Archived entries for Excuse The Mess

Excuse The Mess Interview with Ralf Kollmann

Where did your musical journey begin and how did you find dance music and the techno sound?
Little Ralf loved to listen to the radio. I discovered special shows that aired Maxi and Instrumental Versions once a week and recorded everything with my father’s old tape machine. I was inspired by his record collection, even though I didn´t understand what this music was about. He had this Krautrock stuff, Kraftwerk of course and some other early experimental synthesizer bands in his collection. I made my first steps in the disco arena when the first techno and house wave developed in the clubs in Germany and other cities, in the early 90’s.

I got my early club lessons in Sven Väth´s legendary Omen Club in Frankfurt. I remember a very special night when Richie Hawtin, Daniel Bell and Speedy J all played together, it blew my mind. I realized then that this was a new movement and a whole new lifestyle for a young generation was created. Wow! Just realized that this was 17 years ago… I started as a passionate Raver and became a passionate Maker- being proud of mobilee and our artists playing a little role in the global techno circus.

Tell us about growing up in Germany and watching the development and evolution of dance music scene- from the front row as it were.
I wouldn´t say that I sat in the front row, cause before Germany was hit hard by electronic dance music there was a house movement in Chicago and Detroit, later the Acid House hype in the UK developing from Manchester… When I discovered clubbing it took a few years before techno became mainstream by the help of Love Parade and Mayday. The Sponsors and Media in Germany followed up with Top 10 Chart Positions- I think it was similar to the huge success of Prodigy and Underworld in the UK. That boosted the original Techno underground in the mainstream market and some vibes got lost of course.

When everybody was used to seeing Techno beats and Euro Dance on Music TV, a new underground developed, around 2000- and that inspired me a lot to dive back into the music thing again; celebrating it, enjoying it, feeling it and finally, starting the label in 2005 with Anja Schneider. It’s great that people who inspired me as a little raver are now colleagues and friends. And I still like to rave of course!

Why is everybody obsessed with Berlin right now?

Berlin is one of the most liberal cities in the world. When it comes to clubbing; Panorama Bar and Bar 25 are known all over the world in reference to Berlin’s Nightlife. Compared to other metropolitan cities, it’s affordable to live here without having three jobs. It’s quite relaxed and the city is a huge creative space. There’s a big density of international Labels, DJ´s and Producers who’ve decided to make Berlin their home. The Sound is defined by international activists who discovered Berlin as an inspiring city to live, make music, go out and have fun- it’s the undisputed epicentre of techno music and it will probably not change in the near future.

You’ve played in many cities around the world, recently playing in New York, Miami, Amsterdam and Dubai, tell us about your travels…
It’s always a pleasure to travel and discover other cities, countries and meet enthusiastic and passionate people. Especially the music we are playing and enjoying ourselves; it seems to connect very special people all over the world. The vibe is similar everywhere… if I am playing in a small wooden hut at a beach or at 5 star hotel club resort in Dubai, the people are interested in the music we are doing.

Barcelona is amazing during Sonar Festival, San Francisco and Los Angeles are my favourite party towns in the US. I have a lot of fun playing in London and also Ekaterinburg in Russia. I must say, it’s a luxury that in Berlin we have the opportunity to party for 24 hours- sometimes it’s sad when the party stops at 3 or 4am, when it was just about to get nasty! But every trip has something unique, and it’s great to if you have residencies all over the world where you make friends and know what to expect when you are coming again.
I’m really looking forward to coming to South Africa for the first time in my life and being the first mobilee dude there!

You’ve been nurturing the mobilee label going on 5 years now, how does it feel to have created this yourself and been part of an international music movement?
Anja Schneider and me started it as a side project five years ago and within a short time it accidently became a full time job for both of us. Every mobilee artists is playing an important role and transporting our vision with every gig and every release. After five years we are more than proud that we created an established platform for talented artists who play all over the world. We started the label at a time when the music market changed completely and that taught us to be flexible and go our own way all the time. It’s important to leave the well-worn path sometimes and try something new and take risks. And we still see ourselves at the beginning with what we started and have ideas and visions for the next years to come.

