Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Rest in Peace Tony Dixon












It only seems like yesterday that I did a tribute here to New Jersey producer Tony D who died tragically last year. Well sadly tragedy struck again this morning when another Tony D, known to many as Tony Dixon, died in Dublin after a short illness. Myself and Tony go back to the 90's but it is fair to say he has been pushing soul music in Ireland for a lot longer than that. Here is a quick career summary from RTE's website

"Originally from Pinewood on the Northside of Dublin, RnB DJ Tony Dixon began his radio career working with the 'Big D' pirate station in the '70's.
He was known affectionately in the music industry as a member of the 'Northside mafia', a group of high profile presenters including Ian Dempsey, Tony Fenton and Gerry Ryan who all grew up together and went on to forge distinguished careers on both national and local radio.
In the '80's he moved to another pirate station, 'Sunshine Radio' before managing the popular nightclub 'Hollywood Nights' at the Stillorgan Park Hotel.
Tony joined Dublin radio station, FM104 in February 2000 presenting his Hip Hop and RnB show every Saturday night, where his catchphrase was: "If it's Hip Hop and RnB, don't miss me, Tony D".
He also worked as a sales consultant for the station.

Tony is survived by his son Josh, his son's mother Dee and his three sisters and two brothers."

Personally, I met Tony in the late 90's and early part of this decade when we were both residents at a club called Fresh N'Funky with the wonderful Gilly Robinson at the helm. This club later ran at the Coyote Lounge on D'Olier St but started out it's Irish residency in HQ

From Fresh n'Funky's site

"We launched ourSunday night residency with DJ Swing, at the HQ club in Dublin, a city at the heart of Ireland’s thriving club scene. A stunning live performance from Damage and DJ appearances from Trevor Nelson, Shortee Blitz, Brian Norman and Chilli Source alongside resident DJs Tony Dixon (FM104) and Stevie G ensure this night continues to grow in popularity and establish itself as a must for all Dublin R&B lovers!

Fresh’n’Funky were approached by one of the most stunning venues in Dublin - the Coyote Lounge. So in June 2001 Fresh’n’Funky moved to its current home where it continued to thrive every Sunday night."

I got to know Tony quite well as we were also columnists together at the legendary Blues and Soul magazine (Tony looked after the Irish side of things, on which i assisted him the odd time with news of Cork and the rest of the country; I also did Import reviews). I've included a few snippets including a moving piece Tony wrote about his Mum when she died.

Even though we were of different generations and backgrounds, Tony always struck me as a genuine guy who despite being 100% slick in public and on air, would also be very helpful behind the scenes

On a personal level, he helped me with a demo I made for RedFM back in about 2000/2001, when they were about to come on air in Cork. He helped give me advice that smoothed a transition from pirate radio and as we all know Tony knew a lot when it came to presenting a specialist show. Nearly 10 years later my show is still running and I thanked him personally the last time we met for his assisstance. In 2002 My Black on Red show won best Irish specialist music show at the PPI awards and I also thanked Tony for his influence in that terrific achievement for the music we loved. His legacy on the airwaves in Dublin extends over a lot longer and it's great to see him being recognised by his peers over the years and especially today.

He loved a music that was far from fashionable until the MTV awards arrived in Dublin in the late 90s but Tony was there long before that and he always stuck to his guns too

He will be sadly missed, and from myself and my colleagues in Cork, to the London/UK gang like Brian Norman, Colin Francis, Shorty Blitz, Firin' Squad, DJ Swing, Gilly Robinson, Trevor Nelson, Dodge, Steve Sutherland, Ronnie Herel and more, let it be noted, that Tony was loved outside Dublin too. DJ Swing was another who left us too early (tribute here) The likes of Frank Jez and co in Dublin will carry the torch forward aswell, and there were many more names i got to know over those years with Tony and co. In recent years I became disillusioned with the more charty r&b side of the club scene and one of the final straws was when a girl came to the DJ box in Coyote Lounge and asked us for "some real R&b like Britney". Tony and myself laughed at this. Even though i was much younger, Tony always acknowledged what i was trying to do by bringing the heavyweight soul of Aretha, Marvin and Stevie Wonder into the modern dancefloors that sometimes thought r&b and soul started in the late 90s. Tony knew well because he had been holding it down himself for years and he did more than practically anyone in Ireland for soul music of all different shapes and sizes. It was an honour to know him as a friend.

