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::dj profiles:: |
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[Steve Lawler] |
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Steve
Lawler is a definitive DJ and producer; a tastemaker whose sets combine
quality house music with the power to move dance floors around the world. In
the last few years, he’s wowed crowds in such far flung places as Zouk
in Singapore, Groovejet in Miami, Twilo
in New York and the mighty Space
in Ibiza. Courtesy of home, he
provided the most groundbreaking sets of the season for many of those lucky
enough to hear him. After two months he had been crowned ‘King
Of Space’ by the locals - a rare and well deserved honour. You
can find Steve behind the decks every Friday at Deep
South @ home, where his 5 hour
sets of twisted house are bringing a new lease of life to one of London’s
biggest clubs. His new night at
Code in Birmingham, The Midweek
Session, is fast becoming the most important club night in the Midlands,
past guests have included Sasha and Pete Tong, and future highlights include
Danny Tenaglia, John Digweed, and Carl Cox. As well as guest spots at every
pioneering club in the UK from Gatecrasher
and Renaissance to Bedrock. If
one person had to be singled out for Deep South’s success it would be none
other than top-class resident Steve
Lawler. Whose mammoth five-hour sets of chunky house and intoxicating
tribal progressive sounds have dragged him into the realms of the superstar
DJ, and the club into one of the clubbing success stories of the year. But
modest as ever, Steve puts it down to a combination of factors: "I
wouldn’t accept that it’s all down to me," understates Lawler.
"There are a lot of people involved in making that night good. I just do
what I do." Steve
Lawler hails from the Midlands, yet there is something distinctly
non-territorial in his work. Although loving the atmosphere in the big
Saturday nightclubs (he’s an ex-resident at Cream),
Lawler also refuses to pander to any punter wherever he’s spinning,
especially at home. Think DJ communism, with equal treatment for all the
masses. "
It’s rewarding for me to know that so many people are going off to
underground music every Friday night across the country. Clubs like home and Renaissance have the best soundsystems and crowds in the UK, and the
feeling you get from playing those nights is amazing". Tuning
into electronic music from an early age, Steve used to buy Depeche
Mode records when he was young, so he obviously loved electronic sounds
without even realising it. But it was acid house that really turned Steve on.
Tuning avidly in to local pirate PCRL radio station gave Steve a taste for
house music, and it wasn’t long before his mates were luring him off to
warehouse parties. "I
was totally blown away by the whole experience: the dark room, the strobes
and the atmosphere. The whole thing just blew me away and inspired me to do
my own parties." Which
is exactly what he did, putting on a series of illegal parties in a disused
tunnel under the M42 between 1990-1994. "The last one was just amazing.
We had Tony de Vit playing, and it had just grown from this small party to
this huge thing – basically a rave. It was all about town the day before,
people running around Birmingham going ‘The tunnel’s on, the tunnel’s
on.’" But
it was in Ibiza that Lawler got his first true break. Having earned his Ibiza
stripes – he’s been every year since 1990 through to 1997 it was finally
Steve’s chance to prove himself as an accomplished DJ. He was a resident at
Café Mambo, spinning his
legendary 8 hour sets there every day, as well as playing three times a week
at Pacha. It was then he was
spotted by Darren Hughes, then of Cream,
who recognised his talent and ambition to succeed. Signing him up to
Cream’s DJing agency, he began a residency at the eponymous Liverpool
institution. At only his second date at the club he had to follow Paul
Oakenfold at their NYE party. Not an easy feat, but one which Lawler
coped with admirably. The rest, as they say, is history… It’s
not all about DJing though. Lawler’s accomplished production, under the
monikers of Novocane, Chameleon
and, naturally, Steve Lawler, are
currently causing mayhem amongst the likes of Tenaglia,
Tong, Sasha, Digweed, Deep Dish, and Pete
Heller. ‘Rise In’, his
latest single, is a self-assured cut of heavy dancefloor pressure, which, as
with all the best things, has simplicity as its key. Watch it drop on any
dancefloor in the world and you realise that Lawler, in his production as
much as his DJing, understands how to work a crowd. ‘Rise In’ is set for
a September release, and if you’ve been near any of the coolest dance
floors on the planet, you’ll have realised just how special the track is.
The buzz around the tune has superceded any of this summer’s releases, and
the Top 20 beckons. Who’d have
thought proper house music would once again reach such heights? But then, as
most of you know, Lawler is something very special. "First
and foremost I am a DJ," explains Steve. "I am not making records
for a career or the money, it’s just that I want to make my own version of
sounds that would go down well in a club. When I make music I sit there and
close my eyes and imagine being on a dancefloor, with the lights and the
sound system. It’s hard to get right all the time, but I’m going to keep
banging away at it until I do”. Which
is pretty much Steve Lawler for you. A hardworking Midlands lad who has never
taken the easy path to success. From his mammoth sets at Space in Ibiza, or his tendency to re-edit half the tracks in his
box, Steve certainly knows the meaning of graft: "I
do a lot of my own re-edits, because I get sent so many records where its all
good and then some horrible break kicks in. So I just cut that bit out, get
it on to CD and then go and get a slate cut. It’s the way forward. It means
that a lot of records that people might have, I have my own versions of them.
It makes it unique, which you have to do these days. There’s 1001 DJs out
there. It’s probably one of the reasons why I have actually got
somewhere… I do make the effort." Steve’s
spun at every club in Ibiza, and every decent club in the world, and has
stunned all detractors of the progressive sound. He was described in The
Face as, "The UK’s Tenaglia",
and in Jockey Slut as
“one of the best dj’s in the world”. Steve
Lawler: the pioneer of twisted house who loves a bit of hard work. If you
were waiting for a change of musical tack, then follow Lawler’s lead.
Don’t be left behind… Ben Mortimer, Mixmag. Thanks
to Matt Learmouth and Alice Schofield of Slice PR (UK)
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Steve Lawler's event review is now available @ euphoria... |
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