Mobilee is 5 years old in 2010, what can you reveal the label plans to do to celebrate?
We are just developing the activities for next year. The 5 years anniversary is playing an important role next year and will be the main theme in 2010. We are doing a world tour on five continents in 5 cities each. We will release a very special anniversary compilation featuring exclusive, never-before-heard material from every artist on our roster. This is one celebration you aren’t going to want to miss. We call it “mobilee 5² tour” and it will be showtime! Hope we can make stop in South Africa again next year!

Mobilee is recognised for being on the cutting edge of modern music marketing techniques, tell us about the thought processes behind that…
We are living and acting in a high tech environment. We grew up with internet technology and social networks. It helped us to become popular worldwide without spending multi million dollar budgets in marketing so it’s obvious that we are trying to be on the top with modern music marketing techniques. We just launched a mobilee touch mix application for the I-Phone. The update with 5 new tracks and even unreleased music is available in a few days. We are trying to create a lot of visual content for our artists and exclusive content like mixes and behind the scenes features for our social networks.

It’s very important to keep an eye on what is going on out there. You should always be prepared for sudden changes and embrace new technologies and opportunities. You can cry about how difficult it is to sell music because of illegal downloads, or you can spend this energy finding new ways of distributing your music and using the creative potential of your artists and staff to develop new ventures

Mobilee is also known for its familia vibe amongst artists on the roster, how important is this kind of energy to running a successful label?
That’s part of our label philosophy. We wanted to establish strong and long lasting relationships with our artists from the beginning on. Nowadays you need a strong platform and a strong brand if you want to be recognized as an artist. We are joined forces, building up a strong visual and musical identity, we produce our own event ideas for Sonar

Festival, Winter Music Conference or Amsterdam Dance Event and give our artist as much creative freedom as possible. I think that’s part of our unique standing. We are musically versatile. The mobilee sound is created and defined by our artists and not dictated from above. The personal relationship to our artists is very important. If the personal chemistry is not right we cant achieve something together. We would never release music from someone we don´t like personally, even if it’s the biggest hit we have ever heard in our life.

How would you describe the sound of the label and how has it developed over the years?
It’s essentially just what Anja and I like musically, and this can often vary. We started listening to house and techno a while ago – and we’ve been passionate ravers since the early 90s – so the Mobilee sound is very versatile and primarily defined by our main artists. For us, the most important thing is to release music that makes people dance. Club music is made for the dancefloor – especially 12” releases. When you get down to brass tacks, the whole industry is based on nothing more than moving people’s asses every weekend!

Excuse The Mess with Mobilee Records, South Africa Tour

EXCUSE THE MESS WITH MOBILEE RECORDS
30TH OCTOBER – VOODOO LOUNGE JOHANNESBURG

Excuse The Mess crept onto the scene in 2008 with a secret Party in an empty office space in Central London. Two sound systems, a full bar and over 100 people snuck into the off-limits area on the 9th floor and danced until the early hours of the morning in front of windows boasting breathtaking views of the city. The mischievous tone was set from the start, with partygoers helping to clean and remove all evidence of the subversive shenanigans at the end; birthing ETM’s etho’s of an underground club night with a cheeky twist.

Early days saw ETM taking to the backrooms of some of London’s favourite nightclubs, and stole the show in the Loft at Egg on New Year’s Eve with sheer good party vibes and spirit. Excuse The Mess became ‘the little party that could’ and set the precedent in 2009 when it bust out its first warehouse party at Corsica Studio’s with 3 international acts; Mymy, Matthew Styles and Ralf Kollmann, charging the room with an illustrious array of deep house and techno.