I broke the news to one of the best known names of those gigs today and Trevor Nelson rang me in disbelief aswell. Having not known he was sick I was also taken by suprise that a person so bubbly and full of life was being taken from us.

As Trevor said on Twitter

"Really sad to just hear about the passing of Tony Dixon.a true pro and 1 of irelands best r&b radio djs.had many great times with him"

We sure did.

My deepest sympathies are with all his family and friends

Rest in Peace

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Southern Soul and Disco Festival returns to Cork 2011










No sooner is the Decades Festival over that talk turns to another music festival and the announcement this week that will be welcomed by loads of Cork music fans. The Southern Soul and Disco Festival, which last ran in Cork in 1999, is returning in 2011 and will provide a big boost for the city.






The Southern soul and disco weekends were a product of the Mor Disco and Simply Delicious nights that ran in Cork for many years and all of the operators have been keen for many years to get them back up and running. The original weekends drew great crowds to see some amazing acts, and a certain DJ and production duo called Basement Jaxx were one of the big names who went on to become very well known in music circles. Legendary diva’s such as Jocelyn Brown and Gwen Dickey of Rose Royce also played here, as did acts as diverse as the Jungle Brothers, Hot Chocolate, Trevor Nelson, Norman Jay, Rae and Christian and many more.


It was perhaps the under the radar names which defined the festival best however, and DJ’s from all over Ireland and Britain played in different pubs and clubs throughout the weekend. Mr Scruff was a regular visitor to Cork but back then not nearly as well known while the Idjut Boys, Harri, Future Homosapiens, Fila Brazilia, Tim Love Lee, Chubby Grooves and the Unabombers, plus a whole host of Irelands finest, performed here too. For a certain generation of clubbers in Cork, these weekends were pivotal, and during the 10 year hiatus it has become noticeable that such a weekends absence leaves a gaping hole in the musical calendar here. Details of 2011’s Festival will no doubt be announced in future months but it promises to be a good one!






One of the Festivals DJ’s who has gone to great things since returns to Cork this Saturday for a show in the Pavilion. Luke Unabomber will be joined by Robin Keys on Saturday night while across the road in the Vineyard tomorrow Crtl-Alt-Delete hosts Encrypter, Wife, Robin Renwick, Newah, Thotbott and Severane. N Dubz play Savoy tonight while Exit Pursued by a Bear do a free show at the Crane Lane on Saturday.


All of the people involved in the music scene in Cork received a great boost last week with the official announcement of something that I mentioned earlier in the summer; that Plug’d records is set to re-open on August 28th. The ESB substation in Caroline St will be the temporary home until the Triskels new renovated ChristChurch building opens next year. The Triskels backing is essential and they deserve great credit for having to foresight and faith in the record shop which was at the hub of the Cork music scene in recent years. The extra floor space will also enable more visual art, design, film, magazines and books so from a cultural point of view the benefits are going to be huge for Cork!

Monday, May 17, 2010

A homage to Chic!


As previously mentioned here in Downtown this summer in Cork brings us an amazing amount of soul and r&b gigs with many of the biggest names in music performing here. Already we had a cracking gig from Candi Staton last weekend and with Al Green, Michael McDonald, Booker T and Martha Reeves all in store, it’s fair to say anticipation levels are very high. This week I’m gonna preview a show in late May from one of my favourite acts of all time, Chic, who play live at the Savoy!

Chic are quite simply one of the most influential groups of all time. I would have said till quite recently they were one of the most under-rated groups but I have noticed that their status and indeed recognition level has increased in the last few years. In this country they stole the show at last years Electric Picnic at a show which seemed to be full of more Cork people than anyone else, and their arrival here later this month is sure to attract a lot of interest. It’s always with slight trepidation that I go and see one of my favourite bands, especially one which peaked so long ago, but I have to say, Chic were better than ever.

Bernard Edwards is now sadly departed but Nile Rodgers has assembled a superb band and with himself being one of the best guitarists and indeed producers of the last 30 plus years, you know you are in good hands. One of the reasons why Chic have received a lot of recent interest is because the amount of sampling that has taken place with their music and in the live show they played excerpts from hits such as “Love like this” and “Lady”, which used distinctive hooks from Chic hits such as “Chic Cheer” and “Soup for One”. In truth, modern dance and hip-hop would be a lot different without Chic and back in the day the first ever global hip-hop hit “Rappers delight” was itself a replayed version of their “Good Times”.

Nile Rodgers was of course a massively successful producer for other artists aswell and David Bowie, Madonna, Diana Ross, Carly Simon, Duran Duran and Debbie Harry were just a few who benefitted from Chic’s magic touch, with Sister Sledge basically becoming almost a Chic mark 2 for their most prolific era. Rodgers himself remains an infectious character an his forthcoming autobiography is one of the most anticipated music books of all time. He knows practically everyone in the music business and despite one or two setbacks he remains as enthusiastic as ever on stage and in the studio. Previously, a book called “Everybody Dance, the Politics of Disco”, has put Chic at the heart of an important changing landscape in music in the late 70’s, with some very significant analysis of some of the racial and homophobic obstacles that artists of the disco era faced. Thankfully, we live in more enlightened times now, and Chic are bigger than ever. Here is my tribute to the legendary Chic download here

i've decided to mix up some of my favourite tracks from Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards and co. I kept it mainly to their classic era even though I rate plenty of the work they did afterwards too, but you can only do so much in little over an hour! This music is the soundtrack to my life and I hold all of these tunes dear, as in nearly 20 years of djing i've been spinning the hell out of them. I urge you to go and buy all of their albums, if you haven't already. in the meantime, enjoy the some of the greatest music of all time!

Saturday Norma Jean Wright
Spacer Shelia B Devotion
Everybody Dance Chic
Dance, Dance, Dance (Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah) Chic
Got To Love Somebody Sister Sledge
We Are Family Sister Sledge
I Want Your Edit Chic
Soup For One Chic
Let´s Dance David Bowie
my old piano Diana Ross
You Fooled Around Sister Sledge
My Feet Keep Dancing Chic
High Society Norma Jean
Chic Cheer Chic
Strike Up The Band Chic
Le Freak Chic
Lost In Music Sister Sledge
He's The Greatest Dancer Sister Sledge
I'm Coming Out Diana Ross
Upside Down Diana Ross
Good times Chic
My Forbidden Lover Chic
Open Up Chic
One More Time Sister Sledge
Pretty Baby Sister Sledge
Thinking Of You Sister Sledge
Reach You Peak Sister Sledge
What About Me Chic
Why edit Carly Simon
Easier To Love Sister Sledge
Will You Cry (When You Hear This Song) Chic

And here's some more classics!















Friday, March 05, 2010

One for the late night crew! Kicking Back feat Taxman

UK soul classic you might have had to be in the back bar to understand the sound I dedicate this to Gina, Shane and everyone else also the posse from the Donkey's Ears who are having a reunion in the Pav Friday week details HERE

Sunday, September 20, 2009

King Britt returns to Cork!

King Britt is one of my favourite DJ's and I was delighted that we had him back in Cork at the Pavilion last night for Go Deep. I've been following this guy for years and back when I started doing radio in the mid-90's his first Sylk 130 album was in heavy rotation on my show-I'm a lover of all Philadelphia music, from soul and disco to house and hip-hop, and the influence of King Britt can never be under-estimated as he has released some terrific stuff under many different guises and continues to do so. It wasn't a great turn out but King Britt still showed his class, and to top it off he one of the nicest guys you will ever meet. I can't wait for his next album!



























