| DJ Sets ::Sasha (Alexanda Coe)
N0. 36 RATED DJ IN THE WORLD ON THE
DJ LIST
Sasha (born as Alexander Paul Coe on
4 September 1969 in Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales), is a Welsh DJ
and record producer. Sasha began his career playing acid house
dance music in the late 1980s, and became a central figure
in the development and popularisation of electronic dance
music. He partnered with fellow DJ John Digweed in 1993, touring
internationally and producing a series of mixes (compilations
of other artists work played in a continuous fashion). Through
their track selection and mixing techniques, Sasha and Digweed
were instrumental in the evolution of progressive trance and
house music.
Sasha has produced multiple UK-charting singles and has remixed
tracks for artists such as Madonna and The Chemical Brothers.
His remix of Felix da Housecat's "Watching Cars Go By"
earned him a 2004 Grammy nomination. Sasha's remixing and
production often combine electronic music genres, making it
difficult for critics to pinpoint his musical style, including
on his debut album of original work, Airdrawndagger.
After achieving success as a producer and DJ, Sasha worked
with younger DJs and producers such as Brian Transeau and
James Zabiela, influencing their musical styles and techniques.
His use of live audio engineering equipment helped popularise
technological innovations among DJs who formerly relied on
records and turntables. Despite the changing trends in electronic
dance music, Sasha continues to perform in large dance venues
and is currently[when] on an intercontinental tour of large
European and United States venues. In 2007, he formed a record
label with Renaissance Records called emFire, which will be
the exclusive outlet for his new music.
Early Years
Sasha was born in Bangor, Wales on September 4, 1969, but
spent most of his youth with his mother in the Welsh town
of Penarlâg. Sasha's early musical taste was primarily
Top 40 pop music like The The and The Police. After an "idyllic
childhood", he passed the entrance exam for Epsom College
at age 17. However, he did not like Epsom and left before
completing his Advanced Level (an academic qualification in
England, Wales and Northern Ireland). Instead of continuing
his schooling, Sasha moved to Bangor to live with his father
and stepmother. Sasha's stepmother forced him to take piano
lessons which, although he disliked them at the time, Sasha
ultimately found to be beneficial to his music career.
Sasha became aware of electronic dance music in 1988 at The
Haçienda, a Manchester dance venue. Drawn to the rough
sound of acid house music and the rebellious attitude he associated
with it, he visited Manchester weekly and soon moved to nearby
Disley. Sasha purchased many acid house records and began
to teach himself how to mix. A local DJ at a club Sasha frequented
announced that he was looking for other DJs to travel with
him on a regional tour. Sasha volunteered and made his first
live appearance in nearby Stockport. Sasha recalled of his
debut, "I'd never even touched a Technics: I thought
the pitch control was the volume, I didn't even know where
to plug my headphones in! I'm sure I was absolutely horrendous."
Sasha soon found himself in debt due to low-paying performances
and the many records he bought. To finance his record collection,
he performed at illegal warehouse raves in the Blackburn and
Blackpool areas. With the assistance of another local DJ,
Jon DaSilva, Sasha secured work at The Haçienda, where
he learned key mixing (matching melodic keys) from DaSilva
and refined his ability to beatmatch (to synchronize the beats
of two simultaneously playing records). Though he enjoyed
playing at The Haçienda, in 1990 Sasha left for a club
called Shelley's Laserdrome in Stoke-on-Trent. There, he established
part of his signature sound by mixing euphoric trance music
with Italian piano house and emotional a cappellas. Because
of his increased popularity and visibility at Shelley's, Mixmag
featured Sasha on its first cover, under the headline "SASHA
MANIA - THE FIRST DJ PINUP". While continuing to DJ,
Sasha began to produce several of his own dance tracks. This,
he later noted, was contrary to the career paths of many successful
DJs, for whom it was more common to start out as producers.
