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Home » DJs » Dave Clarke

Dave Clarke

Country: United Kingdom
BIOGRAPHY DISCOGRAPHY MUSIC LINKS

Dave Clarke
THE OUTLINE:
“I may be established but I’ll never be establishment.”
Dave Clarke, March 2005

THE PAST:
“I bought my first Damned album because I thought they sounded like they’d be really evil,” he declares, “and even now their album ‘Machine Gun Etiquette’ is one I keep coming back to. I like the attitude, the free reign of it, and on an artistic level I see my music as in the alternative genre rather than dance music. Techno and electro is an alternative that happens to be on the peripheries of dance music.”

Clarke has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best techno and electro DJs in the world but he’s always been an outsider, from his stormy childhood in the 1980s to his tempestuous relationship with the media today. “The school I was at was all about grooming you to be an accountant or a lawyer or in the army,” he explains. “I just saw that as breaking the human spirit and constantly rebelled against it. I instinctively felt it was wrong and pointless for me. I’ve always been very, very bad at respecting authority.”

Clarke was born and raised in Brighton but was expelled from school a number of times from an early age. The school always took him back but he fully admits to being a thoroughly disruptive boy with a short attention span. What started him on the road to where he his today was his hijacking and combining his parents’ hobbies.

Clarke, his relationship with his family in teenage dissaray, borrowed some his father’s equipment, including the disco lights and retreated to the attic where he covered everything in aluminium foil and made a sci-fi retreat for himself. Here he’d make tapes for his friends and dismantle electronic equipment to see how it worked. He subsisted on a musical diet of Visage, early hip hop, Pigbag and punk.

Clarke was advised by his school careers office to become a software engineer but his parents had split and family life was unbearable so, at 16, he ran away from home. He’d done it before but this time was determined not to return. He ended up sleeping rough in car-parks before a friend offered him temporary floorspace. Taking a temp job in a shoe-shop, he rented himself a bedsit. The only thing that kept him going was his love of music. From soul to the Psychedelic Furs, from Devo to the nascent Chicago house sound, Clarke devoured it all voraciously and blagged himself a DJ slot at a club called Toppers in Brighton. The night he played became so successful that it worried a young John Digweed (then known as DJ JD) whose club-night it was up against. Soon such gigs provided Clarke with a meagre living, one where he was left with a fiver a day to live on after buying records.
“I regard that time as an apprenticeship,” he says now.

DJ-ING:
In 1988 he played his first foreign gig at the now-defunct Richters in Amsterdam, kickstarting a global reputation that now runs from Brazil to Singapore , from Reykjavik to Auckland, New Zealand. These days his DJ diary is booked solid six months in advance and he often headlines on the summer’s international festival circuit.

MUSIC PRODUCTION & LABELS:
Clarke’s reputation was sealed at the start of the 1990s when he produced a series of EPs with the collective name ‘Red’. Signed to de-Construction he received rave reviews for his 1996 debut album ‘Archive 1’ which dabbled in breakbeat and electronica, a novelty for the puritanical techno scene of the time. Clarke, then as now, has no time for techno purism.

“The so-called intelligensia of the scene have done nothing but hold it back,” he snorts dismissively, “The trainspotters who don’t actually dance to it have created a misleading impression of techno for the public. It’s like when you used to go into techno record shops and they’d look at you like a piece of shit if you didn’t know about it. All those shops are closed now…”

By the millennium many first generation techno DJs had fallen by the wayside, drifting off up blind allies and sub-genres, but Clarke’s sets, his extraordinary mixing skills mashing up techno, electro, ghetto-tek, hip hop and even 1980s new wave numbers, remained in constant demand. He put out a number of mix CDs including 2001’s first ‘World Service’ set which showcased his dual love for electro and techno. He also signed to Skint Records, celebrating the event at Hove Dog Track by presenting the prize for a race entitled ‘The Dave Clarke Inaugural Techno Dash’. This union resulted in ‘Devil’s Advocate’ in 2004, an album that reeked of dark gothic energy laced with hip hop’s surly funk, and featured Chicks On Speed, DJ Rush and the MC Mr Lif. Clarke toured the world performing live to promote the album, as well as doing a session for his only DJ hero, John Peel.

Written by: Thomas H Green

Dave Clarke in News:

01-10-08 Amsterdam Dance Event returns..
08-09-07 Amsterdam Dance Event returns..
04-21-07 The Sonar 07 festival in Barc..
12-14-06 Oldies But Goodies from Dave ..
10-26-06 The Results from DJ Mag Top 1..
10-04-06 Amsterdam Dance Event 2006
08-16-06 Creamfields Andalucia event r..
07-29-06 Creamfields Andalucia 2006
05-10-06 We Love Sundays at Space Ibiz..
05-01-06 Madrid Electronic Conference ..
04-10-06 Sonar 2006 lineup published
03-20-06 EXIT Festival 2006: the Balka..
10-31-05 DJ Mag Top 100 2005 results
10-19-05 I Love Techno to celebrate it..
06-19-05 EXIT 05 Full Lineup
05-18-05 Global Gathering 2005 festival
05-08-05 EXIT Festival 05: 4 day summe..
10-10-04 Massive lineup for I Love Tec..
07-01-04 Mauro Picotto and Chris Liebi..
05-03-04 Dance Valley 2004 lineup
04-07-04 Godskitchen Global Gathering ..
03-15-04 Mayday 2004 lineup
10-31-03 DJ Mag Top 100 2003 Results: ..
10-31-03 Dutch DJ Awards
09-22-03 Gatecrasher back at the NEC
04-11-03 I Love Techno 2003

Dave Clarke in Reviews:

Jon Gurd - Future
Carl Cox - Pure Intec
Dave Clarke - Just Ride
Dave Clarke - Devil's Advocate
FUSE Presents Technasia

Dave Clarke in Photos:

Photos: Sonar By Night 2 @ Sonar 2007 - Barcelona (June 16th 2007)
Sonar By Night 2 @ Sonar 2007, Barcelona (June 16th 2007)
Exit Festival 2006 @ Petrovaradin Fortress, Novisad (2006-07-06)
Visit Dave Clarke website
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