Excuse The Mess soon had some of the best local dj’s and vj’s vying for a spot behind the decks. Joining London resident’s Nick Maleedy, Russell Caten and The Fix; Ralf Kollmann, co-owner of mobilee Records with Anja Schneider, joined the team as international resident, bringing his fresh-as-hell German techno assault to the ETM Soundscape. In 5 years mobilee Records has become one of the most watched Techno labels in Europe, their artist roster includes the wickedly talented Pan-Pot, who headlined the ETM show in June and lead the packed Alhambra Warehouse in East London into a Berlin-stomping frenzy.

500 Showcase now presents Excuse The Mess to South Africa!

Excuse The Mess residents Ralf Kollmann and Nick Maleedy are bringing the best from their boxes in London and Berlin to make South Africa part of the ETM family this October! Ralf’s presence is as intense as the full bodied-moving minimal techno he plays and is renowned for tight track selection and tighter mixing, flecked with all kinds of tasty unreleased material. Nick’s penchant for deep house, stripped down techno and tribal grooves sees him mix a sophisticated playlist, and playing  alongside some of Europe’s finest including Pan-Pot, Matthew Styles, Thomas Schumacher, Danton Eeprom and Giles Smith.

Exclusive VJ Appearance from Ben Anchor, whose 8 year career in visuals has seen him reside with the CHAIR TV VJ’s crew and perform at Manchesters infamous Warehouse Project alongside the likes of Richie Hawtin, Luciano, Goldie and Justice.

Join us for the first leg of the 3 city tour at the Excuse The Mess Masked Ball at the sacred Voodoo Lounge in Johannesburg for a no excuses deep house and techno indulgence, complimented by the best local dj’s from Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town.

We ask you in advance to Excuse The Mess

Excuse The Mess Interview with Pan-Pot

What’s all this about Pan-Pot? Has someone cooked up a crazy concoction and made a bloody mess? Well- almost! Pan-Pot is Tassilo Ippenberger and Thomas Benedix, a darkly provocative Techno duo from Berlin. The boys are signed to mobilee Records and churn out chunky Techno hotcakes by the dozen and get sound support from some of the world’s best! Ahead of their gig at Excuse The Mess in London this weekend, we pulled them aside for a little Q & A before things got too messy…

So Techno London has been up in much anticipated arms with the news of a Pan-Pot sound excursion; seems they haven’t been our side in a while! So when was their last L-town gig and how does the UK scene differ to the European circuit they frequent each weekend? ‘We last played at The End for Clandestino Party with Miss Jools last year- it was for our album tour. The sound system was amazing and the party a total freakout!’

Good to hear they got some last Ending action…  ‘Yes, we love the UK; it’s definitely time to get back for some London madness. The UK has a long and important history in Techno, as some of the European cities do, and there’s endless music to educate and challenge you as a dj. And as we’ve experienced at our gigs, there’s always some clown in front of the crowd, which is great- the crowds are always enthusiastic!’

What are their thoughts on the UK being criticised recently by European artists for not being as open-minded as it was before? ‘In general the EDM scene has been growing a lot over the past few years- so many different styles have been created and we’re facing the fact that, having such a huge variety of electronic music, it’s just natural that people get picky. As soon as you have the choice, you start deciding on a certain taste and define it. It’s not just a UK thing- it’s a Europe phenomenon too.’

Speaking of phenomenon’s- Berlin has become a hub for cutting edge electronic music, what’s it like living in this constant environment? ‘The exchange of music, thoughts and ideas is huge.  Sometimes you have to find a way to escape the party and music thing. If not you’ll get crazy…’ No doubt- so where does one go to escape the techno talk- what else is happening outside EDM in Berlin? ‘Berlin offers so many things to distract from techno- there’s lots of cultural and sporty offers… The most important is probably to have enough friends who are not involved in what you do- and we’re both lucky to have enough of them!’

