6AM Guest Mix: Ket Robinson
Discover a special 4-deck mix recorded for 6AM by Ket Robinson. Read more
Discover a special 4-deck mix recorded for 6AM by Ket Robinson. Read more
Avision grew up around the rich club culture of New York City, and is now part of a new wave of artists defining the contemporary techno landscape. He recently released his debut album In My Mind on Maceo Plexâs Ellum Audio imprint, and now presents a documentary of the same name chronicling his background as an artist. Avision sat down with 6AM to discuss his new documentary celebrating the release of his debut album and New York City club culture.
You can win a vinyl copy of Avision’s debut album In My Mind by subscribing to his YouTube channel and signing-up for 6AM’s e-mail newsletter. Follow the giveaway instructions below to be entered for a chance to win.
Hey Avision! We canât wait to learn more about you and your work as an artist. What first got you into electronic music, and at what moment did you decide you wanted to do this as a career?
Hey guys, thanks for having me! My whole life, Iâve always been surrounded by music. I grew up playing the drums and piano by ear, and I started getting into DJing around 12 years old. I was surrounded by electronic music since I was born, and my father who is a singer/musician was into disco and house, so it was inevitable for me to get into it. The minute I decided to start DJing in nightclubs as a teen was when I realized that this was going to be my life.
For you, what makes our dance music community so special?
For me, I always felt our music community is something you canât explain unless youâve experienced it. Itâs a really beautiful moment when you can bring people of all kinds together on a dance floor, and create memories for everyone.
Congratulations on your debut, In My Mind, on Maceo Plex’s Ellum label. Walk us through your inspiration behind the album. Â
Thank you very much. In My Mind was written during the pandemic, so a lot of emotion was bottled up for me. A lot of the inspiration came from New York in the 90s, along with everything that surrounds me. It was super important to represent where Iâm from and the sound Iâve established over the years. Working with Maceo Plex is something I’ve been wanting for a long time, and to be apart of his Ellum family means a lot to me. Being that Maceo gave me the green light to do whatever I wanted to do, I was really on a mission to put out a sound that you haven’t heard from me before – something that plays along with my past and also represents my future. Working with Ellum is a blessing, and I can’t wait to do more with them.Â
Alongside the album, you were featured in your own documentary filmed and produced by Danny Drew. Thatâs pretty sweet. What was the process like making the film? What sparked the idea?
The documentary was something I wanted to put out to show the process behind everything, give my followers the story of how it started for me. A lot of artists tend to just put out music without any background or story, and I felt since this was my album I needed to tell the story that led me to where I am at today. I wanted to show another side of myself. Starting it off in Staten Island where I was born and spent my childhood, was such an amazing moment for me. It made me feel like I went back in time, all of the childhood memories came back to me, and I felt like a little kid again. Those moments transpired to where I am today, especially the moments that I had at the two clubs (Deko, and Club Abyss) that started my career, going back to the rooms that started it all was such an amazing moment.
âThis documentary is all about showing how it started for me. From my first club gigs, to the inspiration of the first track I wrote for my album, it captures the little details that played a huge part for me so far in my career. I wanted to pay homage to my beginnings, and I wanted everyone to know who I am as an artist and a person.â
In your opinion, why is it important to remember our roots?
Remembering our roots is so important as an artist. Itâs a constant reminder to where it all started, why you are who you are. The beginnings of every journey play a part, and for me my childhood made me the man I am today.Â
Tell us a little more about the new brand collective that youâve launched, Ground Rule.Â
Ground Rule is a collective I started to be an outlet for clothing, music, art and my party brand as well. The collective features many key parts in my life – youâll see a lot of baseball influence, a lot of New York old school vibes with music, and clothing. My goal is to tie in the fashion, music, the branding and art to all work together but still be its own entity. I wanted an outlet to show whatâs inspired me over the years, as well as an outlet to push quality over anything. I feel like this day and age everything is so disposable and I donât want that with Ground Rule. It will take me time, and Iâm going to start off at my own pace for now. There is a really big picture with this, and I plan to approach it differently then the average norm. We just had our first show in New York, and I couldn’t have been happier. Everything just felt right for me, and it makes me excited to start planning the next one!
I think the biggest lesson Iâve learned is thereâs never going to be a moment where I feel like ‘I made it’, thereâs always bigger, and better.
Stay hungry!
