This & That

Introducing Music2Deal SA’s new Ambassador – Jaemi Skye

Jaemi Skye does 1st stage A&R – industry sifting between the rough & not ready and the rough and ready to develop artists wishing to move on to 360 and 50/50 deals.

jaemi

Tell us a bit about yourself?

For the first two years of infancy, I slid around rather than walked and didn’t speak one word. I was finally assessed as having two types of “Synesthesia”. Predominantly something known as Chromesthesia, a condition that includes ‘Perfect Pitch’ – a rare auditory phenomenon characterized by the ability of a person to identify or re-create a given musical note without the benefit of a reference tone.

I have since spent time in Spain, Australia, France, Egypt, Tunisia, the U.S.A, the U.K and of course my home, South Africa. Almost entirely within the sphere of professional music and its developmental journey from raw conception to a commercial release. Leaving aside both the astounding Jazz and Classical genre’. There is no other genre of music in which I have not applied myself …grime, trap, big-beat, punk, EDM, hard rock…just love the whole shebang!

 

Have you licensed your music / signed your artists internationally?

Actually, it’s with a grin that I recall the very first time I was approached to give license for the use of a composition. A bizarre yet great confidence booster, at the time. It was spring time 1993 in Bologne, a fishing port in northern France and I received a handwritten letter from an undergraduate in London, England, asking if I may consider composing three individual pieces of music which the student may use in their bachelor of arts contemporary dance performance final exam.

I remember the feeling, an internal glow…just like the way one feels when relaxing in the chilled heaven-sent lazer-red sky show that is a Johannesburg signature in the summertime deep dusk. Since then, with a brief gap as my children matured, it’s been a very, very lucky ride on the magic-stave of music.

 

How do you know whether something is good and modern? How do you keep yourself up-to-date?

Having a default condition such as Synesthesia and particularly component that affects me personally, Chromesthesia, makes the whole world a constant musical influence. From external sounds such as the orchestration of passing peak hour traffic, even the sound of sub-woofers as a car reaches a stop-street or red light, works its way into keeping my musical pulse actively fused to the ‘here & now’. All I have to do is eat, breath, stay as healthy as possible and im a natural born music trend sensor & setter. There’s a book called ‘Lucky Jim’ by Kingsley Amis. That about says it all…(grin).

 

But then, what do you do after work? Go to your studio and continue to work on music?

Over time, whether music has been my daily bread and butter or I have taken a break by working in another sector entirely, when the clock hits 7pm, I find it exceptionally important to shift into an environment in which those I love and hold dear are the main focus of the rest of what the day has to offer us in time. As a younger man, I certainly hit the burn-out phases of non-stop studio six-dayers  (and I do mean no sleep, 24 hr sessions, till you drop!). However, with hindsight, those days, though enjoyable to an extent, don’t give one the space to experience the other things that life has to offer. And that will limit a person’s compositional scope and final product…big-style!

 

What do you suggest for the artist being part of Music2Deal.com having success in the music business?

Belief is everything. If you have a gift in music, whatever that may be, learn to be suggestive, never limit your mind to genres simply because they seem to be in fashion yet keep your ears tuned to the hear & now and most importantly keep connected……one of the best ways to do this?

You want your talent to appeal – Get in with Music2deal.

 

 

 

 

English · Interviews

Interview with Ade Fenton – Part 2

Music2Deal pulled off a real cracker last month when Richard Rogers interviewed producer Ade Fenton about the new Gary Numan album Savage (Songs From A Broken World) that was released last week. We are proud and extremely pleased that the album looks to have gone in at number 2 into the UK Chart this week beaten off only by the new Foo Fighters album but with almost almost 3 times the sales of Ed Sheehan in third place. In fact the Savage sales and chart position is even more startling as it steamrollered ahead of new releases from Cat Stevens, Madonna’s new Rebel Heart album and the new Doors compilation. It is 36 years since Gary Numan last had a top 3 album and in part two of the interview Ade and Richard talk about the new album, Dj’ing, how Sennheiser was important to both of them and working on film soundtracks.

 

Ade Fenton with Gary Numan

Ade Fenton with Gary Numan

 

RR: You’ve put out over 40 releases so when was your first release?

 

AF: 1998 or 1996 I can’t remember. I’d got really into the techno thing, I just happened to be going out with a girl and she had these turntables and we’d gone into the clubbing scene quite big and she’s gone into the house scene and i’d gone down the techno path because I liked aggressive music and I started messing around with these turntables and I realised I could beat match really easy. I had a normal job for many years and I was made redundant so I took all my mates to Ibiza with my redundancy money and had the best two weeks of my life. I came back with no money and thought ‘What am I going to do now?’ So I decided I’m going to give making music a go because I was so in love with the scene. So I started making music with an old program called Cool Edit Pro not knowing what I was doing so I just taught myself. I found a distributor for the record and put my email and number on the record and the calls just kept on coming in and it took off. There you go, timing, it was a shit record, really embarrassing now but it is what it is. Later I met Gary Numan and I was into industrial music and realised i’d learnt what I needed to do.