Wednesday, April 22, 2009

I Like! (In association with Red Drive on Cork's RedFM)


Stevie with Jay-ru

These are a few of my favourite things!


www.chopshop.fm


My man Jay-Ru set up this site a few years ago and it's a one stop shop for free hip hop music downloads!

You can subscribe to their podcast, mixed by Ireland’s best hip-hop, funk n’ soul DJs, including one of my own favourite ever mixes, for RedFM's collections!




So what's it all about?

Do you like good music?
- Great, so do we!

Do you like scratching?
- Sweet, us too!

Do you like free stuff? Of course, doesn’t everybody!
- Then you’re in the right place….

Whether you were rocking shell-toes and fat dookie ropes since ‘86 or just recently opened up your ears to beats & rhymes, there’ll be something here over the next few months to have you backspinning in your kitchen or nodding your head on the bus.

The aim of this site is to provide you with super-dope podcasts from some of Ireland’s top Hip-Hop DJs and turntablists. We’ll be hosting podcasts from a host of DJs all across the country who take their crate-digging seriously, with regular updates every few weeks.

All podcasts are available for free download - if you want any more info on any of the featured artists, just click on the myspace links provided. We only deal in the freshest, so remember to check back regularly to stay ahead of the game. Welcome to the real, now go rock the bells!

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Record Store Day in Plug'd, Corks best record shop!








I worked in Plug'd for four years in the 90's when it was Comet and i've gotta pay full respect to Jim and Albert for keeping it alive in tricky times for record shops world wide-today they had loads of DJ's, giveaways, freebies and it was packed all day!
Respect! If you are ever in Cork check it out at 4 Washington st!


I also selected my tune of the day from there

Friday, April 17, 2009

Theophilus time!








"The next big thing" is a horrible term really when it is applied to a music industry that likes to churn out new stars every five seconds. It is important for the stuttering industry to do this as it is ultimately what the record industry has always depended upon, as hyping up new artists goes hand in hand with increased attention and of course sales. We've seen them come and go a million times and there is a thin line between one hit wonder and next big thing so when looking at up and coming artists it is essential to keep a sense of perspective. This week I'm gonna talk about two artists who are receiving huge hype at the moment, and who we will be hearing loads more about in 2009.
First up I have to declare an interest. Theophilus London touches down at my Jam night tomorrow at the Pavilion for his first Irish show and if I didn't believe he was a truly interesting artist I wouldn't be putting him on. His "This Charming Man" mix-tape was the latest installment of an interesting 12 months in which he also dropped an appropriately named "Jam" mix-tape aswell; but it's his new album (again called "This Charming Man") which is set to really lay down his music vision.
Theophilus is a Brooklyn based MC who's music is far removed from the traditional rap template and crosses into electronic and soulful territory quite freely. You might say there is nothing revolutionary or new in this and you might be right, but I urge you to check out his album and come along and see an artist who i reckon is one of the more interesting out there in 2009. Like I said earlier, it's not always a given that the next big thing blows up, but if he does, you may well live to remember the time you saw him in such a small venue! The night also serves as an after party for the Designer of the year awards for Cork Fashion Week so make sure you are ready to dance
Asher Roth is a name that only really came to me recently even though I actually already had a few tunes of his without even realising it. This guy is set up for mainstream success and even now there are gonna be major parallels with how Eminem went from being an underground MC to a mainstream success story practically overnight about 10 years ago. Roth is not particularly delighted with these comparisons himself and recently said "Him and I are different artists. I think the music’s going to portray that as time goes on. The comparisons are just…it’s cool to be compared to Em, but he’s one of the number one selling artists of all time. I’d rather be compared to him than pretty much anybody else. I think content and everything we rap about is completely different. We’re different artists. We just happened to be under the same genre."
Roth also went on to say that he thinks the comparison is too easy. 'A white emcee with a sense of humor and a political side? Oh, let’s compare him to Em!' ... I have nothing but respect for him though; he made it possible for me to be here, he opened the doors, but we come from an entirely different inspiration" Personally i reckon he has a point and his music is a lot closer to the likes of the New York legends who he was inspired by, though i suppose it also has to be remembered that when Eminem first sprung up he was effectively another left-field rap cat who was influenced by the greats too.
Why all the hype? Well there's a few tracks that have struck a chord big time with many rap fans world-wide. "I Love College" has been huge in dorms everywhere and became a pop hit in the States but it is "Lark on My Go Kart" that is making many heads sit up and take notice. This is proper hip-hop at it's finest and as with Theophilus London I'd be inclined to think that Asher Roth will be around for a long time. If not you can always blame me anyway!







Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Tune of the day!

Dj Krush "Meiso" (Dj Shadow Mix)

Tune of the day-two copies of this led to many great nights in 1996 unreal tune still sounds savage aswell

Friday, April 10, 2009

Give me the night with Red Drive on RedFM

Norma Jean!
Stevie Grainger Give me the Night with RedFM-Jesus this is a classic tune if disco like this doesn't make ya move i can't help ya! Gonna be spinning loads of music like this in the Pav on Sunday after Brian Deady (with Eddie K)

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Fuck Predjudice and Discrimination!

There are one or two people in Cork and indeed beyond who really should know better. I always love records that are defiant and these ones here have been very special to me over the years. Don't take any shit from anyone and stand strong! I'll put some more up later when i've a minute!

Machine-"There but for the Grace of God"
One for the disco and soul people



J Dilla-"Fuck the Police"

anyone who was ever wrongly searched will feel this



Sly and the Family Stone-"Everyday People"

Oh my god does it get better?



Stiff Little Fingers-"Suspect Device"

Grew up on this!



Public Enemy-"Fught the Power"

For a time they were the greatest band in the world

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Gonna Make You Sweat!





There has been loads of talk lately about Sir Henry’s and the legendary Sweat night, which has just been celebrated in a well-received documentary called 120BPM at the Cork Film Festival. A young filmmaker by the name of Keith O’Shea had the unenviable task of bringing the club night to life again, with little or no footage. Though I was personally disappointed with the documentary, I admire Keith for getting up off his ass and actually doing it. It was not an easy task.


Continues Below.........







Sir Henry’s has been a very important part of my life. I rarely look back on those days now but the documentary and the hype surrounding it has stirred up some memories. I DJ’d there for 9 years and was a regular clubber there at least once a week but more often twice or more for over 12 years. Sweat was a religion to me, Greg and Shane up the front and Donkeyman down the back; this was the best club night I’ve ever been at. When Donkeyman handed the headphones to me and I took over the Back Bar, it was important to keep the legacy intact. When I played my last record there in 2001, I was quite content that I had done so, and I was delighted to have been a part of some great nights in Cork. People get all nostalgic and frustrated by this sometimes, but myself, Shane and Greg knew that the time was right to leave and none of us have ever regretted moving on even for a second.

Continues below.....







