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The neo-retro electro-funk phenomenon Chromeo
recently headlined at San Francisco’s Mezzanine.
Along with Flosstradamus, Codebreaker and Frisco Disco
DJ duo Richie Panic and Jeffrodesiac, the max capacity
show was free of charge thanks to a massive sponsorship
from the car company turned music promotion agency, Scion.
Prior to the performance, Eric Kozak
of Denver’s DJ team White Girl Lust
sat down with Chromeo’s Dave One
and P-Thugg, who generously gave us
the following skinny on their history, the state of
the music industry in the digital era and their evaluation
of the electro scene.
Eric Kozak: What was the song that made you
guys say, ‘Wait; this is gonna work?’
Dave One: You know, we got signed (to Turbo Recordings)
before really knowing what we were going to do. We’re
still signed to that label—Tiga’s label.
He knew me as a hip-hop producer and he wanted me to
do something, and was like, ‘well I’m gonna
get P-Thugg involved.’
EK: So he figured that regardless, you could
usher in a sound.
DO: Yeah, but we didn’t know what it was gonna
be; so we started toying around with demos and doing
different things… We didn’t know it was
gonna be Jeri Curl kind of funk stuff. Then we did “Mercury
Tears,” which was on our first album and on an
URB compilation…
P-Thugg: It was the B-side to “You’re So
Gangster.”
DO: Yeah, yeah. That was the first song that made us
go ‘Ah, this is gonna be kind of our style’—like
the analog synths and the processed vocals.
EK: I remember hearing “Needy Girl”
and catching a little bit of press about it; but that
single hung out on various media sites and blogs and
just was constantly floating around.
DO: And the video too.
EK: What would you attribute to the fact that
it didn’t just come out and be hyped up for like
three or four moths and then just go away?
DO: Our whole first album—very long shelf life.
It took a year or two years to catch on.
EK: It’s odd, cuz in the era of blogdom,
something comes out and it’s hot-hot-hot, and
then bam, it’s dead.
DO: That’s just a profile of our band. We started
kind of before all this stuff was happening. We came
out before the big music blog explosion—right
on the cusp, really. I feel like, for the people who
like us—and some people don’t like us obviously—but
people have strong opinions about our music. People
don’t have strong opinions about James Murphy’s
music (LCD Soundsystem/DFA Records); everybody just
likes it.
EK: I know a few people that have strong feelings
about James Murphy’s music.
DO: [Laughs.] I think there’s more people that
have stronger opinions about our music because; well,
because they over-think. But our stuff was a little
before…we’re not one of those blog-house
groups. That’s not what we do. Our stuff is almost
like a vintage record or a re-issue. Even on the new
album, there’s so many re-mixes done and stuff
popping all over the place; it’s just the kind
of presence that we have. I don’t know what to
attribute it to, but it’s like some people take
us seriously enough to make it…
PT: I think it’s just the music. I mean, we put
a lot of thought and work into the songs and they’re
not a sign of the times—they’re not disposable.
It’s not music that you listen to every night
when you get into the club for like a summer and then
you forget about it. The album is still in your CD player,
just like Thriller is still in my CD player.
DO: I wouldn’t say timeless, but it’s definitely
something where we’ve tried to transcend current
trends in electronic music. It’s not necessarily
intentional, but it’s at least half intentional
to be contrary to what everybody’s doing.
When our first album came out, DFA was the big thing.
Everything was this disco-funk. Not much of that is
present today—only the best. Now it’s more
like distorted electro, and again our sound is completely
opposite to that.
EK: Do you think blogging is fucking up the
music game? Is it gonna fuck up your record sales that
your singles get blogged and re-blogged…
DO: Yeah; well, the whole digital medium fucks up record
sales. It's not just blogs. It's Limewire. Hypebeast.
Hypebeast is becoming the best of all blogs. It's becoming
the new Limewire, because I'm not going to find necessarily
a "Riot in Belgium" remix on Limewire, but
I will on Hypebeast.
EK: Are you saying that blogging is a symptom
of necessity now?