 

RR: What is your favourite release of your own material?

 

AF: I did an album in 2007 called Artificial Perfect and Gary guested on the album and we did a track called Recall. I listen to the rest of the album now and go ‘What the fuck was I thinking?’ but Recall was quite a dark track after I broke up with a girl at the time and I was in a low place. I can listen to that song and think ‘Crikey I like that it’s quite good’ and i’m quite self deprecating. All the stuff with Gary has been the highlight year after year. Dead Son Rising Gary and I wrote together and was a huge stepping stone from Jagged in terms of production. Splinter i’m obviously massively proud of but with Savage it feels like the next level again, and i’m very proud to have produced it.

 

RR: From the My Name Is Ruin single it feels like a great taster for the album and slightly exotic with the structure of the song which is so different to anything out there. It seems very eastern based with a pumping rhythm. Was that your idea or Gary’s?

 

AF: That was Gary’s. It is very electronic. We stuck very rigidly to the structure and when Gary gave me the song we ensured the drums are processed to hell through a Sherman Filterbank so it’s really gnarly and with all the sparkly bits and everything. I did think of the structure at the time like yourself ‘Blimey, that’s unique’. It felt like we could be more experimental on the new album than Splinter. I’’m saying this in inverted commas but there isn’t really an industrial rock track on Savage like there perhaps was on Splinter. Because it’s a half concept album there is a story behind it like there was with Replicas or even Dance it is one of the reasons we went full on with it and it’s quite war like in places and in other places it’s really stripped back and there’s a track called ‘And It All Began With You’ and it’s very gentle and minimal with weird electronics and with a thunderstorm going through the song, very experimental and we’re both very proud of that.

 

RR: That’s a beautiful song, lightly sung and atmospheric almost hypnotic. I will put that in one of my DJ sets. Are you still DJ-ing now?

 

AF: Not really. I still do the occasional thing if i’m asked to do it and I like it. It’s like riding a bike I can still do it reasonably well but I just have other things going on really and having a young toddler of 16 months, I don’t want to miss anything with him at the moment. I don’t want to miss him putting his first sentence together, depending on what he says of course.

 

RR: If you were going to have a basic budget DJ set up what would it be to get you started?

 

AF: I always went with a Mac running either Serato or Traktor and personally I love digital vinyl. A lot of people use CDJ’s and I can but I really love digital vinyl and my personal choice of mixer was Pioneer DJM 600 or 800 as that was my preference as I loved the digital effects on board. DJ-ing has a different meaning now and DJ-ing can be put in inverted commas and for me it’s not really DJ-ing. DJ-ing was mixing records together and that’s not always the case now which is why I love people like Dave Clarke as there is proper skill in that. PMC 228’s are my speaker choice but they are not budget speakers, I think they retail for nine or ten grand and i’ve had them for 3 or 4 years. I chose PMC because the clarity is ridiculously good and they do a more affordable range although they are still not really budget but if I were to recommend monitors to anybody I do recommend PMC.

 

RR: On the headphone side i’ve always loved Sennheiser, i’ve got three pair of them and still have a pair from 1989 without the foam surrounds sadly as they wore away. I bought a fabulous pair of cordless ones last year too, the HDR 118’s. What would you recommend?

 

AF: I use Sennheiser as well. Several pairs of them, absolutely battered some of them as well particularly my old DJ-ing Sennheiser headphones. Sennheiser is all I use to be honest. I’ve got some with the mic too. Sennheiser were always reliable and the quality second to none.

 

RR: I always found them a superb company for headphones particularly the overall sound and design, I think they are German but I don’t know where exactly they are based, I know they also do microphones but I never used any in the studio as the Sennheiser microphones were more difficult to find in the UK. It should be easier to find now I live near Cologne.

 

AF: I didn’t know you could get Sennheiser mics, are they studio mics?

 

RR: If truth be known, I don’t know. I’ll find out and ask them. I co-produced the last Karel Fialka and Racecar album (Karel had a huge hit in the GAS territories with ‘Hey Matthew’ in the eighties with over 650,000 copies sold and a lesser hit in the UK too) and I always ensure we do a playback session when a project is completed to sort out any minor glitches. I invited the guys from the project over, one said ‘no it’s OK, we don’t need a playback session’ and the other never bothered to show up. Incredible, you always need playback sessions no question! For me I always listen to the album on my old Roland Monitors for an open playback and then with the Sennheiser headphones for a closed playback. There were only me listening through headphones and the Sennheiser cans picked up a lot of production faults a treat. Startlingly so. I always advise artists to have two playback sessions as well as outside professional mastering. Sadly some artists never listen. So for any Music2deal members out there what is one piece of advice you would give them if they were thinking of treading a path into the music industry professionally?

