Future Music

Classic Album

-

Goldie, Timeless

This month we’ll talk about an opus of breakbeat science, soulful vocals, and super charged emotional soundscape­s that would get into the charts, and then under the skin of an entire generation. It would be the blueprint for drum & bass, a soundtrack to the city, and an album that would go on to live up it its name, with every year that passed.

The man responsibl­e for creating this masterpiec­e was, of course, Goldie. He’d already lived enough lifetimes for a hundred people by this point, and definitely had something to say, but needed help saying it.

“I went into the studio with an album already in my head,” he says. “But, as a person who doesn’t engineer you have to conceive the music first in your head, as an artist, then shape what has to be done, and how to do it.”

Old mentors, 4hero, shared the boards at times, but the bulk of the heavy lifting was done by engineer and Moving Shadow boss

Rob Playford, whose Stevenage semi provided the studio space.

“He was a very good engineer,” says Goldie. “But I pushed it and pushed and pushed it, technicall­y. Knowing that it would work, when he didn’t think it would flow.”

Simple Minds drummer, Mel Gaynor, was drafted in. His playing style brought an extra-generation­al influence, and new tonality to the resulting chopped and layered drum programmin­g.

“He was a huge part,” says Goldie. “He replayed breaks, and helped us make our own take on something. It got so we weren’t just taking, but reproducin­g and breaking down content and reconstruc­ting it.”

The breakneck soundtrack of club nights like Rage also pointed the way, as Goldie and crew took the samplers to their limits, forming complex structures as interlocki­ng as wildstyle graffiti. It would push this music further than before, and onto a world stage.

“I knew it deserved more of a platform, and this was the platform,” says Goldie. “Conceptual­ly, musically, vocally, technicall­y. All of those boxes had to be ticked to get that album made. I wanted to bring a classicist impression­ism into making this music, and give it the respect it deserves.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia