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BILLY NASTY has been DJ'ing half his life, a career that has seen him
spin for ten of those years at a professional level. Travelling the world
as one of the most in-demand DJ's, he has performed at some of the biggest
dance events and some of the most famous venues on the globe and
consistently featured in the upper regions of DJ Magazine's annual Top 100
World DJ's. He has also enjoyed an extensive recording career, formed a
techno label that's as respected as his DJ'ing and set up his own DJ agency
to expose nurtured talent to the rest of the world.
Having spent a handful of formulative pre-House years soaking up the
rhythms of rare-groove, go-go and funk, Billy was already pursuing DJ'ing
when Housemusic exploded in the UK.
Securing a job at London's cutting-edge Zoom record shop in the
latter part of 1989 gave him a frontline job which acted as a meeting point
for figureson the evolving scene and helped him to build up his reputation
as a DJ.
At the beginning of 1990 Billy started his first residency, The
ExplodingPlastic Inevitable (with accomplice Steve Bicknell) at the
legendary BrainClub in Soho. It ran for two and a half years with Billy
playing "Nu Groove records, loops, European stuff and a lot of dance
mixes of bands like My Bloody Valentine, Happy Mondays and James";
sounds and a style that were aprecursor to the progressive house scene that
would come.
By 1991 Billy was gaining a reputation for his deck skills to the
extent that he was asked to contribute the first mix for a new CD series
entitled 'Journey's by DJ' (JDJ). Segueing together emerging artists of the
time like Leftfield and Where Eagles Prey, it displayed Billy's fresh and
developing style and even gained him an entry into the Guinness book of
records for being the first ever DJ to produce a mix set available
commercially. He alsoundertook his first studio project when he was invited
to remix St Etienne's 'Join Our Club', with whom he then accompanied to
Japan as tour DJ during 1992.
Throughout 1992-93, bootleg mix tapes of Billy's were flooding the
UK in such amounts that they were consequently acting as an agent for him.
The bookings came thick and fast with Billy securing gigs at burgeoning
nights such as Venus, Renaissance and Back2Basics as well as numerous other
clubs that welcomed the tougher progressive and tribal sound that Billy was
pushing.
At the front of the pack when Progressive House boomed in 93,
Billy's DJ'ing schedule became ever more frantic. Besides being a regular
at four of the most prominent clubs in London (The Drum Club, Open All
Hours, Final Frontier, and Strutt), he begun to reach wider audience's as
he travelled the whole of the UK and undertook an increasing amount of
European gigs.Studio adventures came with Dave Wesson (Zoom owner) as
Shi-Take - enjoying a six single career on the shop's own label - and alongside
future Chemical Brothers engineer Steve Dub as Vinyl Blair, as whom they
found support at the recently founded Hard Hands label of underground house
compatriots Leftfield.
1995 saw Billy's workload multiply ever more dramatically reaching
such a stage that he left Zoom to concentrate on his DJ'ing, which now had
him playing between 3-5 gigs a week at home and abroad. So in between
studiosessions with Aloof/Sabres members Jagz & Gary as Kamaflarge, he
founded his own DJ agency to manage his now hectic diary. Theremin soon
begun to represent other British DJ's like Jim Masters, Mark Williams and
Phil Perry, followed by European spinners like Adam Beyer, Marco Carola,
Joel Mull, and over years of development has consolidated itself into one
of today's premier techno agencies.
Whilst the miles clocked up through 1996, Billy was nominated for
best national DJ and best Radio One Essential Mix at the UK Muzik awards
and played prime spots at Tribal Gathering's in the UK and Germany.
Having evolved into playing more and more harder-edged techno, 1997
was an appropriate time to update an audience, some of which were still
comparing him to his past. So a second mix CD 'Race Data' (Avex) was
released featuring tracks by the likes of Planetary Assault Systems, Dirty House
Crew and Vegas Soul and a comprehensive summary of Billy's sound at the
time.
