| Techno
and electro is an alternative that happens to be on the
peripheries of dance music."Clarke has a well-deserved
reputation as one of the best techno and electro DJs in
the world but he's always been an outsider, from his stormy
childhood in the 1980s to his tempestuous relationship with
the media today."The school I was at was all about
grooming you to be an accountant or a lawyer or in the army,"
he explains. "I just saw that as breaking the human
spirit and constantly rebelled against it. I instinctively
felt it was wrong and pointless for me. I've always been
very, very bad at respecting authority."Clarke was
born and raised in Brighton but was expelled from school
a number of times from an early age. The school always took
him back but he fully admits to being a thoroughly disruptive
boy with a short attention span. What started him on the
road to where he his today was his hijacking and combining
his parents' hobbies."I started playing with my mother's
records and my father's technology," he says, "My
mother had lots of old disco records by the likes of Roy
Ayers, Lonnie Liston Smith and the Crusaders, and my dad
was really into technology. He had disco lights in the front
room, record decks, reel-to-reels, reverb units, he even
did a thing on BBC Radio about quadrophonics. It's pretty
obvious where I get it all from really."Clarke, his
relationship with his family in teenage disarray, borrowed
some his father's equipment, including the disco lights
and retreated to the attic where he covered everything in
aluminum foil and made a sci-fi retreat for himself. Here
he'd make tapes for his friends and dismantle electronic
equipment to see how it worked. He subsisted on a musical
diet of Visage, early hip hop, Pigbag and punk.Clarke was
advised by his school careers office to become a software
engineer but his parents had split and family life was unbearable
so, at 16, he ran away from home. He'd done it before but
this time was determined not to return. He ended up sleeping
rough in car-parks before a friend offered him temporary
floorspace. Taking a temp job in a shoe-shop, he rented
himself a bedsit. The only thing that kept him going was
his love of music. From soul to the Psychedelic Furs, from
Devo to the nascent Chicago house sound, Clarke devoured
it all voraciously and blagged himself a DJ slot at a club
called Toppers in Brighton. The night he played became so
successful that it worried a young John Digweed (then known
as DJ JD) whose club-night it was up against. Soon such
gigs provided Clarke with a meager living, one where he
was left with a fiver a day to live on after buying records."I
regard that time as an apprenticeship," he says now.From
there, however, his gradual rise began. In 1988 he played
his first foreign gig at the now-defunct Richters in Amsterdam,
kickstarting a global reputation that now runs from Brazil
to Singapore, from Reykjavik to Auckland, New Zealand. These
days his DJ diary is booked solid six months in advance
and he often headlines on the summer's international festival
circuit.Clarke's reputation was sealed at the start of the
1990s when he produced a series of EPs with the collective
name 'Red'. Signed to de-Construction he received rave reviews
for his 1996 debut album 'Archive 1' which dabbled in breakbeat
and electronica, a novelty for the puritanical techno scene
of the time. Clarke, then as now, has no time for techno
purism."The so-called intelligensia of the scene have
done nothing but hold it back," he snorts dismissively,
"The trainspotters who don't actually dance to it have
created a misleading impression of techno for the public.
It's like when you used to go into techno record shops and
they'd look at you like a piece of shit if you didn't know
about it. All those shops are closed now"By the millennium
many first generation techno DJs had fallen by the wayside,
drifting off up blind allies and sub-genres, but Clarke's
sets, his extraordinary mixing skills mashing up techno,
electro, ghetto-tek, hip hop and even 1980s new wave numbers,
remained in constant demand. He put out a number of mix
CDs including 2001's first 'World Service' set which showcased
his dual love for electro and techno. He also signed to
Skint Records, celebrating the event at Hove Dog Track by
presenting the prize for a race entitled 'The Dave Clarke
Inaugural Techno Dash'. This union resulted in 'Devil's
Advocate' in 2004, an album that reeked of dark gothic energy
laced with hip hop's surly funk, and featured Chicks On
Speed, DJ Rush and the MC Mr Lif. Clarke toured the world
performing live to promote the album, as well as doing a
session for his only DJ hero, John Peel."Some pretty
heavy shit shook me up badly at the beginning of this year,"
Dave Clarke concludes, "but music helped me through.
Music has always brought me through, even in times when
I've had nothing. Music has given me everything and I feel
I have to give everything back. I don't know what I'd do
without it, it's in my blood and bones, the only constant
throughout the whole of my life."From Tones On Tail
to Die Warzau, from Anthony Rother to the Sisters of Mercy,
from Terence Fixmer's crunching techno to the filthy 'booty'
sound of Detroit, Clarke is still as enthused as a kid about
it all. Back in his Merc we're nearing his home and he slams
a series of CDs into the car-stereo by everyone from fresh-faced
guitar heroes Louis IV to '80s New York punk funkers Silicone
Soul."I have an unbridled passion for this," he
enthuses boyishly, "Yes, I suppose I've never grown
up. I hope so." |