| DJ Sets ::Paul Oakenfold
N0. 33 RATED DJ IN THE WORLD ON THE
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Paul Oakenfold (born 30 August 1963;
Mile End Hospital, London, UK) is a British record producer
and a trance DJ.
Early Career (1979–1984)
Paul Oakenfold's career was set to be
a chef, after having hopes of becoming part of a band. He
describes his early life as a "bedroom deejay" in
a podcasted interview with Vancouver's 24 Hours, stating he
grew up listening to The Beatles. Later 21-year-old Paul Oakenfold
and Ian Paul moved to 254 West 54th Street. Studio 54's Steve
Rubell ran the place and only allowed popular people inside.
Oakenfold and Paul used fake passes to sneak into places in
New York where they met Maze, Bobby Womak and Bob Marley,
whom they also interviewed, as they said to be NME and Melody
Maker journalists. Other people were Brooke Shields, Cher,
Donald Trump and Bianca Jagger, Warhol, Dali and Yves Saint
Laurent.
Paul Oakenfold's musical career began in the late 1970s,
when he started playing soul in a Covent Garden wine bar.
Here, he met Trevor Fung as well as Rumours in London where
he played Earth, Wind and Fire and popular British bands.
In 1984, he spent several months in New York City's West Harlem.
During this time hip-hop was the most popular sound in the
area (see 1984 in music). Larry Levan, one of the early deejays
during this period performed at the Paradise Garage. He began
breaking into the mainstream as he was working as an A&R
man for Champion Records. At that time, he signed DJ Jazzy
Jeff and the Fresh Prince, as well as Salt-n-Pepa. He also
appeared on the Blue Peter BBC programme for children with
a breakdancing crew. He also became promoter and British agent
for the Beastie Boys and Run-D.M.C.; Since then, he began
his presentations at The Project in Streatham playing soul
and jazz music.
Perfecto and Fame (1985–1991)
In 1985, Oakenfold traveled to the island of Ibiza for a
week to celebrate his birthday. Trevor Fung, Nicky Holloway,
Ian Saint Paul, Danny Rampling and Johnny Walker accompanied
him. It was during this time when playing at Amnesia that
Oakenfold demonstrated the Balearic trance sound that he would
later become known for. The event marked his career as a producer
as he convinced the owner to host an "Ibiza Reunion"
party after-hours. He had previously made an attempt, but
it failed as the crowd was not prepared for the acid house
style until 1987 when the party was successful. Since then,
the night became a classic and became one of the UK's major
acid house nights, known as "Spectrum at Heaven in Charing
Cross". Spectrum became popular in The Sanctuary. As
a bigger space was required, it turned into the Heaven club,
which was run by Oakenfold and Paul. The party was best known
for the "Theatre of Madness", as more than 1,500
people were present on Monday nights, until it went down;
with the financial issues it changed its name to the "Land
of Oz". Artists like Alex Paterson DJ'd in the VIP chillout
area known as the "White Room", which gave Paul
more free time, and then he began producing music under the
alias "Electra" in 1988 with his friend Steve Osborne.
In 1988 he decided to create a place where new artists could
develop their careers. At that moment, Perfecto Records was
born.
In 1990, he worked with Terry Farley, Andrew Weatherall and
Osborne on two remixes for The Happy Mondays. The remixes
of "Rave On" and "Hallelujah" were released
on the Madchester Rave On EP, as well as "Step On",
a covered version adapted from John Kongos' 1971 hit "He's
Gonna Step On You". The song reached the Top 5 position
in the UK. He was invited as a guest DJ to Spike Island, a
gig with The Stone Roses. Pleased with the last single, the
Happy Mondays gave Paul and Osborne the opportunity to produce
their third studio album, Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches.
The album entered the UK charts at #1 with pre-sales of 150,000.
The album was named NME's "1990 Album of The Year",
and both Paul and Osborne won the 1991 Brit Award for "Best
Producer".
As they continued releasing only four singles as Electra,
in Full Frequency Range Recordings (FFRR) founded and run
by Radio 1's Pete Tong, the duo created a new alias under
the name Perfecto. They remixed Massive Attack's "Safe
From Harm" as well as many others. Grace was formed in
the late 1990s, consisting of Oakenfold and Osborne and various
singers, including jazz singer Dominique Atkins and Patti
Low.
