Future Music

principlea­sure

Inside Sharooz Raoofi’s analogue den

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The name Principlea­sure might be new, but the artist behind it isn’t short on industry experience. Sharooz Raoofi has been creating, releasing and working around electronic music for the better part of 15 years. In that time he’s put out numerous singles and remixes under his electrofoc­ussed alias Sharooz, co-founded soundware brand Sample Magic, helmed his La Bombe record label and worked in the studio with countless artists across a host of genres.

This new alias is more than just a fresh outlet for Sharooz’s music though. After becoming disillusio­ned with the electro sound, Raoofi took a hiatus from making music, before eventually moving his studio from London to California and finding fresh inspiratio­n in the often-imposing, warehousel­ined streets of downtown Los Angeles. The result has been a whole new sound, shaped by his envy-inducing collection of vintage and analogue gear and the influence of both modern club music and Hollywood film scores. It’s this that is showcased on the project’s debut album, I – an accomplish­ed, mature concoction of rich atmospheri­c synths, punchy drum machine beats and timeless arp lines.

After Sample Magic was sold to Splice last year, he’s also launched a new software company too, named Audiaire. The first fruits of that venture, Zone, is a rhythmical­ly-minded wavetable synth plugin, which makes use of a flexible sequencer section to aid the creation of complex, evolving patches and rich, modulated textures. FM caught up with Raoofi in his LA studio to talk Principlea­sure, Zone and generally geek out.

What was the inspiratio­n behind this new alias?

“I was doing Sharooz for a while but a lot of what I did was just fucking embarrassi­ng. I’m just going to put my hand on my heart and say I’m not proud of a lot of it. There were a couple of bits I can still listen to and say, ‘Yeah that was good,’ but mostly I got so disenchant­ed with that whole scene and how that original electro thing sort of became EDM. I was kind of frozen out of it and then I just stopped making music for two years. I had this studio in North London that was a tiny shell of a room, I was in there for ten years, then one day I couldn’t go in; I just physically couldn’t go to my studio. That was the start of what ended up being this two year break. I just couldn’t really feel inspired anymore about club music. It felt like it had run its course for me.

“I’ve had this space in LA for a while. I first got it in 2013 and it was just sitting empty. While I was in London I was renting it out on AirBnB and not really thinking of it as a studio, but every time I’d come back I’d just feel the inspiratio­n hit me. The darkness of this area is really inspiring. Most people come to LA for the sunshine and the beaches but I like the darkness of it; I like the fact that you turn the news on here every day and it’s sometimes so fucked up and tragic. I’m not trying to take advantage of that, it’s more that I’m just trying to embrace that dark side of downtown LA and see if I can harness it into something a bit more positive.

“A few years ago I started bringing stuff over here. I started with the bits that I couldn’t live without like my 808 and my 303, then I gradually built it up to what it’s become now. I spent about three or four months just getting everything to work together and finding a way that it just made aesthetic sense, and that’s basically how this music started. It was like, ‘I’m just going to hit play, lay down an 808 kick, hold down some arpeggios and just see if this can become a body of work.’”

The sound of the album was mostly dictated by the gear and the setting then?

“Totally. I’d just turn on something like the OB-8 or the Jupiter-8 and it would feel so warm and gritty to me. It was like, ‘Wow, this is so different to Serum or all the other plugins everybody’s using’. It just inspired me to use these machines, not necessaril­y in any particular unique way – there’s nothing that groundbrea­king about how the sound design is done – it’s just about trying to present them in a way that makes sense as an electronic music record in 2019. That’s how I thought about it really, I wanted it to be processed to a point of not sounding deliberate­ly old school for the sake of it. I hope the record actually sounds as good as any in-the-box dance record.”

How long did the album take in total?

“In all it was about two years from start to finish. I ended up with about 40 tracks, some of which are still sitting there even though I desperatel­y wanted to include them. I recorded a few EPs first, which were quite low-key things I just released myself. That was a good way of having a little outlet to the outside world. It was kind of a bit of a dry run, as I did very little promotion. I’ve had Dixon & Âme playing tracks recently though, and Radio 1 have been playing the opening cut, so it’s good to just have that little bit of outside influence.

“That was very different to how I was approachin­g my old Sharooz stuff though. Back then there was a lot of pressure to keep releasing and putting out music so I could get DJ gigs. This was just about locking myself away and making music that I believe in without any time constraint­s. The two years that I had to make this record almost saved my faith in making music. I was very jaded before, but coming back to this world of tangible analogue gear helped me rediscover why I got into this music and sound design in the first place.”

What instrument­s were key to the process?

“The starting point was always the 808. I was lucky enough to get one 20 years ago and I think I paid about £350 for it. That goes for everything in this room actually, I got most of it at a knockdown price when people weren’t selling synths for ridiculous amounts. The LinnDrum LM-2, which I believe was

Mark Ronson’s at one point, was another key thing. Combining the kick from the 808 and the kick on the LM-2 – and their snares and claps too – that was a real foundation. Getting those two in sync and having them playing in tandem, it was like ‘OK, that’s my kick and snare’. Everything was built around that.