Sir Henry’s was a lot more than Sweat however. It was a live venue that Dave Fanning reckoned was the best in the country. It played host to an indie night on Fridays called Tight, which was also attended religiously by my friends and me. The Sultans and Franks played some great gigs there in my time. I was one of only a few who went to both the indie and dance events but this divide was later broken and a night run by Joe Kelly on Fridays played host to some great indie-dance stuff, This was an exciting time in music and acts like Primal Scream, My Bloody Valentine, Orbital and Meat Beat Manifesto were combining different styles. This progressed on to more hard-edged stuff but it was always interesting. I’ll never forget Joe playing “Polly” by Nirvana in the main room, the night Kurt Cobain died. He had played on the same stage where I now stood only a couple of years before, warming up for one of my favourite bands, Sonic Youth, and the poignancy was unreal. The Back Bar on Fridays at the time played host mainly to DJ Fork, who had the funkiest of funk at the Funk Shop, another big influence on this young DJ. The Fridays were great, but ultimately the Saturdays were the more well known, as Cork was drawn towards the soulful sounds of house, reggae, soul and hip-hop.
Sweat had started as a Thursday and even at this time, the Thursdays were still strong, the 4th Birthday in around 1992 being one of the best nights I ever had in there. I had been collecting records since I was a kid but had never thought of DJing. I kinda fell into it and suddenly was spinning in the Donkey’s Ears, my favourite bar, where the Donkeyman’s sister Michelle was manager, and where he and local reggae legends such as Kev and Liam spun. This was another massive influence on my underage self and the fact that Michelle was going out with Sean, the boss at Henry’s, gave me a big opportunity one Thursday night when they were stuck for cover for Donkeyman down the Back Bar of Henrys. I took my chance and got a Sunday residency of Sean, who happened to be in for a few drinks with the mighty Laurent Garnier, who I then struck up a friendship with and who was a big fan of the Back Bar when he used visit. This was the Sunday after his legendary first gig the previous night, seen by many as one of the best ever guest sets in Cork. Laurent liked the way I played stuff like Sonic Youth and the Cure next to hip-hop and he insisted I warm up for him when he visited Cork from then on in. I had some great times spinning stuff like the Clash and disco before e him, and he used ask me for mixtapes whenever he came over!

Continues below.......










Before long Mark (Donkeyman) decided to retire from DJing, and he was delighted to ask me to take over on Saturdays. I had been away in the States for the summer of 1994 and was gutted to be out of Cork for the first long spell in my life. My music life had been taking off before I left, and I couldn’t help but think I was losing momentum going away. I had blown up the spot at an after party after the first weekender downstairs and now it was looking like I could live my dream of becoming a regular fixture there. Before I went Sean told me there was a job waiting for me when I came back and this kept me going over the summer in the States. The States changed me musically forever. I was always into soul and stuff like Marvin Gaye and Mary J Blige was always big in the Back Bar, where I in the meantime asked Shane Johnson’s sister Gina, to DJ with me. She was Soul Sister Number One in Cork and an incredible DJ with amazing taste in music. The Young Disciples, Digable Planets, Soul 11 Soul and lots more were big tunes for us, and my musical education was being fine toned like never before, but the States pushed me deeper into soul and r&b.


This was the summer that Nas, Biggie Smalls, Craig Mack, Wu Tang, Aaliyah, Warren G, SWV and Zhane really blew up. I became addicted to U.S. radio and befriended a local DJ, Curty Cuts, who used mix soul, r&b and hip-hop on three decks, and who was almost like a hip-hop version of Shane and Greg, mixing wise. This was a big part of my education and I started buying two copies of records straight away, so I could do long mixes and keep the flow going when I got back. The fact that my mixing was crap at this stage hardly mattered, as I knew that would come with time. Curty Cuts had a record shop too and he looked after me like I was his brother, in fact, the first day I found the shop, which was located deep in the ghetto, he told me I was the first white boy who had been in the shop in over four months! Him and his friends were laughing and expecting some honky to pull up some House of Pain 12”s. but when I arrived at the counter with about 1,000 dollars of the shit he’s been playing all summer, he knew I was for real and took me under his wing. I had been saving all summer and for that moment and spent about 6 weeks worth of work cash right there. On subsequent visits to his shop (One Track Records in Providence, around 100 miles away from where I was staying), he would sometimes give me his own promo copies of records that were sold out, a gesture I will always treasure. The day before I went back home he invited me to a big Hip-hop Basketball event that his station, KIKS106 was organising, with Public Enemy, Wu Tang Clan, and Craig Mack all taking part. All the big hip-hop names were regulars on his show, he may have been out of the hip-hop heartland of New York, but he had a massive standing in the music community. I couldn’t go and never got the chance to say goodbye to him properly. Curty Cuts died a few years ago, but his music will always live on. His mixtapes inspired nit only me but everyone I played them too, I only wish I could find more of them today, though I have a few in my vaults! I came back to Ireland determined to hone what I had learned off Curty, and after a few months of slagging by half of my friends in Cork, who wanted a more macho hip-hop sound, it started to click in the Back Bar of Sweat in Sir Henry’s.