DO: Yeah, cuz the record label asks us, “Which
blogs can we leak this song to? Which blogs can we leak
that one to? Oh, we can’t do that one…”
So, yeah, digital is putting a dent in record sales;
but lucky for us, we don’t rely on record sales.
EK: So the leaks are premeditated by the band
and the label from a publicity angle?
DO: Totally.
EK: And the real money for you guys is in touring,
and maybe licensing?
DO: You saw the Reese’s commercial?
EK: What got licensed to Reese’s?
DO: “Needy Girl.” We’ve had a few
of them. Heineken licensed “You’re So Gangster;”
McDonalds licensed “Rage!”

"back in the day" |
But yeah, record labels are obsolete. Imagine if there
was a company whose sole purpose was to make money off
of our T-shirts; an independent company that has a staff
of people—and product managers, and interns—just
for our T-shirts. They’d be doing better (than
the label) because we sell more T-shirts than we do
CDs at every show. The whole medium of having a plastic
thing with the music on it; it’s completely
obsolete. There’s really no point that people
pay for that, aside from a collectors item.
It’s actually a really interesting time. In twenty
years we’re gonna look back and feel like we’ve
lived through a really dramatic media shift. Not just
CDs but paper (is obsolete.) Right now we’re just
lost. The fact there’s no YouTube for Audio. People
are using YouTube for audio with just a still image.
We’ll probably look back at Myspace and feel like
we were so advanced at using such a ghetto site. It
crashes all the time, has errors, “Please contact…”
We’re still using these tools that are so inadequate.
EK: Let’s step back to the final phase
of traditional marketing with independent electronic
music—say, when early Daft Punk was touring the
Homework era, versus the days now where record sales
don’t account for shit. Do you think you’re
in a better position today than you would have been
then?
DO: I know in the music spectrum we would have had
a hard time fitting in because there was no such thing
as left-field electronic music. When She’s In
Control came out, Hot Chip wasn’t out yet, MSTRKRFT
wasn’t out yet, Bangkok Impact wasn’t out
yet. Those people funneled into the scene that allows
us to perform in different venues where you step into
a club and they don’t necessarily expect really
hard techno, but they don’t really expect indie
rock either. It’s kind of a medium between both.
That’s what I think really helped us. That’s
why this tour is sold out.
Now there’s a scene for left-field, non- four-on-the-floor
electronic music that incorporates vocals and some instruments.
That didn’t exist twelve years ago.
There’s a return to kind of a more straight-forward
techno thing now, where DJs are just playing kind of
hard stuff. But, luckily the scene that we’re
in is kind of peripheral to that. We’re not going
to play to 5,000 people with their shirts off trancing
at 5:30 in the morning in Ibiza; but I’d rather
be playing to 400 cool people in London anyway.
EK: In the late ‘90s in dance music there
was Fat Boy Slim, Daft Punk, Moby, Crystal Method…
And for a minute, URB—and whoever—was hyping
up like ‘This is the next rock and roll, guys;
we’re goin’ on the big wave. It’s
gonna take over hip-hop…’ With the hype
around like Justice and you guys, is it possible that
we’ll see that same resurgence in dance music,
and this time it might come through in the bigger development?
DO: First off, nobody is replacing Daft Punk. They’re
not going anywhere. No one’s bigger than them,
and no one’s got better music than them. They’re
still on the throne. But in those years that you’re
talking about, we didn’t know electronic music.
We come from a hip-hop background, and we thought electronic
music was gay music. We couldn’t tell the difference.
We didn’t even know the difference between electronic
music and trance. We thought it was all “Dee-di-di-di-di-duh-duh”
[sings the Vengaboys’ “We Like To Party”—used
for a long and annoying period as the theme song for
the Great America amusement park chain].
Vengaboys, to us, was house, techno, electro, trance,
downtempo, everything… And we purposely stayed
very ignorant about it, because the people that listened
to it looked really corny to us—except for Daft
Punk. So we weren’t really there for that first
peak.