Tours and Nightclubs (1992–2000)
Main articles: Zoo TV Tour, Glastonbury Festival, Grace
(band), Cream (nightclub), and Home (nightclub)
In 1992, when U2 released their song "Even Better Than
the Real Thing", the Perfecto remix reached a higher
charted position than the original song. In 1993 with the
success of his last remix as Perfecto, he was hired by U2
to provide the warm-up sonics to their Zoo TV world tour,
and replaced BP Fallon on the 1993 legs in Europe and Australia,
New Zealand, and Japan, with more than fifty shows in Zooropa
'93 and Zoomerang from May 7 to December 10 of the same year.
He began producing his own tracks as well, continuing to
remix songs from popular artists. He began using Goa music,
something he discovered on the beaches of Goa in India, fusing
it with similar sounding European tracks to create his own
distinct sound. He took this to the mainstream in 1994 he
created a two-hour set for BBC Radio 1's Essential Mix. In
1995, he became the first DJ to play on the main stage at
the Glastonbury Festival for 90,000 people, which he considers
his favorite gig. His album Perfecto Fluoro became the #1
essential dance collection of Boston Beat during 1996 with
Jamiroquai's Travelling Without Moving. The group Grace dissolved
in 1997 as Oakenfold was touring as a performance DJ more
frequently and could not commit to recording.
On June 9, 1997 Oakenfold created Global Underground 004:
Paul Oakenfold, Live in Oslo (GU004) which is a double mix
CD in the Global Underground series, compiled and mixed by
Oakenfold; it is the first work he created for GU. The mix
was recorded live at Cosmopolite Club in Oslo, Norway, as
part of the official launch of the Quart Festival. It showcases
Oakenfold's eclectic taste in music at the time, as the mix
combines drum and bass, progressive house & progressive
trance, and goa trance. In 1997, Oakenfold mixed one disc
of the double album Fantazia House Collection 6, a UK house
music compilation series. Oakenfold became Cream's resident
DJ from 1997 - 1999. During this time, he began to concentrate
on the release of Tranceport in 1998.
In 1998 and 1999, Oakenfold took the first place in "DJmag's
Top 100 DJs". With the two-year contract as a resident
in Liverpool's Cream, it was in 1999 that he released Resident.
Two Years of Oakenfold at Cream. on Virgin. Thrive Records,
the US distributor for early Global Underground releases had
a different numbering scheme for the Global Underground albums,
due to this Global Underground 007: Paul Oakenfold, New York
(GU007) was released as (GU002) in the United States only.
The compilation was released on May 25, 1998, with the US
release on Jan 19, 1999. This was the second production from
Oakenfold with GU and it contained trance, drum and bass,
progressive house, progressive trance, breakbeat and Downtempo.
This became his last work with GU.
In 1999, he left the UK and Europe and moved to the USA where
he went on tour. A
In 2000 he created fourteen tracks of jazz, soul, house and
goa based styles with Mitchell Oakenfold. Twenty-four FX and
scratches loops and sounds were included too, each consisting
of six seconds; the album cover says "Only for DJs and
Producers" and was released on Music of Life. It is not
considered his first studio album, as it only included useful
tools for deejays.
In September 2000 he opened the new Digital Radio station
Ministry of Sound Radio with a live mix from the famous London
club .
Deals and Barriers (2000–2001)
Oakenfold's next project took him to club Pacha in Ibiza for
the summer, before returning to America for the Burning Man
festival in August; Even though he had spoken extensively
to the press about breaking barriers with the US, the DJ/producer
said he felt his "Stateside" ambitions were not
unique. Together with drum and bass maestro Aphrodite, he
sold out the 10,000 capacity of the Red Rocks Amphitheatre
in Colorado. He continued to present the Perfecto Nights for
a year in Pacha, but he decided to host for a second year;
he recruited Hernan Cattaneo as his co-resident at the club,
which has a capacity of 3,500 guests.
