Sound Mirrors
This track features the vocal talents of Jon Spencer (of The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion aka Blues Explosion) and Mike Ladd. Read more on Last.fm.
The duo comprises DJs Matt Black & Jonathan More, formed in London, England around 1986. During their career they have encompassed a wide range of styles from hip hop and rap to electronica and jazz-inflected sounds. They began working together in the mid-eighties on the (then) pirate radio station KissFM. Shortly thereafter they released their first single, Say Kids, What Time Is It?, which marked the first stirrings of the UK's dance/cutup scene. This was followed by their influential remix of Eric B. & Rakim's Paid in Full, which made the top 10 and was voted best remix of the year. Featuring a prominent Ofra Haza sample and a slew of other vocal cutups, it is now regarded as both a hip hop classic and a breakthrough in the remix field. Their first major hit as Coldcut was the house-inflected People Hold On, featuring a then-unknown Lisa Stansfield. The single took the U.K. by a storm, and the subsequent album featured such luminaries as Junior Reid (on the single Stop This Crazy Thing) and Queen Latifah. In 1991 they started their own record label, Ninja Tune, which continues to release groundbreaking and extremely diverse music by a small army of like-minded artists. In 1997 the duo unveiled their own real time video manipulation software, VJamm. Coldcut's current live and DJ sets rely on video as much as records, taking the concept of multimedia performance into largely uncharted territory. Conceptually, Coldcut owes as much to the ideas of beat writer and cut-up theorist William S. Burroughs, 1970s art / industrial group Throbbing Gristle, and the religious writings of J. R. Bob Dobbs as much as to hip-hop originators like Grandmaster Flash or later innovators Double D and Steinski. Recognizing the power inherent in Burroughs' cut-up technique and its presence in hip hop music, More and Black have relentlessly pushed the D.I.Y. ethic and an understanding of play as a means of fostering greater interaction with and understanding of the world around you. The similarities between this ethos and that of hacking need hardly be stated. Ninja Tune uses a corporate facade to communicate via the marketplace itself, an idea first implemented by Throbbing Gristle via their own Industrial Records imprint. One of the key aspects of the Ninja Tune ethos, Stealth, implies that their following of DJs and listeners are agents in a Burroughsian sense, propagating the D.I.Y. ethic of play as an essentially subversive act by replaying and manipulating media under the radar of mainstream culture. Nowadays Coldcut reach a worldwide audience through their syndicated radio show Solid Steel. Black has recently (2003) worked with Penny Rimbaud (ex Crass) on Crass Agenda's Savage Utopia project. In 2006, Coldcut released their fifth album, Sound Mirrors. single True Skool featured rapper Roots Manuva and featured an Indian sample from a cult Bollywood era, making the track popular on the bhangra and desi scene and with most of the British Asian urban nation. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
This track features the vocal talents of Jon Spencer (of The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion aka Blues Explosion) and Mike Ladd. Read more on Last.fm.
The duo comprises DJs Matt Black & Jonathan More, formed in London, England around 1986. During their career they have encompassed a wide range of styles from hip hop and rap to electronica and jazz-inflected sounds. They began working together in the mid-eighties on the (then) pirate radio station KissFM. Shortly thereafter they released their first single, Say Kids, What Time Is It?, which marked the first stirrings of the UK's dance/cutup scene. This was followed by their influential remix of Eric B. & Rakim's Paid in Full, which made the top 10 and was voted best remix of the year. Featuring a prominent Ofra Haza sample and a slew of other vocal cutups, it is now regarded as both a hip hop classic and a breakthrough in the remix field. Their first major hit as Coldcut was the house-inflected People Hold On, featuring a then-unknown Lisa Stansfield. The single took the U.K. by a storm, and the subsequent album featured such luminaries as Junior Reid (on the single Stop This Crazy Thing) and Queen Latifah. In 1991 they started their own record label, Ninja Tune, which continues to release groundbreaking and extremely diverse music by a small army of like-minded artists. In 1997 the duo unveiled their own real time video manipulation software, VJamm. Coldcut's current live and DJ sets rely on video as much as records, taking the concept of multimedia performance into largely uncharted territory. Conceptually, Coldcut owes as much to the ideas of beat writer and cut-up theorist William S. Burroughs, 1970s art / industrial group Throbbing Gristle, and the religious writings of J. R. Bob Dobbs as much as to hip-hop originators like Grandmaster Flash or later innovators Double D and Steinski. Recognizing the power inherent in Burroughs' cut-up technique and its presence in hip hop music, More and Black have relentlessly pushed the D.I.Y. ethic and an understanding of play as a means of fostering greater interaction with and understanding of the world around you. The similarities between this ethos and that of hacking need hardly be stated. Ninja Tune uses a corporate facade to communicate via the marketplace itself, an idea first implemented by Throbbing Gristle via their own Industrial Records imprint. One of the key aspects of the Ninja Tune ethos, Stealth, implies that their following of DJs and listeners are agents in a Burroughsian sense, propagating the D.I.Y. ethic of play as an essentially subversive act by replaying and manipulating media under the radar of mainstream culture. Nowadays Coldcut reach a worldwide audience through their syndicated radio show Solid Steel. Black has recently (2003) worked with Penny Rimbaud (ex Crass) on Crass Agenda's Savage Utopia project. In 2006, Coldcut released their fifth album, Sound Mirrors. single True Skool featured rapper Roots Manuva and featured an Indian sample from a cult Bollywood era, making the track popular on the bhangra and desi scene and with most of the British Asian urban nation. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Autumn Leaves
True Skool
Timber
Sound Mirrors
Colours the Soul
Everything Is Under Control
Man in a Garage
Just For The Kick
Eine kleine Hedmusik
Mr Nichols
Naked Leaves
Aid Dealer
This Island Earth
Atomic Moog 2000
Space Journey
Return to Margin
Music 4 No Musicians
A Whistle And A Prayer
Rubaiyat
Cloned Again
Pan Opticon
Noah's Toilet
Give It Up
People Hold On
Boogie Man
More Beats & Pieces
Walk a Mile in My Shoes
Sign
Every Home A Prison
Boogieman
Autumn Leaves - Irresistible Force Mix
I'm Wild About That Thing
Autumn Leaves (Irresistible Force Remix)
Walk A Mile
My Telephone
Walk a Mile in My Shoes (Henrik Schwarz remix)
Kinda Natural
Man In A Garage (Album version)
Colors the Soul
Fat (Party And Bullshit)
Walk A Mile In My Shoes (Tiga mix)
More Beats + Pieces
Screw Loose
Onamission
2 Player vs. Herbaliser - Some
Man In A Garage (Bonobo Remix)
Atomic Moog (The Qemists remix)
People Hold On (feat. Lisa Stansfield) - Radio Edit
Only Heaven
Whistle and a Prayer
label_stop_radio