 

AF: Apart from buying Sennheiser and PMC products for quality I would say for the music industry, always have a back up plan. You’d be very lucky if things fall into place really quickly these days because making money out of music is very difficult. I was dead lucky, timing is a massive thing as well. I was lucky that when I started the first record I ever made sold quite well and I started getting DJ bookings and suddenly i’ve got a career. For me I’ve got into the film world as there is no age barrier in being a composer and I love making music for film and TV. For me it was a long term decision to do that as there will come a point that i’m not as young as I used to be and that matters less in Film and TV. So my advice is have a back up plan but if you make it work it is so worth it?

 

RR: What other projects are you working on?

 

AF: I’ve been working with Jayce Lewis who is supporting Gary Numan on the forthcoming World Tour as well as a band called Puzzle who are superb. Other than as I mentioned i’m really trying to get into the film music, film soundtrack area and music for TV. The next TV project out is 8 Days That Made Rome. Gary Numan and I did a soundtrack a couple of years back to a film called From Inside and i’ve been involved in a lot of horror soundtracks but i’d like to broaden the scope if I can.

 

RR: Are you aware if the deal for the Savage album with BMG is a one album deal or more?

 

AF: As far as I know it’s a one album deal but I’m sure there are options in the contract.

 

RR: Will you be going out on the road for the Savage Tour?

 

AF: Unfortunately not as I have other booked work coming up. Even today i’m working on a remix of a track from Savage that will be an extra track on the Japanese version of the album. It’s a bit of a  mad remix.

 

RR: Finally, apart from Gary Numan, if there is one other artist you could collaborate with who would it be?

 

AF: Oh come on you know the answer to that one – Trent Reznor of course.

 

RR: Ade, thank you very much for your time and good luck with the release of Savage.

 

AF: My pleasure, thank you.

This & That

Interview with Ade Fenton

Last month Music2Deal picked up a real coup as UK manager Richard Rogers, himself  a songwriter/producer, manager and A&R Man interviewed Ade Fenton the admired producer, manager, DJ and current Gary Numan Producer. With over 40 solo releases under his belt as a writer/producer the respected Fenton was upbeat about the new Numan album in part one of a 2 part interview.

Ade Fenton

RR: Hi Ade, you’ve recently completed the new Gary Numan album Savage out on BMG Records on September 15th, what was your role and how long did the album take to make?

AF: Hi. My role was as producer as it has been for the last four albums. We started the new Savage album in late October 2016 and finished it in mid May 2017 which was pretty quick for us. Splinter the last album took about 18 months on and off to complete but with this one we said ‘We’re going to start it and we’re going to finish it’ and we worked every single day and I mean every day with no time off at all, I was working silly hours on it but it needed to get done. The deal with BMG that Gary had done meant we were hitting a deadline and we knew we had to finish it by that date so we got the mastering booked up way way in advance. So we know we had to get it done but that pressure just makes you work really really hard but I don’t mind working under pressure, working under deadlines as long as they are sensible. We had a great time making it. We’d had a break where we hadn’t worked together for a year or two and we went off and did our own thing, but when we got back together it was that instant perfect recipe where the ingredients really work.

So Gary had already written some demos, I think he started writing his demos in January 2016 and then he started getting a collection of demos together but because of other musical commitments I could only start in October 2016. It’s only August now and we got the album mastered on the 24th May. He was still writing new songs for it up until March of this year. That happened with Splinter as well but that was on and off as we were touring and doing other things. With this one it really was a case of ‘this is what we are working on in the next six months’. It’s like a chain reaction with me and Gary, we get into a method, he sends me demos, I work stuff up and send it back to him, that gives him a new idea and he goes ‘what about adding this to it?’ and so on.

