Future Music

Track by track with Philippe Zdar

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Cassius 1999

“This one started out as a homage to Stevie Wonder’s Too High from his Innervisio­ns album. We wanted to do a Breakbeat song with that kind of bass. This is also the first time that I put my voice on a record.

“It became a famous music video for us. We gave the track to [music video directors] Alex and Martin and when they gave it back we said, ‘Oh no! This video is too good!’ We didn’t think our song was big enough to match it! So we went away and remade it. This is our original version of the song, though. It’s really undergroun­d compared to the remix, which we close the album with.”

Feeling For You

“Hubert found the sample [Gwen McCrae’s All This Love That I’m Giving]. Then we came up with the idea for this song, but it wasn’t really classical. It was a cool idea, but nothing too clever or credible with the sampling. Then, when we were DJing in a club around the time, I thought I’d try it out and the crowd went crazy [ laughs]. We knew there was something there, so the next day we went back in the studio and played with it a little bit more. It would become one of the most important records for us.”

Crazy Legs

“We’d always wanted to do a song for the breakdance­rs. We loved that music. Crazy Legs was the name of one of the bboys from the Rocksteady Crew. We were obsessed with him and that New York scene in the ’70s. There were a lot of breakers in Paris in the clubs when we were making this album too. It was a big scene. A lot of Italian guys, French, Swiss. All dancing. It was happening. In House clubs! There was a very famous night called Respect. Everybody was breakdanci­ng. We wanted to bring back that feeling; to channel that funky, Disco breaks vibe that they got down to. This was our homage to people like Afrika Bambaataa and the Electro music he made like Planet Rock. We were obsessed.”

La Mouche

“This started with a bassline I’d made. I knew I didn’t want it to sound like a typical House track so I added the notes over the top of it. It was like two notes. It would be easy to do now because EDM music reminds us every day that you can make a song with just two notes, but at the time everybody was all about being very musical and adding more notes! We were being very minimal to be different.

“When we had the remix done by DJ Falcon the song became very big. That became part of the trend for ‘maximal’ House music. When we played that version it was the start of people in House clubs headbangin­g!”

Chase

“We were messing with the breakbeat thing here and trying to turn it into something classic. The beat was made in the E-mu SP-1200, which was a great piece of kit. The song all comes from that. I loaded in some drum samples and made my own beat. That was the great thing about the SP-1200. The sound of the drums after you put them in there was always incredible.

“We still use it to this day. It gives you a nice crunch. It’s an effect you can emulate easily now with a bitcrusher, but at the time everyone was putting stuff through this machine to get that sound.”

Foxxy

“This was the first track me and Hubert ever made as Cassius. Well, we were called Qui Valait Trois Millards [The Six Million Dollar Man], and the track was called Foxy Lady. We remade it for this album. We were making Hip-Hop music under the name Motorbass but we wanted to try and do a Dance track. Hubert went away and then called me saying he’d been working on something on that tip [sampling Willie Hutch’s theme from Blaxploita­tion flick Foxy Brown] and played me this. I was like, ‘Wow! That’s what I’m talking about.’ You could say this was the start of it all.”

Planetz

“I remember this track very well. I love this song. It was a piece of music that was coming from House, with a bit of a Detroit influence, and mixed with a lot of the New York Electro from the ’80s by the likes of the Soulsonic Force. This track was made at the same time as Crazy Legs. You can put them both together. This was our Planet Rock. We started with a little vocal sample that said ‘planets’ [taken from The Whispers track,

Planets of Life] and built off repeating that. We tried to make it very rough and undergroun­d sounding.”

Hey Babe

“This was us trying to be Techno-y, but not just relying on that ‘four-tothe-floor’ drum kick programmin­g. We stumbled on this beat and both went, ‘Oh. This is what we’re looking for.’ We then added to the top of that. It came together very quickly. As soon as it was finished being programmed we bounced it down to tape then and there and it was finished. Very quick.”