Frustrated also that the style of music he had been playing and championing
was only minimally supported by a few labels and people in the UK, he set
up his own imprint Tortured to tie-in. "The reason I did 'Race Data'
and started a label was so that people could see what sort of music I was
now playing, because they were all listening to the old tapes and the old
CD. And even though all the music I've played has had a power and a dirty
funk to it, my style was changing from progressive house into trance and
then into techno. "Having also been responsible for nurturing the
likes of Adam Beyer, Marco Carola, Joel Mull, Umek and Gaetek, (Billy flew
them over for their debut UK gigs) I knew I was sort of looking after all
these talented people - who at the time nobody really knew who they were,
so it was natural to start Theremin."
Billy also started Open to Torture (with Jim Masters); a bi-monthly
night at London's The End which has to this day been one of the few quality
techno nights in London and has acted as an all-encompassing showcase for
the talent both attached to and surrounding the label (other guests have
included The Advent, Green Velvet, DJ Slip, Oliver Ho, Holy Ghost, Swag,
Laidback Luke, Cherry Bomb and Access 58). Studio time was eaten up with a
new project Barb-Wired (with Swag's Richard Brown) and a brief re-formation
of Vinyl Blair for the remixing of Gravediggaz and Howie B.
Finally to round off a magnificently creative year, Billy became a
father to the first of two daughters.
1998 saw Billy's first expedition to the States, the Americans
quickly warming to his decks dexterity and there have been frequent returns
to spinat New Yorks' legendary Twilo club and at venues in places such as
Chicago, Detroit, Washington, San Francisco, LA, Toronto, Seattle through
Canada also, gaining popularity along the way. All the while Billy has
continually enjoyed return trips to many places throughout the UK and
Europe where the crowds and promoters are exceptional and his reputation
and rank most enduring. In Holland where his following is enormous, he's
voted second most popular international DJ of '98.
1999 up to the present has been spent constantly running and shaping
Tortured (which has now achieved over twenty releases) and Theremin which
has been rapidly expanding over the last 18 months.
In May 2000,
Tortured released 'The Torture Chamber'; a brand new mix CD by Billy which
showcases the quality of Tortured's pounding beats and power cuts. "I
wanted to do the mix CD as a label compilation because I think that we've
put out some superb music out on the label. When I started it I made a list
of some of my favourite ten producers and I'm proud to say that I've had
eight of them work for it. "It will be the first in a series with the
other DJ's involved with the label mixing future ones. I want this to be
the best series of techno CD's for the next decade."
In support the Tortured team was out on the
frontline with a mammoth tour from mid-February until the end of May that
travelled around the globe (with Adam Beyer, Steve Rachmad, Craig Walsh,
Holy Ghost, Umek, Joel Mull, Daz Saund, Gaetek, Marco Carola all supporting
Billy on varying dates).
Straight after he remixed Leftfield's 'Double Flash' with Richard Brown.
A new label
has also been launched; Electrix which deals in "Experimental electronica
- everything from Maurizio style stuff to electro". The success of Electrix has
surprised everyone, with the media going mad for this new outlet of classy
underground music. Billy will
be releasing tracks on Electrix soon.
2001 sees
Billy returning to Ibiza for the first time in many years where he will be
playing at Amnesia for Dance Valley. As well as the now legendary techno sets, Billy
played an extra special tech-house set for Slam’s residency Freelance
Science in Glasgow. He will be
dropping back down to Headstart at Turnmills for an Electrix Records
showcase with a farely hefty electro set. The Tortured parties are still thriving down at the End,
plus Billy has taken up a bi-monthly Tortured residency at the Red Box in
Dublin. Later in the year, he
plans to launch Tortured parties in Amsterdam.
Now in his 11th year of professional DJing, Billy has
moved through varying genres in his time turning his back on the cash lined
path to preserve his musical integrity. He still remains at the summit of underground dance
music.
Things
are looking Nasty.
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