With the success of Tranceport and the mix compilations
he created for GU, he released two DJ Mixes known as Perfecto
Presents: Travelling and Perfecto Presents: Another World,
both released in 2000 as double disc albums. The compilation
traces Paul's hip-hop sense as well as underground disco,
and includes Quiver's remix of Led Zeppelin's "Babe I'm
Gonna Leave You" with a passive rock feel to it. The
compilation sold 13,000 copies at counter sales in its first
week, and over 80,000 copies were shipped to stores across
the US. While in the US he met actor Jack Nicholson at a Lakers
game; it was Paul's first Basketball game.
Paul joined Seb Fontaine and Timo Maas for Cream's event
at Nation before travelling to play at the Ministry of Sound
event at the Millennium Dome, London. He performed with The
Dreem Team, who broadcasted live on BBC Radio 1 from 1:00
am to 3:00 am.In 2001, Oakenfold took part in the first Area
Festival tour. This tour featured Incubus, Carl Cox, The Orb,
OutKast, and The Roots. He later released a new compilation
album, Perfecto Presents: Ibiza; The album features the essence
which has inspired his dance music focused on Ibiza.
Global Underground sold over 150,000 copies of Paul Oakenfold's
previous Global Underground: New York. A spokesperson for
the label revealed that in the US, demand for UK dance music
had been increasing in the past couple of years, and now made
up over two-thirds of the label's sales. The Global Underground
New York office opened in on Ninth Avenue in Manhattan. The
Mekka Electronic Music Festival, otherwise known as the "electronic
Lollapallooza" took place in ten cities in the US and
Canada during August and September, including New York, Los
Angeles, Toronto and San Francisco. The event featured Paul,
Armand van Helden, De La Soul, LTJ Bukem, Josh Wink, Derrick
Carter, Roni Size, Deep Dish, BT, Crystal Method, Carl Craig
and Überzone. Since Oakenfold had been working in the
American market for a long time especially during 2001, he
moved to Los Angeles to work on film soundtracks and to intensify
his DJing commitments Stateside. In 2001 he created the soundtrack
for the film Swordfish, Swordfish: The Album contained a transformation
of "Planet Rock" into a seven minute breakbeat trance
anthem. Most of the tracks are collaborations with Andy Gray,
the remix of N.E.R.D.'s "Lapdance" which gained
total notability from other tracks. The soundtrack was produced
under Village Roadshow and Warner Bros. and distributed through
London-Sire Records. Paul recorded a track with Crazy Town
vocalist Shifty Shellshock at the end of the year for his
new album. In an interview with Rolling Stone in the US, Shellshock
said that the track known as "Starry Eyed Surprise"
was created after the pair met at a Crazy Town show.
Bunkka (2002–2004)
In 2002, Bunkka became his first official studio album when
he signed to Maverick. Bunkka is a compilation of styles which
Paul has learned to mix throughout his career; the blending
in of progressive trance with goa makes the album different
from other conventional dance album. The name Bunkka comes
from Peter Gabriel's studio in the UK, where the album was
recorded. An extended play was released featuring live versions
of four songs under Peoplesound Records. It is also Oakenfold's
best selling album to date, with sales largely exceeding 1,000,000
(1 million) copies worldwide.
The album features the vocals from singers from Jane's Addiction
vocalist Perry Farrell on "Time of Your Life" and
Shifty Shellshock of Los Angeles rock and rap band Crazy Town
on "Starry Eyed Surprise" with popular Ice Cube
on "Get Em Up", Tricky and Nelly Furtado on "The
Harder They Come". The album contains the appearances
of Asher D of So Solid Crew on "Ready Steady Go"
and Grant Lee Philips, founder of the 90's Los Angeles rock
band, Grant Lee Buffalo, is also included as part of the disc
with Carmen Rizzo's version of his song "Motion".
Bunkka also provided the start to three new artists, Carla
Werner on the smashing single "Southern Sun", Tiff
Lacey on "Hypnotized" and Emiliana Torrini on "Hold
Your Hand"; Hunter S. Thompson's spoken words are provided
on "Nixon's Spirit". The world-renowned Pakistani
musician Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's composition was adapted in
an electronic version on the tracks "Zoo York".
In 2002, Q magazine named Paul in their list of the "50
Bands To See Before You Die". In 2002, Oakenfold revealed
he had struggled with dyslexia as a child and announced his
intention to help dyslexic children.
In 2002, Paul remixed David Arnold's widely popular "James
Bond Theme", the song was released under Warner Bros.