Okay, Pan-Pot musically- there’s a really sexy, sinister and atmospheric sound to Pan-Pot productions- some really interesting vocals too- how does it all come together? ‘There’s no ‘usual’ way we do a track. For sure, we start with a basic loop, but we’re both involved from the beginning and always switch roles. Then it just takes between two days and two weeks of fighting till we come to a satisfying end!’

Their last EP was released on London label, True to Form in summer last year, and a bunch of hot remixes since- what’s hot and Pan-Pot still to come in 2009? ‘We recently finished the next EP for Mobilee which is a two track vinyl and two exclusive digital tracks. It gets released towards the end of July; there’s some remix work to do following that and we’re also both working on some solo stuff with friends and partners.’

So how did Pan-Pot come about- how did they find each other in Technoland and merge music ambition? ‘We met at the audio engineering school and quickly discovered that we have the same idea about techno.  Electronic music; djing and producing, was important to both of us already- the fact that we were the only Techno heads there just tightened our decision to go the Pan-Pot way.’

What about the name Pan-Pot? They described it in their biography as the technical flip-flopping of a switch, but sure they get asked ‘Which one’s Pan and which one’s Pot?’ all the time and with the lookalike imagery; is this a marketing bonus for Pan-Pot? ‘Yes we get that a lot- never thought about it as a marketing aspect, but as you say it- we’ll have to improve on it! This ‘who is pan and who is pot’ question has developed into one of the worst ones we know! Every weekend several times- and then in combination with the ‘you look like twin brothers’ statement… Thanks, NEXT!’

Pan-Pot take London by storm this Friday in a naughty little mobilee Showcase with Excuse The Mess at Alhambra Warehouse in Shoreditch. Also headlining are mobilee man, Ralf Kollmann and The Fix. The audio goods will be delivered from 10pm- you’ll want to be front and centre for this one!

Excuse The Mess presents Mobilee Showcase

Excuse The What? Yes, its’ time for a new little subversive excursion into the electronic abyss. Excuse The Mess presents another festive night of electronic debauchery in the sexy, messy, and forthcoming style you’ve become accustomed. We’ve put together a mobilee records showcase for you within the naughty walls of a fitting secret location in Shoreditch. Yep, the boys are armed with a plethora of too much minimal and techno goodness! The Pan-Pot boys take the helm with fresh L-town energy and Ralf Kollmann puts a cap in the ass of his second mess. The Moustache Mama’s take over room 2 for those of you who prefer your disco a little dirty… So bring your best friends and your worst behavior… and don’t mind us, just Excuse The Mess.

Friday night in East London has never sounded this hot! The venue this time around is Alhambra, a huge Moroccan style Warehouse on Commercial Road (3 minutes from Aldgate East). An exclusive members club during the day, Alhambra makes for the perfect summertime warehouse venue with its beautiful outdoor smoking terrace and atmospheric main room and huge sound system to boot! Doors open at 10pm, giving you enough to time to pop on a mix, shake off your working week and get scantily clad to come out and milk this balmy English summer weather for all its worth!

PAN POT
Pan-Pot are the brilliant multidimensional Berlin duo, Tassilo Ippenberger and Thomas Benedix, currently twisting house and techno fans into a rapturous frenzy! Pan-Pot have quickly become a central presence in the EDM scene, signed to mobilee records and delivering a smattering of top notch track releases. In this well timed era of divergent genres they’ve come with an intriguing sound and style- it’s all about dynamism on the dancefloor, and far from the simple switch they’re named after, Pan-Pot are renowned for sets that rope together crispy minimal, coolly restrained techno and hot and heavy house. Pan-Pot make this special London appearance with a love slap from the heart of the Berlin underground!