Upon signing a recording contract, he also set up an entire
recording studio at the same time, which led to a "painful
learning curve" at the outset. He released his first
single, "Appolonia", under the name BM:Ex with producer
Tom Frederikse on Union City Recordings. After DJing at Shelley's
for several years, Sasha left his position because of increasing
gang violence in and around the club. As a result of his growing
reputation, Sasha was offered work in several London and Australian
clubs. He accepted, instead, a spot in the DJ rotation at
Renaissance.
Later in 1993, Sasha produced "Together", his first
single under the name Sasha. "Together", which he
produced with Danny Campbell for Pete Tong's FFRR, peaked
on the UK Singles Chart at #57. With this success, Sasha began
a series of records for Deconstruction Records with the singles
"Higher Ground" and "Magic" (for which
Digweed produced a remix) and The Qat Collection with Frederikse
and vocalist Sam Mollison.
Digweed Era
In early 1993, Sasha partnered with fellow Renaissance DJ
John Digweed. Sasha and Digweed honed their DJing skills,
often performing in tandem and focusing on track selection
and technical mixing abilities. Renaissance was pleased with
their performances, and had the duo compile the triple-CD
mix album Renaissance - The Mix Collection, releasing it on
the club's own Renaissance Records label. The album featured
tracks from such artists as Leftfield, Fluke, and 2 Bad Mice,
and original productions and remixes from Sasha and Digweed.
The Mix Collection was released soon after Sasha's departure
from Renaissance in April 1994. Following his success at Renaissance,
Sasha was again featured on Mixmag with the tagline "SON
OF GOD", though he resented the accolade. After touring
together for two years, the duo became "true superstars"
with the release of their double CD Northern Exposure on mega-label
Ministry of Sound. Around this time, Sasha began a recurring
mentorship and partnership with fellow producer BT with the
album Ima. As well as providing guidance for BT, Sasha produced
a "euphoric" and "introspective" 42-minute
rendition of the album which formed the centrepiece of the
UK release and appeared as a "bonus" second disc
on the US release. He continued to advance his own production
work by pairing with vocalist Maria Nayler to produce the
single "Be as One", which reached #17 on the UK
singles chart.
In 1997, Ministry of Sound released Northern Exposure 2,
Sasha and Digweed's next double-CD entry in their Northern
Exposure series. To support the album, the duo toured internationally,
and in the process helped to define the sound of trance music
in the late 1990s. After extensive touring, Digweed and Sasha
took up residency at New York City's famous Twilo nightclub,
where they would DJ for the entire night. In 1998, the two
released separate mix albums on the Boxed label, as part of
the Global Underground series: Digweed's Global Underground
006: Sydney, and Sasha's Global Underground 009: San Francisco,
which drew from his experience touring on the West Coast of
the United States. Both DJs formed their own record labels
that year: Sasha created Excession Records and Digweed started
Bedrock Records. Excession released fewer than ten records,
the last in 1998; the experience, however, led Sasha to found
the management agency "Excession: The Agency LTD."
Excession remains a booking agency for many DJs, including
Hybrid, Nick Warren, and Steve Lawler.
Sasha reached a more mainstream audience with his remixes
of Madonna's "Ray of Light" and GusGus's "Purple"
for those artists' single releases. His success in pop music
led him to score the music for the PlayStation video game
Wipeout 3. In 1999, Sasha and Digweed reunited in the studio
to record their third edition in the Northern Exposure series,
Northern Exposure: Expeditions. In addition to mixing and
DJing, Sasha joined Charlie May of Spooky to produce the Xpander
EP, the title track of which many clubbers still view as "one
of the greatest trance tracks of all time". He used the
title track as a centerpiece for Global Underground 013: Ibiza,
his second Global Underground release. Sasha continued his
collaborations with BT on the track "Ride", which
was released as a single on Yoshitoshi Records and on BT's
Movement in Still Life. Soon after, he worked with Underworld's
Darren Emerson on the single "Scorchio", Sasha's
first charting single in four years. In between touring and
producing original material, Sasha and Digweed released the
mix album Communicate in 2000, prompting them to temporarily
leave their Twilo residency for a promotional tour of the
United States. Communicate had mixed reviews: Spin stated
that despite a "few stellar moments, [Communicate] is
ultimately a let-down". LAUNCHcast, too, described Communicate
as "boring and lackluster...stalled in a monochrome world
of dead beats".
