’s always been an outsider, from his stormy childhood in the 1980s to his tempestuous relationship with the media today.
    ‘The school I was at was all about grooming you to be an accountant or a lawyer or in the army,’ he explains. ‘I just saw that as breaking the human spirit and constantly rebelled against it. I instinctively felt it was wrong and pointless for me. I’ve always been very, very bad at respecting authority.’
    Clarke was born and raised in Brighton but was expelled from school a number of times from an early age. The school always took him back but he fully admits to being a thoroughly disruptive boy with a short attention span. What started him on the road to where he his today was his hijacking and combining his parents’ hobbies.
    ‘I started playing with my mother’s records and my father’s technology,’ he says, ‘My mother had lots of old disco records by the likes of Roy Ayers, Lonnie Liston Smith and the Crusaders, and my dad was really into technology. He had disco lights in the front room, record decks, reel-to-reels, reverb units, he even did a thing on BBC Radio about quadrophonics. It’s pretty obvious where I get it all from really.’
    Clarke, his relationship with his family in teenage dissaray, borrowed some his father’s equipment, including the disco lights and retreated to the attic where he covered everything in aluminium foil and made a sci-fi retreat for himself. Here he’d make tapes for his friends and dismantle electronic equipment to see how it worked. He subsisted on a musical diet of Visage, early hip hop, Pigbag and punk.
    Clarke was advised by his school careers office to become a software engineer but his parents had split and family life was unbearable so, at 16, he ran away from home. He’d done it before but this time was determined not to return. He ended up sleeping rough in car-parks before a friend offered him temporary floorspace. Taking a temp job in a shoe-shop, he rented himself a bedsit. The only thing that kept him going was his love of music. From soul to the Psychedelic Furs, from Devo to the nascent Chicago house sound, Clarke devoured it all voraciously and blagged himself a DJ slot at a club called Toppers in Brighton. The night he played became so successful that it worried a young John Digweed (then known as DJ JD) whose club-night it was up against. Soon such gigs provided Clarke with a meagre living, one where he was left with a fiver a day to live on after buying records.
    ‘I regard that time as an apprenticeship,’ he says now.
    From there, however, his gradual rise began. In 1988 he played his first foreign gig at the now-defunct Richters in Amsterdam, kickstarting a global reputation that now runs from Brazil to Singapore , from Reykjavik to Auckland, New Zealand. These days his DJ diary is booked solid six months in advance and he often headlines on the summer’s international festival circuit.
    Clarke’s reputation was sealed at the start of the 1990s when he produced a series of EPs with the collective name ‘Red’. Signed to de-Construction he received rave reviews for his 1996 debut album ‘Archive 1’ which dabbled in breakbeat and electronica, a novelty for the puritanical techno scene of the time. Clarke, then as now, has no time for techno purism.
    ‘The so-called intelligensia of the scene have done nothing but hold it back,’ he snorts dismissively, ‘The trainspotters who don’t actually dance to it have created a misleading impression of techno for the public. It’s like when you used to go into techno record shops and they’d look at you like a piece of **** if you didn’t know about it. All those shops are closed now’’
    By the millennium many first generation techno DJs had fallen by the wayside, drifting off up blind allies and sub-genres, but Clarke’s sets, his extraordinary mixing skills mashing up techno, electro, ghetto-tek, hip hop and even 1980s new wave numbers, remained in constant demand. He put out a number of mix CDs including 2001’s first ‘World Service’ set which showcased his dual love for electro and techno. He also signed to Skint Records, celebrating the event at Hove Dog Track by presenting the prize for a race entitled ‘The Dave Clarke Inaugural Techno Dash’. This union resulted in ‘Devil’s Advocate’ in 2004, an album that reeked of dark gothic energy laced with hip hop’s surly funk, and featured Chicks On Speed, DJ Rush and the MC Mr Lif. Clarke toured the world performing live to promote the album, as well as doing a session for his only DJ hero, John Peel.
    ’Some pretty heavy **** shook me up badly at the beginning of this year,’ Dave Clarke concludes, ‘but music helped me through, Music has always brought me through, even in times when I’ve had nothing. Music has given me everything and I feel I have to give everything back. I don’t know what I’d do without it, it’s in my blood and bones, the only constant throughout the whole of my life.’
    From Tones On Tail to Die Warzau, from Anthony Rother to the Sisters of Mercy, from Terence Fixmer’s crunching techno to the filthy ‘booty’ sound of Detroit, Clarke is still as enthused as a kid about it all. Back in his Merc we’re nearing his home and he slams a series of CDs into the car-stereo by everyone from fresh-faced guitar heroes Louis IV to ‘80s New York punk funkers Silicone Soul.
    ‘I have an unbridled passion for this,’ he enthuses boyishly, ‘Yes, I suppose I’ve never grown up. I hope so.’
    Long may it be so.


Comments

  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Looking forward to this !!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 679 ✭✭✭brianc27


    funny old dj is dave clarke, i have seen him so many times and any time i see him in ireland i always find his sets lacking (except the 1 time he played for EC in traffic about 5 years ago), have heard some great sets out of him outside of ireland


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15 ItsAnOmen


    Isnt this right after Orbital? Would ye get to stay for it or do you have to pay extra?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,787 ✭✭✭g5fd6ow0hseima


    ItsAnOmen wrote: »
    Isnt this right after Orbital? Would ye get to stay for it or do you have to pay extra?
    they empty the venue immediately, do a sweep to make sure nobody's hiding away and then admit people for the 2nd gig.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 15 ItsAnOmen


    they empty the venue immediately, do a sweep to make sure nobody's hiding away and then admit people for the 2nd gig.


    Jaysus I will still be mashed! That is a bit **** in fairness, were could you go after?


  • Advertisement
  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    ItsAnOmen wrote: »
    Jaysus I will still be mashed! That is a bit **** in fairness, were could you go after?

    I'm going to both. Cannot wait !!! :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40 theh


    So did anyone go ? I am going to see him the 27th.. but i'm curious how his set was last friday..


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    set wise seemed very good, I would not normally comment on 1 or 2 a holes but fcking hell the place was completely witnessing a lot of total scum bags. Watch where you're dancing, heawre you, this kind of bollox. We went spur of the moment as had been drinking nearby but certainly a mistake.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40 theh


    Jay D wrote: »
    set wise seemed very good, I would not normally comment on 1 or 2 a holes but fcking hell the place was completely witnessing a lot of total scum bags. Watch where you're dancing, heawre you, this kind of bollox. We went spur of the moment as had been drinking nearby but certainly a mistake.

    Ah yes, thats why I prefer going to the crawdaddy /pod area.. Although small they crowd is pretty good and the music is often very good.

    Miss the Red Box a bit... (Best night ever was Timo Maas @ Red Box )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3 KimChords


    Thought he played a great set friday...yeah some of the people there were on the angry side


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 38 john2984


    I know im late with this but i missed DC's latest gig a few weeks ago:(

    I saw him back in February, though, and he was unbelievably good. Was anyone at both gig and, if so, how did they compare??

    Also interested to know what countries has the above user has seen him in? Ive seen him close to ten times but always in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 679 ✭✭✭brianc27


    ive seen him in england, holland and belgium, most recently the weekend just gone actually, at awakenings in amsterdam and ill be honest, he was terrible, one of the worst clarke sets ive heard, some of the tracks he played wouldnt be out of place in one of those poxy fidget house djs dets, you know Switch and the likes.


Advertisement