Music

INPUT | Afro-Acid Presents: Phuture/ DJ Pierre/ Turtle Bugg

Output
Thu Aug 27Fri Aug 28 10pm Ages: 21+
DJ PierreNikola BaytalaPhutureTurtle Bugg

About INPUT | Afro-Acid Presents: Phuture/ DJ Pierre/ Turtle Bugg


The year is 1985. The game-Innovation. The players- DJ Pierre, Spanky and Herb J. The story goes Pierre got wind of the uniquely interesting sound coming out of the small silver box infamously referred to as the Roland TB--303 at a friend's house.

The story goes on to say Spanky rushed to purchase the 303 at a used equipment store, after Pierre's urging. At the time it was defunct and no longer produced by Roland because it did not accomplish what it set out to do. It was originally designed to emulate a Bass Guitar and apparently that did not catch on to the general public.

So back to the moment when our players got a hold of the little silver box with 303 tagged on it. Their creative out-of-the-box mindset saw more to this machine. They saw DIFFERENT and they saw BIG potential. They didn't see a defunct machine. They made contact and the squelchy sound that to a normal "lay" ear would sound like-nothing, sounded like sweet music to them. They were elated because they knew they found "IT". Spanky started on drum beats, Pierre got on twisting the knobs...Herb J joined the jam session which lasted hours.

The end result was the very first Track that had elements of what we call Acid House. Acid Track is also tied to legendary DJ Ron Hardy and Marshall Jefferson who helped the group get it to where it is was when we first heard it on record. Ron Hardy was the first dj to play the track and caused an acid madness to sweep across Chicago and ultimately the world.

Acid House took over the UK and the Rave culture was born as a direct result. The Summer of Love in London primarily was a direct result of the first Acid Track and the innovative thinking of the members of PHUTURE.

DJ Pierre, the group's creative director, began to produce other material and came to be known as the innovator of another sound-Wildpitch. Spanky as dj Spank Spank created notable tracks as well outside of PHUTURE.

At the time, the guys had no idea they would be the fathers of a scene that would last over 30 years, so the thought of leaving solo careers to remain as PHUTURE was not a priority.

With age comes wisdom. They looked around and Acid House is a genre that has it's rightful place amongst electronic music in mainstream Hip Hop, Pop and what the industry refers to as EDM. You hear the impact in all of these genres.

And so the players are naturally back in the game because they are intimately connected to this thing called Acid House. It has a new energy now and it's only right that the fathers, the original players return to help baptize the new generation.

Original members dj Pierre and Spanky with new member Rio The musician are gearing up to release their first album in over 20+ years with a tour to boot.

PHUTURE has survived.


DJ Pierre is one of the hardest working men in the music business. After more than a decade of producing innovative and cutting edge underground house music, the master creator is at the height of his burgeoning career, and shows no signs of slowing down.

DJ Pierre is the quintessential dance producer. With his finger on the pulse of today's underground house scene, he is shaping the present and laying the ground work for the future. Pierre is currently laying down tracks for his forthcoming full-length opus and in the midst of starting his own underground dance label.

My music is the center of my world says the beat master "Once I get the vibe going, I can't stop. It's an intense feeling, fusing the rhythm and beats in an underground groove that makes the dance floor shake and people move. It's a very spiritual evolution for me -- one that I take very seriously."

More than just a producers' producer, Pierre is the unconventional king of the hard-core house mixers and a visionary. One of the original producers of the 80's Chicago scene. Pierre fuses together scorching acid grooves with pulsating beats, laden with the sultry vocal samples "I'm more or less a minority type producer," he says "I make music for a very select group of people. It's not for the masses. It's for people who really know their music. If you just get into dance music, you probably won't be into my tracks. Someone has to be deeper into house to get my music."

