Arab Times

Tricky ‘goes’ clean, darker

Music piracy up

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PARIS, Sept 20, (AFP): After a string of releases over the past decade, Tricky found himself in an unfamiliar state. The influentia­l trip-hop producer didn’t need money to settle past debts.

Freed from the burden, Tricky turned back to the hard-hitting beats and vocal refrains that made him a key player in the Bristol scene of the 1990s, while still delving into his demons.

On his latest album, “ununiform,” which comes out on Friday, Tricky works again with his signature vocal collaborat­or and former girlfriend Martina TopleyBird — and also, reflecting a more recent passion, with Russian rappers.

“I’m still learning stuff, and I’ve still got ideas that I want to chase,” Tricky told AFP on a visit to Paris ahead of the release.

The 49-year-old DJ became a cultural force with his 1995 debut album “Maxinquaye,” a work of dark layers and diverse musical roots that he put together after leaving his limited role in Massive Attack.

But Tricky said that his more recent albums have come with a weight — he knew he had to do them to make money.

Tricky, whose real name is Adrian Thaws, said he had faced legal action and was forced to pay “a tax bill for hundreds of thousands of pounds” in both Britain and the United States.

“So every album I’ve been doing for the last few years has been going straight to the taxman,” he said.

“This album, ‘ununiform,’ I didn’t even have to record it if I didn’t want to. I could have just taken two, three years off now. So this was done because I wanted to do it — rather than I had to do it.”

“ununiform” is also Tricky’s first album since moving to Berlin where he lives a self-described boring lifestyle. Despite the German capital’s vibrant club scene, Tricky said he rises early, goes to bed before midnight and makes sure to exercise and eat healthy food.

Even if Tricky’s life is looking up, his subject matter on “ununiform” is hardly cheery.

“When We Die,” a steadily churning, rap-rooted track with Topley-Bird, asks questions about the afterlife. “Dark Days” similarly heads into bleak territory but through charging synths.

Tricky said that he remained haunted by his life’s first memory — seeking the body of his mother, who died when he was four.

“When my mother died, we had the coffin at home. Like, oldschool — you have the coffin at home so all the people can come and see the person,” Tricky said.

“And her coffin was next to my room, so I used to go in and stand on a chair and look at her. You know, it’s open coffin and stuff,” he said.

Tricky on the album also enlists the actress Asia Argento and one of the most prominent Russianlan­guage rappers, Scriptonit­e.

With his severe voice, Scriptonit­e brings an element of horrorcore to his tracks on “ununiform.”

Tricky, born in Bristol of Caribbean ancestry, does not understand Russian but said that it made no difference to him aesthetica­lly.

He calls Moscow his favourite city and spent several weeks in the Russian capital recording and relaxing in the bitter winter.

LONDON:

Record

Also:

Tricky

Music piracy is on the increase worldwide, with 40 percent of users are accessing unlicensed music, up from 35 percent last year, the global recorded music industry group IFPI said.

Internet search engines are making piracy easier, the Internatio­nal Federation of the Phonograph­ic Industry (IFPI) said in a report on Tuesday, calling for government action.

The increase in piracy follows a slump in recent years when policing of the digital music landscape appeared to be clamping down on the practice.

“Copyright infringeme­nt is still growing and evolving, with stream ripping the dominant method,” said IPPI chief, Frances Moore.

“With the wealth of licensed music available to fans, these types of illegal sites have no justifiabl­e place in the music world,” she said, calling for greater regulation of the digital music sector.

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