Records and was followed by the album's next two singles after
"Starry Eyed Surprise", "Ready Steady Go"
and "Southern Sun". "Southern Sun" with
Carla Werner was first issued as a B-Side of "Ready Steady
Go" until it was included on Tiësto's In Search
of Sunrise 3: Panama compilation with his own remix of the
song."Southern Sun" became a smashing hit as it
was then released as the A-Side of "Ready Steady Go"
in mid-2002, "Ready Steady Go" was featured in Saab
commercials, the EA Sports game Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2003,
THQ game Juiced, the pilot for the television program Las
Vegas, NASCAR theme song for 2006, It appears in the video
game series Dance Dance Revolution in DDR Ultramix for the
Xbox, Fastlane episode "Dogtown" and the Alias episode
"Snowman". In an earlier episode, "The Imposter",
of Radio Free Roscoe, a 2005 series on The N, a character
Travis Strong DJed to the song, acting as if it were his own.
It has more recently been used in the film adaptation of Anthony
Horowitz's novel Stormbreaker, The Bourne Identity and it
was reproduced with Korean lyrics for the movie Collateral,
the song has also been used during the performances of extreme
freestyle water ski jumpers, the song later became the theme
song for the TV Show TRL Italy since 2003 until 2005. An EP
of "The Harder They Come" was released on Perfecto
and featured other works from Oakenfold and other artists.
On the Creamfields event, in 2002 at Speke Airfield DJ's like
Paul Oakenfold, Seb Fontaine, Paul Van Dyk performed along
Dave Clarke, Jon Carter, Richie Hawtin and Felix Da Housecat,
the event also featured live appearances from Basement Jaxx,
All Saints, Death In Vegas and Moloko. In 2003 he released
the fourth single of his album, Hypnotized which became successful
enough to be included on Paul's next compilation from the
"Perfecto Presents..." series, "Perfecto Presents:
Great Wall" included the Deepsky remix of the song as
well as tracks like Motorcycle's "As the Rush Comes",
Björk's "Pagan Poetry", UNKLE's remix of Ian
Brown's "F.E.A.R." and Paul's recent remix of Madonna's
"Hollywood" song.
With the event of Creamfields that took place in 2004, Oakenfold
felt inspired enough to release a compilation of songs he
played during the event as well as tracks influenced by the
environment and the vibe of deejays like Paul Van Dyk, Armin
Van Buuren, Ferry Corsten, Judge Jules, Fergie, Tall Paul,
Eddie Halliwell, Chris Lawrence, Adam Sheridan, Shan, and
Alex Kidd at the Cream/Goodgreef & Mixmag Arena.
Greatest Hits and Side Work
(2005–2007)
In 2005, Oakenfold was contacted by the car manufacturer
Toyota to create a free promotional CD available from aygo.com
to promote a new Toyota car. The CD contained only seven songs
which he worked on with Ian Green; the album was entitled
Feed Your Mind.
During Paul's career he has remixed a variety of songs from
Madonna, like "What It Feels Like For A Girl", "Hollywood",
"American Life", "Sorry" and later in
2008 "Give It 2 Me" from her album Hard Candy, Paul
went on tour with Madonna for two months opening her presentation
in the Confessions Tour, previously he had supported her in
2004 at Slane Castle in Ireland.[41] His sets lasted for an
hour and a half, followed by Madonna's two-hour show.
Oakenfold remixed the Transformers theme as the theme song
for then-new TV series, Transformers Cybertron. He also contributed
with his single "Beautiful Goal" for the 2005 video
game. His single Ready Steady Go was composed for the 2005
video game Juiced. His second studio album, A Lively Mind
was released on June 6, 2006. Receiving unsuccessful reviews,
the first single "Faster Kill Pussycat", a collaboration
with the actress Brittany Murphy, was released on May 2, 2006;
the second single was "Sex 'n' Money". Both songs
stand out from the rest, as most of the album has a more trance-like
feel. Gregory Jeffries from Allmusic stated the album might
have been in the nominated albums of dance music in 1997 but
not in 2006, as the album has guitars with disco sounds that
might be only appealing to trance addicts.