During the late 1990s, the increased popularity and visibility
of "superstar DJs" led to the creation of superclubs
such as Liverpool's Cream and Sheffield's Gatecrasher. By
2003, however, electronic dance music clubs languished. The
Guardian's pop critic, Alexis Petridis, attributed the "terminal
decline" of dance music to its over-commercialisation
by big-name DJs, such as Sasha, and to their demands for increased
fees for performances. Though dance music had been declared
"dead" by many in the dance industry, Sasha continued
to tour—despite the closing of many superclubs, including
his resident club Twilo in May 2001.
Delta Heavy Tour
After the closing of Twilo, Sasha and Digweed embarked on
their ambitious Delta Heavy Tour of the United States in 2002.
Featuring veteran tour producer Kevin Lyman and opening act
Jimmy Van M, the tour covered 31 cities and played to 85,000
people. The appearances, complete with laser shows and video
production, were more akin to rock concerts than to typical
DJ events. This development was new to the DJing scene, and
compelled other DJs to host similar concerts. A DVD of performance
highlights, interviews, and behind-the-scenes footage was
released as Sasha & John Digweed present Delta Heavy by
System Recordings. Ben Turner, creator of the DanceStar awards,
retrospectively described the Delta Heavy tour as "a
landmark moment for electronic music". Though the duo
of Sasha and Digweed never explicitly split up, demanding
schedules and frequent independent touring prevented any substantial
collaboration for a long period after Delta Heavy.
Post-Digweed
During the latter half of 2002, Sasha collaborated with
big beat artist Junkie XL on the single "Breezer".
Junkie XL, along with Charlie May, also assisted Sasha on
his first album of original material, Airdrawndagger. Airdrawndagger
took several years to produce due to Sasha's desire for the
album to be "as near to perfection as possible."
That March, Sasha suffered a perforated eardrum in a traffic
accident, further delaying the album's production. Though
the accident temporarily impaired his hearing, he drew inspiration
for the album from his ordeal. Airdrawndagger was finally
released, in August 2002, to much fanfare. However, the album
was "received with a lot of head scratching", according
to Sasha, which he attributed to its unexpected mix of genres.
The album did not feature the heavier "club sound"
of Sasha's previous mix albums, bearing a closer resemblance
to ambient music. Airdrawndagger generally received favorable
reviews, though critics noted that it was not as consistent
and well produced as his DJ mixes. Sasha himself described
it as "a selfish, slightly self-indulgent record",
though he maintains that he is "happy with it to this
day". Some critics, however, called it "sleepy";
E!Online described it as being "more in league with Yanni
than Moby". To encourage listeners' interest, Sasha held
an amateur remix contest for the album's first single, "Wavy
Gravy". Due to the contest's success, Sasha released
all the tracks from Airdrawndagger on his website, so that
fans could download and create their own versions.
After the release of Airdrawndagger, Sasha took the young
DJ James Zabiela "under his wing". He introduced
Zabiela to the CDJ1000 turntable, and signed Zabiela to the
Excession talent agency. The two toured the United States
together, which extended Sasha's influence to already-popular
American DJs such as Kimball Collins.
In 2004, Sasha signed with Global Underground to produce
another mix album. However, he found the process of creating
a standard mix album unrewarding, and decided to apply his
production and DJing skills to a mix compilation that resembled
a "real" album—that is, one featuring original
material. Sasha's next studio album, Involver, was "a
fusion of mix album and production record", consisting
entirely of Sasha's reworkings of tracks by other artists."I
tried to take all the separate sounds to all the tracks [and
recombine them]", he later explained, "and it allowed
me to mix the tracks together on a much deeper level."
He accomplished this by sequencing the album using Ableton
Live and Logic Pro. Ableton Live is a music loop-based software
package that Sasha uses to engineer tracks in real-time, whereas
he used Logic Pro primarily for premeditated edits to audio
tracks.