Over the past 10 years, DJ Pierre has created a niche for himself in a genre that sees its players change continually, most being forgotten more than remembered. Moreover, his name has become synonymous with some very provocative and influential sounds. Pierre has produced more than 50 house anthems ranging from Phuture's "Acid Trax", "The Creator" and "Your Old Friend" to Photon Inc.'s "Generate Power" and "Give A Little Love". He also scored well with Joint Venture's "Masterblaster" and his own "Muzik Set You Free." As a remixer, he's hit gold by reinventing more than two dozen infectious grooves including, Phuture's "Spirit," RuPaul's "A Shade Shady," The Pet Shop Boys "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Kind Of Thing" and Urban Soul's "Sex On My Mind." He hit number one on the Billboard Dance chart with Midi Rain's "Shine."

His talent doesn't stop there either. Pierre has also co-written some club classics including Juliet Robert's international romp. "I Want You" and "Shout," with the dynamite vocal power of Sabrina Pope. With "Jesus On My Mind" released on Twisted America Records, Pierre managed to mix his two favorite passions- hard-edged house sounds and religion, and along the way he stirred up a little controversy. "I'm definitely not afraid to speak my mind. I believe in God and I'm not ashamed. Jesus is on a lot of people's mind. But in dance, no one expresses that. I'm the type to write what I think about" he says. "A couple of labels didn't want to touch it because of the religious aspect. They were afraid to have a song that expresses religion so bluntly, which is silly. But Twisted loved it and embraced it."

Growing up in a suburb of Chicago, DJ Pierre was a master whiz at fixings things, be it transistor radios, televisions or the Christmas lights on a family tree "I always thought I'd be into electronics. I was seven years old and really good with doing stuff like that--fixing people's watches, putting lights in people's radios. I had no training, just a lot of curiosity", he says. "I've always been able to figure out on my own and learn by the experiences of doing things myself."

It was that curiosity that led to his fascination with electronic instruments-keyboards, drum machines and programming. In 1986, influenced by his father and uncle, both of whom were musicians (his uncle played with Duke Ellington), DJ Pierre started getting into the music vibe. Practicing in his parents' basement, he started playing tracks. "The thing was, I was into this Italian House and Spanky, who I hung with, said, 'they don't listen to that anymore'", he recalls. "I was from the suburbs and he'd be going into Chicago, then coming back and telling me what people were listening to. He's been telling me that the stuff I was listening to was about to die out. I didn't really know about what was going on. But I caught on pretty quick... and Spanky then put together this group Phuture and we began to create this totally new sound that everyone else soon caught on to."

Pierre became immersed in the underground world, learning the ins and outs of the Chicago House scene. Soon he was spinning at parties and Chicago clubs. By the late 1980's, Pierre was considered to be one of the best DJ's in the area and he was being lauded for his on-the-cusp acid house sounds and his def remixes.

"I just started messon' around and the next thing I knew, I was pumping out these killer acid tracks," he says "Spanky had already made up the drum beat. I just started turning the knobs and improvising. It was some of the best work I'd ever done."

After a brief stint with Jive Records in Chicago, Pierre headed to New York in 1990. He hooked up with Strictly Rhythm Records in 1991 and burned up the dance floors with Photon Inc.'s "Generate Power," a project he calls his "second coming."

Since then he has become one of the most in-demand producers and DJ's. He's constantly sought after Europe, playing regularly in Germany, the UK, Italy and France. And he's a staple at the clubs in New York City. In the next few months, Pierre plans to launch his own house music label, along with an R&B one. He'll also continue his successful work with Twisted America Records, Strictly Rhythm and the other handful of labels with whom he has become synonymous. And he only expects the pace to continue getting faster, both in his work. With LaVette, who co-writes most of his material, he hopes to focus more on vocal tracks, as well as the house sound for which he has become famous.

"House is always going to be here. There is always going to be some form of underground dance music. It's not going to snuff out. People will always have a need to express themselves," he says "I get a really spiritual vibe from what I do. With the right beat, the right flow, I get a hypnotic feeling from the music I produce. I could be doing something more commercial, but then it wouldn't be true."

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