With the film scores and soundtrack productions he did for
$90,000,000, he decided in 2007 to play live at the Boston
Pops which created a piece of orchestral music with electronic
music. The event took place in Miami for 10,000 people with
a 75-piece orchestra, he wrote a piece of music which he described
as "difficult". In 2007 he was nominated to 2 International
Dance Music Awards (IDMA) at the Winter Music Conference (WMC),
Best Underground Dance Track for "Faster Kill Pussycat"
and Best Full Length DJ Mix CD for "A Lively Mind".
2007 saw the publication of the first official biography of
Paul Oakenfold, written by Richard Norris of The Grid and
Beyond the Wizard's Sleeve fame. Paul Oakenfold: The Authorised
Biography was published by Bantam Press on 24 September 2007.
Oakenfold is said to be a big fan of Chelsea F.C.. It was
thought that he played a zombie in the movie 28 Weeks Later
however this is incorrect, he was offered the opportunity
but turned it down. He also scored the soundtrack for the
2007 Japanese CGI anime film Vexille.
Greatest Hits & Remixes, Vol. 1In October 2007 he released
his Greatest Hits & Remixes, Vol. 1 which features his
best performance tracks. Oakenfold was a judge for the 6th
and 7th annual Independent Music Awards to support independent
artists. In October 2007 Oakenfold also remixed Britney Spears
number one hit Gimme More, which became the lead remix off
its release. Paul Oakenfold has created more than one hundred
remixes, and has sold over 5,000,000 (5 million) long plays.
More recently, he has been touring in British universities
to promote his new album and autobiography. The tribute album
was released in November in the United Kingdom with a 2 CD
set and a 3 CD version with the same number of songs. It was
also released in the United States with only 20 tracks in
one CD; it featured some remixes from the original version
but it also included, two new remixes which are; Justin Timberlake's
"My Love" song and his remix of Hans Zimmer's "Jack
Theme Suite" which was used for the film Pirates of the
Caribbean: At World's End. Exclusive 2008 Remixes from Paul
were also included from Mark Ronson's "Stop Me"
song, Radiohead's "Everything In Its Right Place",
Eisbaer from Grovezone, "Missing" by Everything
But The Girl and a remix of Paul's own "Southern Sun".
Releases with Catalog#: UL 1602-2 included a DVD of live show
and documentary. The compilation consists of tracks which
influenced his career and made his personality what it is
nowadays, with artists like The Cure, Happy Mondays, The Stone
Roses, Massive Attack, U2, Olive, The Smashing Pumpkins, Madonna,
& Underworld.
Pop Killer and Film Scoring
(2008–Present)
In 2008, he released the last single from his last studio
album, Not Over. This was a new version of the tracks known
as "Not Over Yet" which he produced while working
with Osborne as Grace and in collaboration with Ryan Tedder
from One Republic. The song was also covered by Klaxons as
"It's Not Over Yet". In 2008, Oakenfold worked on
film scores for various films and television programs such
as Californication, The Heavy, Fever, The Bourne Identity,
and Speed Racer. In mid-July Paul ended his world tour promoting
his greatest hits album. He also joined Madonna again in her
Sticky & Sweet Tour in London, Santiago, Buenos Aires,
Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.. After touring, he began his
residency in Las Vegas on August 30, where he plans to release
a new album titled "Decade of Dance" and write the
score for the film Humboldt Park. In the fall of 2008, he
started his first Resident DJ position in the United States.
"Paul Oakenfold Presents: Perfecto Las Vegas" was
conceptualized specifically for Rain Nightclub, the legendary
25,000-square-foot (2,300 m2) nightclub and concert venue
at the Palms Casino Resort known for its special effects and
international headliner acts. From July to August 2009, Paul
will again open Madonna's concerts from the Sticky & Sweet
Tour on Europe. In 2009 Paul's third studio album was announced
to be actually named, "Pop Killer", and not "Decade
of Dance" as the article from The Sun stated.
He also worked with Madonna on her third Greatest Hits collection
Celebration and her final release with Warner Bros. Records.
The first single was released on August 3, 2009, it is also
titled "Celebration", it was produced by Oakenfold.
He also remixed a past demo "It's So Cool" from
the American Life, and it is included as a bonus track on
iTunes.
Paul Oakenfold has just remixed a song called Firefly which
is from the latest Matt Goss album called Gossy.