An example would be the new single My Name Is Ruin, using Gary’s daughter Persia on backing vocals was a really late move. My Name Is Ruin had originated from a working title called March because I believe Gary had written it in March 2016 and it was a groove with the top line melody and everything. We thought we’d finished it, it was the bassline and the big chorus and i’d put all the drums together and it had turned from one thing into another thing but we felt that we had a problem with the chorus as the chorus was dragging slightly. It was one of those tracks where when the chorus kicked in it felt like it was labouring slightly so we came up with the idea of bumping up the BPM on the chorus. You might not notice it but there’s a 2 BPM jump on that chorus and with Persia it was a last minute thing with what we thought was the last version of the track. Then all of a sudden Gary said ‘i’ve got this idea for an Arabian top line’ in the verses and i’m thinking ‘where the fuck is that gonna go?’ because it’s just a bassline and a groove and that was the whole point of it originally, but then he came up with this fantastic Arabic top line and we thought why don’t we get Persia his 11 year old daughter to sing on it as she’s got a great little voice and that was a last minute thing and it just developed and developed from there so even though that track was started in March last year it wasn’t finished until April 2017. We were working on other things of course but the chain reaction of sending each other stuff backwards and forwards works brilliantly. We decided we would have quite a big middle eastern influence on this album and there were hints of it going as far back as the Jagged album. In fact Jagged, Dead Son Rising and Splinter have all got a little bit of that middle eastern influence but with this one we thought if we were going to do it then lets do it properly so we really went for it.

RR: Have you seen the video? It is excellent, I don’t know the guy who put the video together but it is superbly done and they’ve edited it down from over 6 minutes to 4 minutes 25 seconds and it’s been really well done.

AF: Sometimes it’s a bit tricky to do the radio or video edit, but to be honest it only took about ten minutes to do it!

RR: What’s your favourite track on the album and why?

AF: It’s a track called Mercy, it’s evil, it’s just so evil and so much fun. Steve Harris is on guitar again on this album and on Mercy. I’d seen a trailer for possibly Bladerunner and I was writing all the back end stuff for this track and I saw the trailer while on a coffee break with the arrangement on my computer opening up and it was one of those things that just takes you off in a completely different direction so when Steve came over to do it I got him to record just the weirdest stuff on his guitar and all of it ended up in the track. It’s like The Wretched by Nine Inch Nails or something like that. It’s just one of those tracks where you’re banging your head, it’s really slow and electronic. In fact the whole album is really electronic and much more electronic than the last album Splinter. For me it’s the darkest track and most satisfying for me.

RR: Gary’s based in Los Angeles now as he has been for a few years so do you join him in America or do you do everything from Bath where you live and work?

AF:  On Splinter we worked in Los Angeles quite a bit but that’s because I was managing him at the time and I was in the band so we were always together but on Savage everything was done remotely although Gary came over to the UK and worked in my studio for a period of about two weeks in the whole six month period. But you know it doesn’t matter these days, the way we work we have complete trust in one another musically and i’m still a Gary Numan fan so when he sends me something he knows pretty much i’m gonna like it. Equally he trusts me and gives me complete carte blanche to do whatever I want as a producer but for certain tracks I don’t need to do what I want. He might say ‘Here’s a track, I want it to go in this direction, come up with a few ideas’ but other tracks like Mercy for instance he’d sent me this back end that was brilliant and that bassline that was Gary’s 100% but it’s so effective. It’s one note all the way through but it’s that one note that gives it this feeling so all I did was build on that one note and I kept building and building layers and layers.

Whereas with other tracks he’d say ‘I want it to be this’ and then he’d let me go off and do what I want and that trust thing is knowing that 99 times out of 100 he’s going to like it and on the odd occasion he doesn’t like it then fine but i’m not precious about it. But they’re not my songs, they are Gary’s and my job is to make him happy and do the best job I possibly can and added to that he is so generous in allowing me to do my thing and you have to have confidence in yourself that Gary is working with me for a reason. I’ve got a particular sound and he likes it and it’s like I said it’s this whole thing about having these certain ingredients that just work and for us having high speed internet makes it easier as well as Dropbox. We can just fire ideas at each other, we were swapping logic arrangements and he’d change arrangements and want one beat here and one beat there and 30 seconds later it’s changed and it’s brilliant. Yet we’re still getting the benefits of being able to do our own thing but use Facetime, 5 or 6 times a day and technology has allowed working remotely to become a much more personal experience. It seems to be the way we like it, it’s great. I mean I wish I could have gone over to his house and jumped in the swimming pool every day, but you can’t have everything I suppose. When Gary came over to work in the studio it was still great to work with him here because we are able to scientifically get into every single channel and every single track and every single segment and for that you need to be together.  No swimming pool at my place though, sadly.

RR: Have you got any writing credits on the album?

AF:  Yes, there’s one track I co-wrote called ‘What God Intended’. It’s just the way it worked out, it wasn’t intended to be a co-write. It was another example of us firing ideas at one another, but with that one we did it in reverse.

RR: On Savage are you classed as produced by you and you alone or is it a co production with Gary?

AF: No, it just says just produced by me.

RR: Good for you mate.

AF: Well I hope so. The signs are it’s going to do really well. Secretly we hope it’s going to do better than Splinter the last album. Savage feels like it’s a real progression from that album and it feels like a different sound and way more electronic than Splinter.

 

Part 2 Will be in two weeks where Fenton talks more about working with Gary Numan.