DJ Food explained

DJ Food
Origin:London, England
Genre:Electronic, IDM, trip hop, breakbeat, downtempo, nu jazz, acid jazz
Years Active:1992–present
Label:Ninja Tune
Associated Acts:DK
Current Members:Strictly Kev
Past Members:Matt Black
Jonathan More
Patrick Carpenter

DJ Food is an electronic music project currently headed by Kevin Foakes (also known as Strictly Kev). It was conceived in 1990 by Jonathan More and Matt Black of Coldcut and the Ninja Tune record label. It has since included various lineups of More, Black, Patrick Carpenter (known as PC), Foakes, and others, before finally being formed only of Foakes.

History

Originally conceived by the members of Coldcut on the Ninja Tune record label, the project started in 1990 on the premise of providing metaphorical "food for DJs". DJ Food released the Jazz Brakes series, with Jazz Brakes Volume 3 being the most successful. The records consisted of collections of breaks, loops and samples that could be used for mixing, remixing and producing.

Later DJ Food albums have developed with shades of Latin, dub, breakbeat, ambient, and drum and bass.

The 1995 album A Recipe for Disaster was a conscious move away from the Jazz Brakes volumes to form more of an identity as an artist, and a remix album of tracks from all six LPs, entitled Refried Food was released the following year. The more recent release, Kaleidoscope (2000), featured guest artists including Bundy K. Brown (formerly of Tortoise, Directions in Music, Pullman) and voiceover artist and jazz poet, Ken Nordine.

Members

DJ Food started as a Coldcut side project from Jonathan More and Matt Black.[1] Along the way they met Patrick Carpenter (known as PC). A loose collaborative team began to form including Paul Brook, Paul Rabiger, Kevin Foakes a.k.a. Strictly Kev and Issac Elliston.

Although keeping their hand in as DJs on the albums, Black and More could not perform DJ sets twice in one night under the aliases of both Coldcut and DJ Food, so they handed the mantle of live performances over to PC and Strictly Kev. Later, PC became so involved with the Cinematic Orchestra that he decided to quit DJ Food, leaving Strictly Kev as the sole director of the project. He has since contributed three remixes to The Shape of Things That Hum EP in 2009.

Discography

Albums

DJ mix albums

Internet only releases

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music. Colin Larkin. Colin Larkin (writer). Virgin Books. 2000. First. 0-7535-0427-8. 127.
  2. Web site: 2023-08-26. DJ Food: Kaleidoscope: Pitchfork Record Review. 18 January 2008. Pitchfork Media. 18 January 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080118124205/http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/17052-kaleidoscope. dead.
  3. Web site: 2023-08-26. DJ Food: The Search Engine, PopMatters. 4 April 2012. PopMatters.
  4. Web site: 2023-08-26. Kaleidoscope Companion by DJ Food. Ninja Tune.
  5. Web site: 2023-08-26. DJ Food: Solid Steel Presents: Now, Listen!. Pitchfork.
  6. News: Rob. Fitzpatrick. 2023-08-26. It's more alive than ever, you fools!. The Guardian. 24 February 2007. 0261-3077.
  7. Web site: UbuWeb Sound - DJ Food. Ubu.com.