From when you first started to now, what has been one of your greatest lessons?Â
I think the biggest lesson Iâve learned is thereâs never going to be a moment where I feel like âI made itâ, thereâs always bigger, and better. My career has changed immensely over the last few years and if I told myself where I would be right now two years ago, I would have thought that was it – I finally did it. In all reality though, I donât ever see myself saying that anymore because there is so much more to do, and so much more I want. At the end of the day itâs about staying hungry.Â
Any advice you have for aspiring DJs and producers?Â
Stay humble, work your ass off, donât let anyone ever tell you that you canât do something. Push your talent, and back it with hard work. Lastly, care about your craft, and learn it to the best of your ability. Do it properly!
What are you looking forward to most in the future? Any new music or other projects on the horizon?
Iâm looking forward to so much this year. I have a bunch of shows lined up for March, including Chicago, Montreal, New York, Miami Music Week, and in Austin. Iâm also headed to India for the first time in the beginning of April for two shows â one in New Dehli, and the other in Goa. Musically, I just dropped my single âParty Startedâ feat Strafe, which is also a part of my EP coming out on March 25th. Iâm also looking forward to heading over to Europe this summer, and dropping more music!
Anything else youâd like to share? Â
Keep On Dancing, Keep On Smilinâ.
Maceo Plex accidentally injured a woman at a show in Brazil after throwing a drinking cup into the crowd. The incident happened on December 3 at Warung Beach Club. It was reported there were other incidents that night. The Twitter account Business Teshno captured a video showing when Maceo Plex throws the cup after finishing his drink. Accounts report it hit a woman in the face causing a nose bleed.
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Celebrated NFT producer Hipworth launches DJEnerate NFT, a collection of 10,000 unique NFTs from the electronic music world. Carl Cox, Sven Vath, Jamie Jones, Joseph Capriati and Ricardo Villalobos are among over 30 superstar DJs featured. The launch ushers in a new era of collectible NFTs with a platform powered by a group of industry experts from the NFT world together with music industry professionals. Both groups are joining forces to develop a framework that encompasses community and music in a way that has never been explored using NFTs.
The Spanish painter Pablo Picasso once said, “good artists borrow, great artists steal.â Artists have always âborrowedâ (consciously and unconsciously) each other’s works. Picasso’s quote references the fine line between imitating and emulating. A good artist creates a copy of an existing work while a great artist selectively takes elements and re-works them into their own sound and/or style to create something new. When it comes to music, plagiarism happens, particularly in electronic music. Remixes, edits, covers, and bootlegs have been a huge driver of dance music and have been a great way for artists to make a name for themselves. Oftentimes, these versions arenât authorized by the original artist. So knowing that art, music, in this case, is to some extent borrowed, what’s fair use, and when does it cross the line into music plagiarism? What makes music original?
Los Angeles-based promoters Factory93 set the Los Angeles house and techno scene on fire with their debut festival Secret Project in 2018. An instant favorite amongst fans in SoCal, Secret Project brought the best of house and techno DJs to spin amongst the gritty backdrop of the City of Angel’s industrial area. Now Factory93 debuts One Project. After a cancellation in 2020 due to the pandemic, Factory 93’s imprint Secret Project has announced their new two-day SoCal event: Secret Project Presents: One Project premiering on October 2 – 3, 2021.
A musician, a DJ, a teacher, an inventor, and a visionary, Mike Henderson aka ENDO has been touching various aspects of the music industry for more than 20 years. From managing tours for Sasha, Nicole Moudaber, Pete Tong, and Dubfire to being one of the most sought out music techies training industry heavyweights including Carl Cox and Grandmaster Flash on Traktor, ENDOâs curiosity has been the driving force to his musical abilities. Read more
Montreal-based artist Atroxx is a musical chameleon. Even though his techno project Atroxx has amassed a significant fan base in recent years, he never wanted to be constrained by just one genre. Within the techno genre, Atroxx created another alias Three Faces of Eve to explore techno without boundaries, creating a more experimental and aggressive sound. From producing techno to synth-wave, Atroxx lives by the motto “put the audience first.” The musical identities around each alias are completely unique and the music he creates with each alias are meant for different settings. Some of the world’s biggest DJs and producers are well-known for their musical aliases as well. Maceo Plex has Maetrik and Mariel Ito. Eric Prydz has Cirez D and Pryda (and many more). Richie Hawtin has Plastikman, amongst a long list of others. These various sonic identities allow artists to open up worlds of possibilities and explore creatively.
Atroxx recently sat down with 6AM to give guidance on personal sonic exploration, finding success over time, and what the future in store holds for him. Creating music so many different aliases certainly takes dedication.
Maceo Plex turned heads this week with a simple statement on social media, “I can smell a fake producer from a mile away. That’s why many of technoâs most popular artists stay away from me.”
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