What’s different now is that people’s tastes
are more eclectic; so you’ll have kids, like us,
that are into hip-hop stuff and techno stuff. I don’t
know much techno, but I love Boys Noize; and I’m
the guy who listens to Little Wayne 20 hours a day.
And as far as Daft Punk taking over hip-hop, they have
taken over hip-hop. Look at Kanye’s new single
and look at Busta Rhymes… A lot of people are
using electronic music’s techniques to sonically
get on that level. When Little John came out with his
first productions, you know, all those big sounds, like
with Usher. He was like, ‘I go to strip clubs
and I hear techno music…’ Well, it’s
probably trance, but he’s like, ‘What did
they use to do that?’ He bought those sound modules
and he made hip-hop with it.
What’s funny is that in all this cross-breeding,
our music is staying non-hybrid. We keep doing that
Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis shit no matter what. The music
is changing and you’ve got dance-flavored hip-hop
and hip-hop-flavored dance. We’re just trying
to make the retro records, and we’re in a retro
chamber when it comes time to produce our own shit;
cuz that’s our lane. No one else has stepped in
that lane. That’s just gonna be our lane. We’re
the guys doing that real ‘80s-flavored black music
with this kind of crazy twist, cuz we look completely
different and our subject matters are funnier.
EK: How do you feel about people coming up
and trying to steal the steez that you guys established?
DO: Like who? (Laughs.) There’s this kid in the
UK named Calvin Harris. No one here is hip to him, but
over there topping the charts. His stuff is ‘80s
funk, man. It’s more accessible than what we do,
but it’s a little less substantial. To what I
can approximate: the guy doesn’t have fifty analog
synths stacked in and the drum machines and all that.
EK: Do you think there’s a chance that
he’s heard your records?
DO: Yeah, there’s a chance, but we would look
so sour pointing fingers at people.
EK: What about the folks that are remixing
your shit without your permission?
DO: This is really symptomatic of what’s going
on right now: Fancy Footwork 12” comes out. Remixes
come with it. The singles are buzzing on the Internet.
This kid from the south of France called Strip Steve
sends me a remix—a great remix of Fancy Footwork.
But he didn’t have the parts; we didn’t
give them to him cuz he wasn’t commissioned. So
he samples part of the song and does a remix to it.
The remix gets everywhere and the record label calls
us. “What’s up with this Strip Steve remix?”
I said, “He just did it, and it’s great.
We’re playing it. He doesn’t want money
for it whatever.” The record label’s like,
“Okay, cool. Can we give it to people? Can we
use it?” We said, “Yeah, cool. Use it.”
Then Boys Noize wants to put it out, but just as an
instrumental; so it’s not a remix anymore. We
said, ‘Sure’. Except that it contains a
sample from our song. And now Boys Noize is getting
signed to our label. So Boys Noize is putting out an
instrumental version of some kid who’s signed
to Boys Noize, who used our record as a remix without
the remix blanks. That’s what going on.
It’s inbred, bro. Inbred.
EK: So on Hollarboard, it’s all about
the illegal remix. Curtis Vodka and tons of other people
are blowing up off totally illegal remixes. Is that
cool with you?
DO: We love it. I mean, they’re not making money.
No one’s making money. Music isn’t a money-making
medium. Curtis Vodka will probably play our records
anyway; I know he does. I mean, you call it illegal;
I call it free.
www.chromeo.net
www.myspace.com/codebreaker
www.myspace.com/flosstradamus
www.myspace.com/whitegirllust
www.turborecordings.com
www.myspace.com/officialtiga
www.lcdsoundsystem.com
www.dfarecords.com
www.limewire.com
www.hypebeast.com
www.mstrkrft.com
www.myspace.com/bangkokimpact
www.daftpunk.com
www.vengaboys.com
www.myspace.com/boysnoizemusic
www.kanyewest.com
www.bustarhymes.com
www.flytetime.com
www.calvinharris.tv
www.myspace.com/stripsteve
www.myspace.com/curtisvodka
www.myspace.com/topr
Jef Hoskins August 15, 2007
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