RALF KOLLMANN
Ralf Kollmann was the wunderkind of our last Excuse The Mess event, and so it was only right to make him our international resident and get him back again! The main man of mobilee, Ralf keeps his ear to the ground and knows Berlin’s underground electronic dirt like the back of his hand. He indulges a penchant for resonant deep house and mixes it up with the occasional driving curveball in suave style. He’s been dipping deep into electronic music since the beginning of the 90’s and those iconic roots are audible in his sets today as he rubs the freshest unreleased sounds from his mobilee and leena labels, with stone cold classics. It’s cheeky to say the least and downright hedonistic to say just a little bit more…

THE FIX
The Fix are a duo making devilishly sinister sound waves on the clubbing circuit, not least because of their interesting live performance- something you really want to see live to get the real Fix experience! The underground act and their label project, Yeah:No Recordings are fast earning electronic music world love. Their single ‘The Fire Inside’ got 3 successive thumbs up on Pete Tongs Radio1 Essential Selection after its release it February and was swiftly followed by a moody remix of Lopazz’s single ‘Credit Card Receipt’, released on Get Physical Music. The likes of Audiofly, Livio and Roby and Thomas Schumacher have headlined their own event night, Cadence at The Lightbox in Vauxhall, London.

NICK MALEEDY
Nick Maleedy knows good music. Having weaned an instinctive ear on a diet of dark and dubby progressive house, he’s developed a moody and intelligent soundscape. Nick’s refined beats and unassuming manner has piqued the interest of the underground clubbing community and seen Nick guest for top London event nights, as well as earn his White Isle stripes with gigs at Es Paradis and Savannah last year. Nick has had the pleasure of mixing alongside some of the finest including Matthew Styles, Giles Smith, Colin Dale and Spencer Parker, and plays regular LIVE guest sets on the capitals House FM.

MOUSTACHE MAMA’S PRESENT LOOSE
The Moustache Mama’s have been shaking things loose cross-country with their furry lips and wild disco fever. The blonde duo present a festive smash of dirty funk and disco laced with pop classics. They’ll be dominating Room 2 with their Bearded Brothers Paul Crognale and Cred for another kind of music madness in keeping with the messy mayhem!

Excuse The Mess Interview with Mymy

Mymy formed in 2003 during Berlin’s rebirth as an Electronic Music Mecca.  Originally a collective of 4 aspiring artists, moved by the creative music juices flowing around them at the time, they began experimenting in production. Over the past seven years, Lee Jones and Nick Hoppner, have become highly regarded as the Mymy duo, and their divergent approach to making music has earned them an eclectic and truly hedonistic following- and a string of unique gigs across the globe.

The Mymy cog began to turn when the likes of Richie, Ricardo and Luciano were playing all over Berlin, at classic parties like Beat Street and Bar 25. Long before the term ‘minimal’ became a cliché; the sounds were new and fresh, and the guys found themselves being blown away by the aural assault that met them on their nights on the town.  They got stuck in and it was a good two years of playing with the knobs in studio before they felt their sound was ready to be published and released.

Lee and Nick have merged their skills, and appreciation for different sounds to come up with Mymy’s affecting quality. Lee, the composer and instrumentalist, originally from Essex, England, has an impressive bank of incredible music from his work as Hefner, incorporating his own riffs on guitar and keyboard melodies into their music. “I’m a musician and composer first and foremost, rather than a technician or producer.”

Mymy’s approach to making music is to make art before entertainment- or not to bother at all and it’s this philosophy to make original, honest and personal music that gives their productions an artesian flair that only really well produced music carries and endures. “We knew that this creative approach would be our secret weapon- we couldn’t compete with producers who’ve been using Ableton since version 1.0, building their own synths and filters, and collecting vinyl since they were 12 years old!”

Nick and Lee feel the music itself is the reason to be in it. “We also had to think in terms of concepts and emotions- not plug-ins. We want our tracks to be objects of beauty, rather than technically perfect floor-fillers.” As artists, they find aspects of the industry appalling- the generic production of musicians and their contrived commercialism among it, no doubt- but their experiences with clubs and music that holds the spirit they believe in, gives them the stimulus to carry on.

