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With a turn of serendipity, I was watching the classic
film “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” and heard
the infamous lines that appear in "Une Very Stylish
Fille" off of Sacrebleu
by Dimitri From Paris—“How
do I look?” says Audrey Hepburn after turning herself
from a just awoken state to a trend setting Hollywood
goddess, by which George Peppard replies, “Very
good. I must say I’m amazed.”
A few days later I learned that not only was Dimitri releasing a double CD,
Dimitri from Paris Returns to the Playboy
Mansion, but that his U.S. tour would
bring him to Denver for the first time.
This double-set release is a first for Dimitri. "PartyTime"
is a set of remixes dedicated to his dance fans where
he’s taken his love of vintage soul, disco and
R&B and waved his magical wand and poof! We have
a rich array of booty waving and body swaying “PartyTime”
tracks that bring new life to the “old fashioned,
heart warming soup.” Chefs and their dishes range
from DJ Fudge’s “Liv &
Love,” the tinkling cowbell of Young & Company’s
“I Like It,” the bongo madness of Lorraine
Johnson’s “The More I Get, The More I Want,”
and the get-this-party-started beauty from Jamiroquai,
“Cosmic Girl.”
But that’s not all folks. We have more decadence
in store. That’s right, if you act right now you
too can get down and dirty to “SexyTime”
(insert Borat’s accent here), the second CD in
the Playboy package. Here, Dimitri ventures into a stylish
mood he’s not often afforded in the club; the
ballad, slow groove that plays in his own man-of-the-world
pad. And for this, he turned to the masters of the seduction
craft, including Marin Gaye, Teddy Pendergrass and Barry
White.
Talking from Paris, Dimitri told me of his overflowing
dance card, which included a stop at this year’s
WMC, along with gigs in Miami, New York, St. Martin,
Boston, and other firsts, including Coachella and his
date this Saturday in Denver at Beta Nightclub.
We began our chat talking about how music has expanded
and diversified not only in what’s available from
artists and bands, but how it’s being played in
clubs.
Kaffeine Buzz: Dance music went through this
era about 10 plus years ago where everyone wanted to
be or thought they were a DJ. Then that kind of waned,
and now we're back to a place where its not just electronic
music fans that hit the dance clubs, but there’s
a diverse, crisscross of music via mashups that’s
drawing in people to dance clubs that host a mixture
of all kinds of music--rock, hip-hop, indie, or whatever—all
in one night.
Dimitri: I totally agree. When I started DJing, and
that was 25 years ago, that's how it was. Whatever it
takes, as long as people have fun and there's a variety
of music. The more variety the better it is. People
got into these niches for a while, "Oh no, I'm
a tech-house guy" or "Oh no, I'm a drum and
bass guy." Well, you'd hear the same style all
night and I would find that a bit boring. But the crowd
wouldn't really let you drift away. If you play something
that you're not supposed to, like if I was a house DJ
and I started playing hip-hop, people would be, "Hey!
I don't want to hear hip-hop!"
Like you said, the boundaries of styles are all sort
of meshed together. I think it's more fun. It's more
fun because I'm digging out Motown records to play my
sets and people are enjoying them, and I'm playing them
without fear that I'm gonna break the vibe of the format.
I think it's much more exciting and I think there's
much more room to experiment as well.
KB: You're known for pulling things from archives
and putting a new spin on them that comes from your
own creative mind. How do you go about getting your
hands on the masters for some of those older tracks?
Dimitri: You don't actually access the masters. That
is very rare. When you have the masters, it means someone
has opened the door for them. In most cases, people
don't ask you to remix a song, but you still want to
give it a fresh twist, so you use whatever is available.
Recently I've been doing re-edits and fresher versions
of some Motown songs after finding some Karaoke CDs.
KB: Wow. Really?
Dimitri: Yes. They're the original songs. They're not
fake covers. They were remixed, I don't know by whom,
but the sound is similar to the original but you get
to have the instrumental version and the vocal version,
and then the vocals by themselves. So it gives you a
bunch of stuff to play around with, especially from
very old music from the '60s. It amounts to pretty much
having the master. Back then they didn't have 24-track
or 28-track. They had like two-track and four-track,
so you're able to have the original version as it was
recorded and you're able to separate parts that you'd
never heard in a song before. So, whatever I can lay
my hands on, I use it. And with this set, it was 20
volumes worth, so there were a lot of things to play
with.
Recently I've been remixing and re-editing a lot of
old things because, like you said, there's more room
to play a variety of things.
KB: How much time did it take you to go back
and coordinate all the different tracks that you have
on this double set, and then decide how you wanted the
music to flow from beginning to end. It seems like it
was pretty involved.
Dimitri: It took forever! (laughing) This had to be
the CD that took the most time to get together. I started
early September, so the music thing was finished late
December. But then there were other people working on
the clearance. Once you've got a list of tracks you
want to use, then you're hoping that people will let
you use them. Everyday it was a back and forth thing,
"Okay this one you can have, this one you can't
have." So then I try to get this other one and
call the guy, who knows a guy, who knows a guy.
In some cases, knowing the right person really helped.
In some cases it was a dead end, no matter what. Then
the deadline was nearing and I still had things that
needed clearing and some songs had to be taken out.
It does take a lot of time. It's hard to try to keep
things as close as possible to what you had in your
mind.
That's what's been the hardest thing for me with this
CD because usually I'm lucky to get everything all at
once. On this one we had quite a few let downs, so it
was always figuring out the replacement track that's
not worse than the one you originally chose. There's
no plan B. Everything has to be an A.