Continue Below..........








By late 1994 the Back Bar was 75% full of girls and the atmosphere was amazing. Sweat had always been soulful and attracted loads of women but even those who didn’t like what myself, Shane and Greg, played used come along now, and many were won over. It was a silly myth that you couldn’t score and meet chicks in Henry’s! The music remained centrefold however, and the team that remained together for the next 8 years or so every Saturday was in place. I became quite close to Greg and Shane, we perfectly complemented each other and were mutually beneficial to each other too, with soul, hip-hop and reggae down the back and house up the front. We later produced some great music together and have worked together since in the Savoy, Fast Eddies, City Limits and of course RedFM. Back then though these were difficult years in Cork and there was a bit of a Henry’s backlash with the place going out of fashion periodically. There were so many times when I was told that the house scene was dead and that Henrys was on the way out. I just laughed, indeed we all did, and we kept our core crowd and went from strength to strength. Other clubs that I was involved in became very big, such as Mor Disco, which packed out the city hall a few Christmas ‘s in a row, and brought the amazing Soul and Disco Festival to Cork too. At this stage I was playing in the Pod, Kitchen and Ri Ra in Dublin, Jazz Juice at the GPO in Galway and loads of other clubs in Limerick, Waterford, Tralee and all around Ireland. Sweat was where it was at though, and it remained my heart and soul, because in both rooms the music was cutting edge. I was working by day in Comet Record with Jim and was well on top of the new music as always, so this helped my DJing in Henry’s, and later on on Radio Friendly, which started in 1996. I did on average two shows a week for 4 years there, but it was Sweat that remained the cornerstone of everything.


The music was the key to Sweat. The music in both rooms was top quality and always new. I used finish my night with old favourites (new to many ears) but it was the new stuff that made the club. In the peak years of Henry’s there was no radio In Cork, except 96FM (no-one of our generation listened to it really). There was no internet and no exposure on T.V. plus no pirate radio. The mixtape culture and Henry’s was everything, as Ronan C rightly pointed out in one of the documentary’s better observations. The only place to get and hear the new music was Henry’s and mixtapes. Gorby’s did a more streamlined thing and eventually clubs like Mor Disco, Freakscene, Rubber Dollie, Citrus, Immramma and Revalation Sound kicked off, but for a time it really only was Sweat. My good friend James McGrath (Ruff Cherry) is a wicked graphic designer, and he designed mixtape covers for me and posters for Henry’s. Even today the designs look great. The music had to match and artists like A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Pharycde, Gang Starr, Mary J Blige, Dr Dre, Snoop, Wu Tang, SWV, Groove Theory, The Roots, Fugee’s, DJ Shadow, Erykah Badu, D’Angelo. Maxwell, Eric B and Rakim, Nas, Yvette Michelle and lots more made up the Back bar sound. Reggae, soul, downtempo (“trip-hop”-terrible term) and even rock was also blended in while pop tracks such as “Fast Car” by Tracy Chapman and “Dreams” by Gabrielle, were also favourites. Cutting edge underground hip-hop was massive there, the late great Jay Dee (J Dilla) was not known back then, but his music was massive in the back bar of Sir Henrys. Labels like Ninja Cuts, Mo Wax, Stones Throw were big, as were loads of underground U.S. jazz and funk labels. The 2 Pacs and Biggie’s of the World were still alive then, and their music was large. The Fugees and Blackstreet and others had anthems that were being spun for months on end on import before gaining commercial release here, and it was always special to see another big hit developing. This had always been the Henry’s way, and it had happened with Donkeyman and stuff like “Jump Around” and “Dre Day”, aswell as with Greg and Shane with countless dance classics. The place was special; there was no doubt about it.

Continues below.........