“The new album is Ibifornia. It’s our fourth. It has less Breakbeat, and more Afrobeat and Disco, and it’s more songbased because we are obsessed with Pop music and singers. It features a lot of guests who are friends now, like Cat Power, Mike D and Pharrell. It’s probably a less crazy album. It’s a mix of what we feel now, and it’s an antidote to the cynicism of EDM, where you get a lot of money to make shit music, but you don’t care. We wanted to show that there is another way.”

We wanted that funky, live groove you get with drum breaks; not that rigid 4/4 programmin­g

Mister Eveready

“Definitely one of my favourite ones off the album. Thinking about it now, it was a kind of tribute to Fela Kuti, which is kind of full circle now as the new album takes a lot of inspiratio­n from Fela. We always thought of Fela as Mister Eveready. He was always ready. This is a good song to get into. It’s over six minutes long. It builds nicely. You can put it on and close your eyes to it. Dance with your girlfriend to it. It’s like an old James Brown song. Vintage and funky.”

Nulife

“It’s quite fast, no? It’s a good party track to play. I think we just wanted to make some mix-up of Disco and House for the dancefloor. We kind of came up with that recipe. We loved that era. We liked playing it out with the Chicago House music that was around at the time. We were very obsessed with both the old-school Chicago House music, as well as the new-school tracks that were coming out on that, how you say in English, Deep House tip? In France there were suddenly all these guys sampling and making their own version of it. It blew up and got everywhere, this French House. In fact this new music was nothing but a rip off of Chicago House movement [ laughs].”

Interlude

“This is a little track. We always tried to make some moments on our albums where you could just breathe for a second. This is like the stuff we would make under the name La Funk Mob. There were a lot of La Funk Mob moments on the first album. It’s quite Trip-Hoppy. We had a Hip-Hop beat backing it, with some sub bass and the crackle of vinyl over the top. Hip-Hop was in our roots.”

Somebody

“This, I love. It’s another homage. This time to Michael [Jackson]. This is direct to the Bad album. Or Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ off Thriller. It has that funky drum machine shuffle. There is even some ‘ha ha ha ha’ breathy vocals in the background, too [ laughs]. We wanted to channel Michael on this one.”

Club Soixante Quinze

“This is Club 75. It’s a club track, but a slow club track for girls. It’s got that sleazy Prince sound. Tracks like this were all about that vibe. It’s been a main influence from day one to now, that Minneapoli­s sound. It was funny, in 2009 Pedro, aka Busy P, said we should form a supergroup with him and DJ Mehdi and Justice called Club 75. We toured that for about a year, but it got the name from this track. We all knew it was a big song. You could play it anywhere.”

Supa Crush

“Another Breakbeat! Thanks to this interview I’ve been listening back to the album and realising just how many breaks are in it [ laughs]. We were obsessed with making beats. We wanted that groove; that funky, live movement you get with drum breaks. We didn’t want that rigid 4/4 programmin­g. That was too strict. We wanted the Funk that the Hip-Hop producers were digging.”

Invisible

“Here we sampled the greatest singer/ songwriter ever, Curtis Mayfield [from

To Be Invisible from 1974’s Sweet Exorcist]. This song was a homage to him and his sound. There are a lot of guys we love as singers, and there are a lot of guys we love as players, but not many can do both so well as Curtis Mayfield. He has everything.”

Cassius 99 (Remix)

“And we go back around. This is a remix of the first track of the album. Like I said, the opener is our original version, and then we had to make this remix after we saw how good the video was for the song! It went on to become our biggest single, so thanks to [directors] Alex and Martin for raising that bar [ laughs].”

WANT to KNOW MORE?

For more informatio­n about Cassius and their ongoings, please visit their bold and baffling website: www.cassiusoff­icial.com

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 ??  ?? Zdar and Boom Bass first cut their teeth together in the late ’80s serving up Jazzy beats for French Hip-Hop megastar, MC Solaar. In ’91 they struck out on their own as La Funk Mob, turning in dope Trip-Hop beats for Mo’ Wax. Zdar would go on to...
Zdar and Boom Bass first cut their teeth together in the late ’80s serving up Jazzy beats for French Hip-Hop megastar, MC Solaar. In ’91 they struck out on their own as La Funk Mob, turning in dope Trip-Hop beats for Mo’ Wax. Zdar would go on to...
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