‘WHEN BANDS LIKE DEPECHE

MODE COME UP TO YOU, YOU

START FREAKING OUT'

Wild horses

Sandra Marron talks to seminal techno producer, remixer and DJ CJ Bolland as he guests at Relentless

J Bolland is a very busy tnan. [)Jing.

collaborating. remixing and even recently

tttrning his hand to screenwriting. The Yorkshire-born. Belgium-based lad is a one man creative machine who shows no signs of slowing down anytime soon. Bolland started his career in music at the tender age of IS when his demo tracks were aired on the hugely influential Liaisons l)urigvn'tisr's radio show where the Belgian new wave body music scene was being hugely championed. A listener sent a recording of one of his demo tracks to the techno label R&S and the rest is a pretty much a 15-year-old boy‘s wet dream. He was signed tip straight away by R&S. and over the following five years he released some of techno‘s most revered tunes. including the floorftller ‘l)o That Dance‘ and seminal classic ‘llorsepower‘.

Living in Belgium at that time was the proverbial. ‘right time and place' for Bolland and he has often wondered if things would have been different on the music front if he had remained in Yorkshire as a child. ‘I am sttre I would have been into music because I was a little freak. l was always into this electronic sound and it was quite apparent I would be doing something with it.‘ he explains. ‘Whether or not I would have got a break is something else. It might have been a bigger break. we don‘t know. btit it happened when l was l5 here. I suddenly got approached by this record company R&S. which. at that period of time ended tip being the biggest. freshest thing on the scene and l

was caught tip right in the middle of it.‘ He adds with a chuckle: ‘I know I atn pretty happy I don‘t live in Middlesbrough.‘

After leaving R848. Bolland had a pretty dark period where he and his newfound record label PolyGram ran into trouble over creative issues. He looks back with

sadness. ‘We never really focused on the charts or

whatever and did the music we loved and that was considered to be underground. Then this mainstream crossover thing happened and suddenly all the rules changed.‘ The change in rules meant that the record company wanted his records to be more commercial. It culminated in Bolland recording lots of tracks and in the end releasing none of them. However it was during this time that he recorded a string of remixes for such luminaries as Tori Amos. The Prodigy. ()rbital and Depeche Mode. ‘I can‘t even remember half of them.‘ jokes Bolland. ‘I did so many at a certain point in time. I must have done about a hundred.‘ He looks back at remixing Depeche Mode with both joy and despair. 'I was a fan of them. yet that was also the one I was most disappointed with. It kind of freaked tne out because I ttsed to remix people I had never really heard of.They were my heroes basically and when bands like Depeche Mode come up to you. you start freaking ottt. It was alright btit it is definitely not the one that I am tnost proud of.’

CJ Bolland guests at Relentless at Sub Club, Glasgow, Fri 23 Mar

Access Luke Slater showcases his considerable grasp on the electronic form, running through the best in techno and electro with a few leftfield asides. Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh, Fri 76 Mar.

Subculture Call him Bobby Peru. call him Paul Woolford (pictured), house music‘s man of the moment swaps Leeds’ Back To Basics for a night with Harri at our own institution. Sub Club, Glasgow, Sat 7 7 Mar.

Superfly A half century of British teenage culture is being celebrated at the Superfly sixth birthday. Be you a Teddy, a Mod, a Rocker or a Baggy, get yourself down to the Woodside and represent your tribe. Woodside Social Club, Glasgow, Sat 7 7 Mar.

Saturday Circus, Spitfires Social Club and Jerk Alert Red launches three new nights as they gear up their new DJ roster. So expect seedy comedy (17 Mar), indie (20 Mar) and a youth club discotheque (21 Mar) respectively. Red. Edinburgh, Sat 7 7 Mar, Tue 20 Mar & Wed 27 Mar.

Relentless Once a tweaker, always a tweaker. British-born/Belgium-based master of the 303 CJ Bolland enters the Subby for another night of unrelenting vigor. Sub Club, Glasgow, Fri 23 Mar.

Club Noir Scotland’s burlesque shindig launches in Edinburgh once again. Let's hope the night of decadent sauciness has finally found a permanent home on the east coast. Studio 24, Edinburgh, Sat 24 Mar.

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