In 2005, Sasha produced his next album, Fundacion NYC, based
on his nights DJing in New York at the Crobar club. Fundacion
NYC received positive reviews for its originality, though
JIVE Magazine found it "too complicated for the ear".
Sasha is pleased with the album, and plans to make a series
of Fundacion albums. The next year, Sasha released 10,000
copies of a June 2006 DJ set for sale using Instant Live,
making him the first DJ to use Instant Live's licensing and
publishing services. In August 2007, Sasha announced the formation
of his record label, Emfire, which will be the exclusive outlet
for his new material in both vinyl and digital formats. Its
first release was"COMA", a collaborative track by
a group of the same name which features Sasha, Barry Jamieson,
Charlie May, and Duncan Forbes. While continuing to regularly
DJ, Sasha began work on another Involver mix and the next
Fundacion mix. Sasha's Invol2ver was released in September
2008.
Back With John Digweed
Though frequent performing kept them apart for several years,
Sasha and Digweed announced that they would reunite for a
few Australian performances. In November 2006, the duo performed
at several venues, including Sydney, Brisbane, and Melbourne
as well as numerous tour dates throughout 2007. In 2008, Sasha
and Digweed kicked off an American tour with a performance
at the Winter Music Conference. The duo played at mainly larger
venues on the weekends and smaller (750.1000 people) shows
on weekdays. Sasha described their music as "driving
and dark" with "a little throwback of Twilo sounds".
The duo now perform together annually at the Winter Music
Conference.
Sasha runs a music studio and lives in New York City, and
maintains a house in London. He brings his wife with him on
his frequent tours. Sasha finds the constant touring to be
physically tiring, though he also feels that he thrives on
it. While fans may regard Sasha to be a DJ "hero",
he is uneasy with fame; Sasha considers himself "shy
at heart" and is typically uncomfortable discussing his
personal life. He has mentioned on numerous occasions that
he is so busy with DJing and production that he rarely has
any free time. However, he enjoys watching football, cooking,
and sampling the cuisine of the countries he visits. The movie
"New Emissions of Light & Sound" won the Best
Original Score at the X-Dance Film Festival. The score was
made up of new and previously unreleased tracks.
Musical Genres
Sasha performing 8 July 2006 in Bucharest, Romania, playing
electro-house.Influenced by the early sound of The Haçienda,
Sasha began his career playing records of the rough, danceable
genre of acid house. By the early 1990s, he had moved towards
a more dark European house music style, though by the time
of his Shelley's residency he had begun to experiment more
with American house. His tastes further developed as he moved
to Renaissance, and he began to incorporate the pop-based
sounds of Moby, Spooky, and Leftfield. Sasha's second Digweed
collaboration, 1997's Northern Exposure, was described as
"epic house", and subsequent releases featured the
spacey and atmospheric progressive trance sound of artists
such as Sven Väth, Matt Darey, Tilt, and Armin Van Buuren.
A rhythmic and bassy progressive house influence distinguished
his Xpander EP and the mix albums of the late 1990s. At the
time, Sasha's music rotation included records by artists such
as Space Manoeuvres, BT, and Breeder, and Sander Kleinenberg's
single "My Lexicon".
With the 2000 album Communicate, the duo's work moved towards
a deeper and darker house music sound. The album featured
tracks by Morel, Mainline, and Jimmy Van M. The focus shifted
from the melodic themes of previous releases in favour of
a stronger emphasis on the bassline. The Delta Heavy Tour
and Airdrawndagger marked a dramatic shift in style, and reflected
the influences of relaxed ambient and breakbeat music on Sasha's
work. These influences inspired the album's strong melodies,
occasional breakbeat loops, and limited use of percussion.
Involver was primarily a fusion of the musical style of house
and ambient breakbeat music characterised by UNKLE and Lostep.
With 2005's Fundacion, Sasha's style was mostly progressive
house and electro-house music, with work by James Holden,
Tiefschwarz, and Swayzak. With his success in progressive
house, Sasha has commented that he feels people try to "pigeon-hole"
him into playing that genre. Rather than calling it progressive
house, Sasha considers his most recent material to be between
house, trance, and breaks, though he has stated that he prefers
not to associate himself with a specific genre of music.