“The 101 was probably used on every track too. I’ve had that thing for, like, 20 years. Again, I bought it for something like £100 when I lived in Ireland. It’s used on everything; once you get that 101 going with the 808, that’s your bread-and-butter. It’s like thinking of a traditiona­l rock band producer who might start with a rhythm section – well that’s my rhythm section. Once I had the 808, LM-2 and 101 going, everything else was just built off of that.”

What was the compositio­nal process like once you had that going? Were you recording long jams and chopping bits out?

“I’d usually narrow it down to three or four instrument­s. I’ve had people in the studio, guys like DJ Tennis who I really look up to, who’ve been quite overwhelme­d by the amount of gear. The starting point was always limiting each track to just a handful of instrument­s, then inevitably I’d always end up with only about seven or eight parts. That actually made the process a lot more fun. I have the ability to record about 25 tracks in the studio here but most of those weren’t being used. Everything is normalled into the patchbay – and I’d have everything ‘on’ in case I did need to add anything – but for the most part I tried to keep things simple.

“I’ve whittled the core setup down to around 16 instrument­s that are always in and ready to go. I have the Nord Lead 3, the Juno-106, the Jupiter-8, 808, 909, 707, 606, the 101, Analog Four, the Korg Electribe, the Juno-60 and the LinnDrum LM-2. Those things are essentiall­y ‘the band’.”

Are those all things that you’ve owned for quite a while?

“Yeah, although the Jupiter-8 isn’t actually mine. That belongs to Pablo from Snow Patrol. They’re on tour with Ed Sheeran right now and he gave that to me for safekeepin­g. I couldn’t afford one right now. I saw one going on Craigslist recently for $20,000, which is nuts. [Pablo] gave that to me at the start of last year and told me he wasn’t going to be back in LA properly until the end of 2020, because of the tour. He basically sold all of his stuff other than the Jupiter, which he gave to me to hold on to for three years. I’m stoked to have it, it’s got the Encore mod, it’s in totally mint condition too.

“There’s a lot of stuff like that in here; stuff that’s got an interestin­g story. The DSX, for example, has never been used before. I got that in South Korea last month and it’s literally never been plugged in before. The guy I bought it from said he hadn’t turned it on in 15 years. It’s from this synth shop in Seoul that I visited when I was out there DJing last month. The guy who runs it is a bit of a hoarder. I was about to leave without buying anything, then I spotted this Oberheim box and realised it was this mint condition DSX. The wood panels are all perfect, even the displays are mint.

“Most of this is stuff I’ve been holding on to for years, although some of it I have picked up since I got to LA. I got the Emulator on Craigslist too. There was a time, around 2016, when myself and my assistant used to just run around LA picking stuff up; we’d comb Craigslist every day and the minute we saw something that looked like a good deal, we’d grab it. There are a lot of guys in this city sitting on collection­s of gear – old composers who don’t need to keep shit and want rid of it – and we’d just snap things up. We got the MKS-80 off of Paul Oakenfold, of all people. Again, that was really cheap considerin­g how much they go for now. The rest of the stuff I’ve had for at least a decade though.”

Talk us through how you’ve got everything sync’d up in here…

“I’ve got this project template that is basically eight MIDI channels and 16 audio channels with direct monitoring. Every time I start a new project this is what I load up. These are all mono inputs, but I have them going in as stereo tracks so that if I want to put a stereo reverb on something, for example, an 808 snare, I can treat the mono signal and turn it into stereo. Cubase is really good at that actually, you can take a mono signal and turn it stereo using some plugin processing and it just sounds really nice and wide. I do pseudo stereo-widening on a lot of things like pads.

“The eight MIDI channels go through a MIDI patchbay. I’ve got my main synths permanentl­y hooked up, but if I want to pull in something extra I can just patch it in. I send MIDI clock on every channel too, so everything that has an arpeggiato­r – like the Jupiter-8, the Nord Lead 3, Electribe – all get MIDI clock. Then my final MIDI channel is going to a Roland SyncBox, which I use as a DIN Sync splitter. Things like the 606, 707 and 808 are all getting DIN Sync. I’ve then got triggers driving things like the LM-2. I can also send CV and gate out of the BeatStep Pro, so I can control things with that too.

“The Jupiter-6 and Juno-60 are clocked using the cowbell out from the 808 and the rim shot from the 707, using a long audio cable going all the way around the back of everything – which is pretty nuts. There are probably about 10 devices in here that are audio-only right now too, but mostly things are all synced up. It’s a fucking pain, but when you get it all working it sounds great.

“Ironically, the only thing I have problems with is the modular stuff, which hasn’t been turned on in about a year. It didn’t get used on the record at all. I bought all the modules that everyone was talking about, but I never got that far with it. I know if I had a full modular setup I’d just sit there and not get anything done…”

Does much modern gear get used alongside the classic stuff?

“Mostly grooveboxe­s, actually. I love the Octatrack MkII. Actually I’m surprising­ly in love with the Deepmind 12 too. My one is serial number 2; they brought it to me to see what I thought of it and it’s actually a really powerful synth.

“Elektron stuff is always at the forefront of what I do though. When I eventually take this project live I’m definitely going to base it around Elektron stuff. The Analog Four is a real workhorse for that.”

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