KB: Well, I just love that the first track
on the CD is Jay Kay (Jamiroquai) to lead everything
off.
Dimitri: Thank you. (laughing) I was so happy that
he let me use it, which was another bit of groundbreaking
news for me. That was one of the biggest smiles we got
when he said "yes."
KB: What are they up to these days? I haven't
heard anything from them in a while.
Dimitri: I know! They've been kind of quiet. And I
want to hear more of them.
KB: Well, maybe this will spark them to get
off their butts and start making music again.
Dimitri: Yeah, who knows.
KB: Even though these are original tracks that
DJs can get from other places, do you ever make your
remixed versions available for DJs as singles?
Dimitri: In this particular case it was difficult to
get the unmixed rights. The major labels, they don't
want the indie labels to get the unmixed rights because
they want to go on selling the music on iTunes. What
they will do is let you have it on vinyl, because they
believe vinyl is a niche, a small market. In this case
there will be two vinyl double packs with some of the
songs that are on the two CDs. When I say some, it's
because some didn't let us use the rights on vinyl.
So there are a total of 16 songs out of the 35 songs
in the CD package.
Sometimes I just make a copy of a song for a DJ friend,
but it has to be a trust affair. I need to know that
they're not going to do anything dodgy with it.
There has always been the DJ network, and obviously
the Internet has helped us a lot. People send us tracks
over instant messaging or You Send It from the other
side of the world. There's a song that I put on the
vinyl [version] because it wasn't ready when I did the
CD. A DJ friend of mine out of Brazil literally sent
it over the net to the cutting room 15 minutes before
they were cutting it. He had finished it a few hours
before and had gone to bed, but forgot to send it. (laughing)
I was like, "Wake up! They need it now!"
But that's the thing with the DJ network. He can send
me over something he did and I can play it in my set
that night.
KB: That's the beauty with the digital era
of music; the access to music that you can get a hold
of from all over the world.
Dimitri: That's the good side. The bad side is that
more stores are closing down. But people do have more
access to music even if they're not living in a big
city where those stores exist. It's the good and the
bad. It's hard for me because I always had access to
those record stores and it was more fun to go there.
There was a whole dimension to it. You could meet your
friends, or you go in to buy one thing and you walk
out with something else that's even better that you
didn't know about before. When you're online, you have
to know what you're looking for. But now you can get
stuff sent to you by your friends, where before it was
impossible. You could hear them over the phone, and
that was the best that you could do.
KB: (laughing) Oh yeah, I remember doing that
a lot. That's so funny. "Hey, you gotta listen
to this 8-track!" There's something extremely exciting
about nostalgia, like going thrift shopping is like
a treasure hunt.
Dimitri: I love that too. I'm always digging through
stuff, whether it's old stereo equipment or music, everything
from a purer time is what I like. America is good for
that because you've got those garage sales and thrift
stores that we don't have so much of here.
KB: Oh really?
Dimitri: Yeah, the country's a little different. People
treat things as antiques or they don't care about them.
KB: Well, you've stuck with the Playboy Mansion
theme for like, 12 years now, is that right?
Dimitri: Well, more like 10.
KB: What has kept you going back to it?
Dimitri: It's back by public demand, really. (laughing)
It was this sort of organic process and it all happened
by chance. I met those people from Playboy because they
happened to be sponsoring the club where me and my friends
were doing a party. That's where the idea came to do
a CD with Playboy involved. That CD became a huge success
for me and really put me on the map for international
DJing.
To this day, whether it's Japan or Austria or Miami
or Australia, there's always someone asking me, "Are
you going to play something from Playboy?!!" This
has been going on for 10 years. And I'm tired of playing
those same songs, you know? They like those songs, and
who am I to tell them otherwise. It just feels like,
"Okay we've played those songs enough. Let's move
on." But they wouldn't want to hear anything else.
So I figured, why not give it another go.
Also, Defected [record label], whom I've been doing
a lot of compilations and we have a strong relationship
with, did this partnership with Playboy that had nothing
to do with me, actually. So it was like, "Oh, you
guys got together with Playboy." So I thought I
could to my part on it.
Thirdly, there were people that would come up to me
and say, "Oh, I made out to your music with my
girlfrind/boyfriend" or whatever. Yhis is dance
music but they're treating it like something that's
smooth and sexy. And we didn't think it was, so I figured
why not do a mix CD of ballads and slow songs, which
is something I really like, but you never get to play
that in the club. So it gave me a chance to do that.
The favorite part of the CD is the slower songs, and
a lot of people seem to like it as well. I mean, you've
got the usual suspects like Barry White and Marvin Gaye.
No one does it better.
I'm curious to see what kind of feedback I get. It's
unusual that you get a mix CD of ballads and slow songs.
Usually that type of thing is an upbeat affair.
KB: Well, we're looking forward to your first
gig here in Denver. The place you're playing is a new
club that opened a bit ago called Beta. It's run by
the guys from Beatport, so they know what they're doing.
Dimitri: The first time playing in a city is usually
pretty good because people make an effort to come out.
They're not like, "Oh he's been here. He'll come
back." But we usually get a lot of really motivated
people and it makes for a good party. So I'm really
looking forward to it.
Return to the Playboy Mansion from
Dimitri From Paris, released just this week, is available
on Defected. Dimitri comes to Denver Saturday, April
26 at Beta Nightclub in Denver.
www.myspace.com/djdimitrifromparis
www.dimitrifromparis.com
-Kim Owens, April 25, 2008
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