Techniques and Technology
Sasha performing using Ableton Live.Sasha attributes his success
to his technical skill and ability to "connect with his
dancers". During performances, he balances new and experimental
material, while ensuring that "the party is still rockin".
His spontaneity carries over to studio work; he typically
has only a vague idea of the track listing when beginning
work on a new mix album. Because of this, his albums never
turn out quite as he expects. Sasha is known for applying
new music technologies to both his studio and live work. Both
Sasha and Digweed used Pro Tools on Macintosh computers when
mixing their compilation albums, and used turntables and records
during live performances. For their remixes, however, they
used an Atari ST—an obsolete personal computer from
the early 1990s—with Notator, a music sequencer used
for arranging audio tracks. For more recent albums such as
Fundacion NYC, Sasha used Ableton Live for sequencing, partially
because of Pro Tools' higher price. In live performances up
to the late 1990s, Sasha performed exclusively using records.
Before he started using the CDJ1000, a "turntable"
used for CDs, he had his digital music specially cut to acetate
records before each tour. Once he integrated CDs into his
live act, Sasha operated CDJ1000s with Allen & Heath mixers
and FireworX. While he is now known for heavily utilizing
audio technologies, Sasha was one of the last DJs to begin
using CDs in live performance.
Sasha using Ableton Live at a 15 July 2006 performance at
Panama, an Amsterdam nightclub.Sasha began DJing with Ableton
Live in his live act as well, using it in tandem with turntables.
Having explored its functionality, Sasha found that he could
perform entirely through Ableton Live. He then co-developed
the Maven controller, which he uses as a physical interface
to the Live software. (DJing with a mouse alone, he has said,
is "not going to look right or feel right".) Fundacion
NYC was the first album on which he regularly used the Maven
controller. During DJ sets, clubbers often believe Sasha is
playing new, unheard remixes; in fact, he is often playing
modifications of tracks created in Ableton. Sasha most often
uses the built-in Ableton plugins, preferring their superior
stability and performance over third party plugins. For the
first public performance of Involver material, he used a PowerBook
running Ableton, but has since shifted to a setup that includes
an iMac G5 and Ableton Live. Despite Sasha's insistence that
Ableton Live allows for greater creativity and spontaneity,
"vinyl purists" have accused him of taking much
of the challenge and mystique out of DJing by using software
in performances.
The Internet has affected how Sasha obtains and uses tracks
for performance. While he once hunted through record shops
for new records on a regular basis, Sasha now regularly receives
new tracks from producers and labels via the Internet. These
tracks, which number in the hundreds each week, are edited
by Sasha and others for use in his live DJ sets. He still
buys hundreds of records on vinyl, which are then recorded
and converted into music files prior to being edited in Ableton
by his team of engineers.
Popularity and Honors
He has been voted among the top ten DJs in the world by readers
of DJMag every year since 1997, placing first in 2000. At
the annual Winter Music Conference, Sasha has won the "Best
Techno/Trance 12" award (1999) for the Xpander EP, and
"Best CD Compilation" awards for Global Underground:
Ibiza (1999, 2000) and Involver (2004). He was also nominated
in the categories "Best European DJ" (2004) and
"Best Remixer". At the 1999 Ericsson Muzik Awards,
he received an award for "Outstanding Contributions to
Dance Music". Sasha was nominated as the top DJ in his
genre every year since 2000 in the DJ Awards, but did not
win. However, in 2008, he was selected as the best DJ in the
progressive house category.
In 2005, the Grammy committee debated whether Involver was
eligible for nomination as Best Electronic/Dance Album. The
Recording Academy decided that the album was eligible, but
Involver did not receive a nomination. Sasha did receive a
Grammy nomination for his remix of Felix da Housecat's "Watching
Cars Go By", which was featured on Involver.
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| Commercial Releases
To Buy :: Sasha
[20]
| Commercial Releases
To Buy :: Sasha &
John Digweed
[6]
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