Mymy originally threw it all into the pot when it came to making sounds, but these days they find their headspace a little more controlled and like to plan a little direction before jumping in. The guys enjoyed a productive past winter, with Nick releasing a new 12” on Ostgut Ton and a remix for David Durango on Meerestief. Lee completed a remix for Marc Romboy on Systematic, as well remixes for Hypercolour, Tartelet, Further Project, and a Felix da Housecat ft Miss Kitten remix on Get Physical. Together, Mymy remixes of Adam Freeland and Ruthit on Four:Twenty are coming soon and they’ve begun working on the second MyMy artist album.

Although exhausting, the duo feel really blessed travelling around the world to showcase their music. With the hype around the original Minimal pioneers having somewhat subdued in the German capital, Mymy is reveling in the new peak of potential they and their friends have now, to really forge their own sound and make their own mark on electronic music- both in Germany and beyond. This summer sees them travel to Japan at the end of July, and headlining an exclusive gig with Excuse The Mess at Corsica Studio’s in early May- possibly the only opportunities to see them live in the UK this summer!

Join Excuse The Mess as they kick-start summer with an Underground German Invasion in the Big Smoke. Excuse The Mess presents Mymy LIVE with support from Ralf Kollmann (Mobilee) and Matthew Styles (Crosstown Rebels) at Corsica Studio’s on 2nd May 2009. £12 tickets available from Ticketweb and Clubtickets, and £15 at the door on the night.


Excuse The Mess Secret Launch Party Review

It’s really doesn’t do to say ‘Excuse The Mess’ if you don’t really mean it- but when you’re provided with the tools and technicians to help make it yourself- well then, that’s a different kind of mess to excuse indeed!

The word ‘mess’ was given a whole new meaning at the super secret launch party of ‘Excuse The Mess’ Productions last weekend. Under a veil of online conundrum; think ‘Central London- Empty Office Space- You- Us- Our Mess- and Shhhh!- a warranted wave of curiosity ensued in the lead up to Friday night’s bash. Not surprisingly, this became the only and exclusive place to be for a messy selection of London’s finest revelers (but of course!), who gathered and lurked curiously outside Match Bar off Regents Street at 9.00.PM in eager anticipation…

Clearly not the secret site, the party boys and girls were soon gladly whisked off by the Messy Makers themselves, to a venue none of us would be able to find our way back to if we tried… And it was almost too delicate to make dirty; the for-one-night-only ‘club’ comprised of 2 dancefloors- thickly draped and velvet carpeted, offering glittering views over the entire city! Add to that the line up, which included some of London’s hottest talent, and you’re really not leaving us with much option but to make a mess with a seriously capital ‘M’.

The recipe for a good mess, once you’ve ‘found the right spot’ to make it, requires a few key ingredients; an organically bonded bunch to keep you company- some are like family, some are new friends and some are fun-loving freshies- and you know how we like to play with those! A few sound technicians to apply the mess making magic; the mix masters that took to the tables gave everyone an ‘off the record’- but oh so on it- performance in what I’m sure will become known as true ‘Excuse The mess’ style. Sahin Meyer, Cleb M, Nick Maleedy, Billy Gonzalez, Jasmine and Avgoustinos well and truly kicked it all off with moody music that tuned us in and on and it was all a blur of mess and madness from there…

Taking the cake and mashing it; The Live Tech Rebelz debuted their position as the ‘main Messy men’ by taking us through a deep, afro infused techy set- that probably made secret party history, well, I’d like to suggest that line of thinking anyway! Quinton and Floyd, who make the infamous twosome, have been making consistent waves of rebellion across London for the past few years and now sees them armed and ready to paint the town all shades of debauched! The rest of the nights escapades are filed strictly under ‘Had To Be There Hush!’ but I can say: A little nice and a whole lot of nasty; you’ve been warned; excuse this mess!



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