|
As a third wave musician with along musical background, its safe to say
that Jay Denham has been around the block a few times.
At fifteen, he picked up his first instrument, a bass guitar, and by
the time he was seventeen was playing in a rock band for friends at parties.
He developed a taste for punk and what Americans refer to as "new wave",
moving on to the funk of Parliament, Cameo and The Time as the eighties
arrived.
In 1982 he came across a Chicago Hot Mix tape, which opened his ears
to the then revolutionary sounds of Farley Jackmaster Funk and Frankie
Knuckles. Immediately blown away by this new sound, he took to making
expeditions to the Windy City to find records and tape the local radio
shows he couldn't pick up in his home town of Kalamazoo. A chance meeting
in Chicago with early house producer Chip E implanted the idea that he
might actually try making this music himself....
The next step came for Jay when he started Michigan State University
and met up with Shake aka Anthony Shakir, who now runs Frictional records
with Claude Young. Shakir had a keyboard, Jay had a drum machine and it
wasn't long before they were jamming together on early tracks. When Shakir
got to know Derrick May he passed him some of Jays' tapes. Mays' favourable
reaction led to Jay moving to detroit after college to work for the nascent
Transmat label, and releasing his first records: "Ritual" as Vice on the
Techno 2 LP and then the mythic 12" "Insync" as Fade II Black.
Frustrated by Transmats' low output, Jay recorded for kevin Saundersons'
KMS and the Burden Brothers' 430 West, before a combination of hard times
and family commitments led to a return to his home town of Kalamazoo in
1992, for what he himself describes as a period of self retirement from
the business.
But thats only half the story. Back in Kalamazoo, Jay continued to quietly
developed his sound, working with local producers and dj's, and amassing
a stack of tracks, despite the fact that he had no-one to release them.
Late in 1994 jay took the plunge himself and started his own label, Black
Nation, beginning with the "Birth of a Nation" EP (also the title of an
infamous early 20th Century Ku Klux Klan propaganda movie, fact fans)
whjich features tracks by himself and friends like Fanon Flowers, Tony
Ollie, Brett Dance and Chance McDermott and a philospohy to produce "funky,
rhythmic, driving underground grooves for the funk conscious record buyer".
Black Nation Records has gone on to become one of the best and most consistent
underground labels around.
It would have been all too easy for Jay Denham to have sunk without trace,
just like many of the early chicago producers he was inspired by. Or to
have fallen into the rut of churning out endless formula Detroit tackle,
which it might be argued that many of the Motor Citys' original musicians
are guilty of. But he didn't. Jay Denham is back with a new attitude and
some of the freshest, fiercest grooves around.
|