There are a million stories I could tell but I’m getting restless now. The building was a kip but I spent many days in there alone, up front in the main club, making mix tapes and practicing mixes. I did workshops in there, formed the basis of Jam Junior at teenage discos (Susie K and my Jam Partner Colm Kenefick started their careers at these), and made many many friends. I met girlfriends in the club and met a million other friends too. Of the DJ’s, Claude Young, Eric Rug, Jon Aquaviva, Laurent Garnier, Nelson Rosado and of course Kerri Chandler, became good friends at various points. The Back bar, like the front, was never primarily about guests, but Mark Rae, Aim. YZ, Tracy K (with Dextris) Firing Squad, Spikee Tee Marcus Valentine, Harry J, Mikki Dee and many others played there. I have the recordings and a million more pics than I have posted here (pardon the bad quality). The best nights were with the residents though, I’ll always remember Shane playing hip-hop with me one Saturday down the Back, as Greg, who was "in the zone" that night did the front by himself. Both rooms rocked as usual.


I was interviewed a few times for the documentary and I’m sure I mentioned some of what I’ve said today but it didn’t make the cut. In fact the Back Bar was mentioned in a “blink or you’ll miss it” once at the start by Jim, and in passing by Shane and Greg, who like myself, were very disappointed by the documentary. In fairness to Keith, he told me straight up that he didn’t have time to include the Back Bar, so fair enough. He also gave me tickets, which was a nice gesture. Regarding the documentary, I was more concerned with how the club itself was represented. Fair enough about leaving out myself and Donkeyman and Fork and Marq Walsh and everyone, but Shane and Greg were talking for about 2 minutes, and there was more talk about drugs and violence than music in the whole thing. It was more Ball and Chain than Greg and Shane, and for me that was a big disappointment. Despite an impressive interview list, only a few ended up making the cut, so a narrow view of Henry’s was portrayed. To me, it looked like a pretty depressing place. The footage at the start, which I could have seen at Paul Mulvalaney's place if I really wished, was impressive, but I thought the documentary could have done a whole lot better. Interviews with Mike Pickering and Grahame Park were ultimately boring and adding nothing to the mix, it would have possible been better to interview a few more people who went there as clubbers though the years. But hey, what do I know, I’m no filmmaker. Keith, who hadn’t attended Sweat, obviously worked hard to get it done and did it off his own back, so I admire him for that. Most of the people who went seem to have liked it, and I’ve always felt that as an entertainer you should please the crowd rather than the one or two DJ’s in the corner. On that note, he got it right and deserves praise.


As Marq Walsh said last week though, there is no way anyone could hope to capture the memories we have in our minds, as those of us who were there will know exactly how what Sweat was to Cork. I felt privileged to have played there on the 10th Birthday in 1998, one of my best ever gigs, and felt that each one after that was a bonus. We made another three but enough was enough, we have all moved on and while we will celebrate the 20th anniversary next year with a number of low key events, there is no point in trying to bring back the memories forever. I was there. And for that, I will be forever thankful.





















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    I'm a DJ from Cork in Ireland. I work with RedFM, presenting Red Drive, The Hitlist and my specialist show, Black on Red. I'm probably best known for being one of the main hip-hop/soul DJ's in Cork and Ireland. I've been DJing in Cork since the early 90's in legendary clubnights such as Sweat in Sir Henrys, Mor Disco, Free La Funk, Yo Latino and also Jam and Jam Junior at the Savoy and the Pavilion. I've also held down long term residencies at clubs around Ireland such as Brown Sugar at the Kitchen in Dublin, U-Turn at Ri Ra in Dublin, Jazz Juice at the GPO in Galway, Thompson Garage in Belfast, the Soul Clinic, Dee-Bop, Meltdown and Mo Bounce in Limerick and i've played abroad in the United States and the U.K. on numerous occasions. I also write a music column for the Evening Echo and i'm a regular contributor to the U.K.'s Blues and Soul, the longest running black music magazine in the world. These days i run the Pavilion, a music venue in Cork, which hosts my Jam night every few Fridays http://www.pavilioncork.com also you can catch me at http://djstevieg.podomatic.com