Richard Dinsdale - November 2007 Mix

www.inthemix.com.au
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House music: it’s more than just a feeling. For young turk Richard Dinsdale, it’s a way of life.

Although only a sprightly 24 years old, this new kid on the house block’s been living, breathing and bleeding dance music for the best part of a decade. His mouth-watering mix of tech-tinged electro and bass-heavy house is a regular fixture at leading London nightspot The Cross, his solid, groove-led productions snapped up by UK labels Renaissance, Kinky Vinyl, Big Love and Toolroom. He also counts some of the scene’s most successful movers’n’shakers – Erick Morillo, Mark Knight, Seamus Haji, Trophy Twins, Plump DJs – among his famous fans.

Bitten by the house bug, 13-year-old Richard got himself a pair of decks. “They were a pair of really dodgy belt drives! One broke, so I ended up hooking a tape player to the mixer, just so I could still practice on the other one” It was an unorthodox method, but while his school friends were busy on PlayStations and the like, Richard was busy honing his talents. So much so, in fact, that he was a winner of Muzik magazine’s Bedroom Bedlam award a couple of years later.

He eventually got enough money together to buy himself some infinitely more swish Technics, and, aged 17, bagged himself a gig at infamous south London rave den The Chunnel Club. “Around that time Pete Wardman from Trade had taken me under his wing” he says of his early days on the circuit. But his love of hard dance gave way to house very soon. “I was really into labels like Subliminal, which was a cross between hard disco and house. I realised that this was the music for me.”

His newfound love of house, not to mention the nationwide leg-up Muzik had given him, hadn’t gone unnoticed on the scene: he got himself a deal with Represents, Seb Fontaine’s DJ agency, and a gig at his flagship London club Type followed soon after. This was in March of last year, and was a turning point for Dinsdale. “It was a warm-up set for MYNC Project and I packed it out; everyone from the main room were coming through to the second arch for my set” he beams fondly. A month later, he was playing in the main room as a resident, being asked to play album launch parties by Subliminal’s head honcho Erick Morillo, even playing the Radio 1 stage at that summer’s Glastonbury festival.

And right now, it’s his production work that’s taking centre stage in his life. And with his teenage years making way for his early 20s, his enthusiasm for the beat of the house drum is stronger than ever. “It’s been a great year because things are going underground again. Up-and-coming producers are driving the scene and people are starting to pick up on new styles like electro and European sounds rather than plain old house music,” he enthuses. “Commercial house isn’t so popular anymore, and the people going out clubbing now are the ones who are truly into it so much more.”

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ELLLENNNN

ELLLENNNN said on the 9th May, 2008

is there a tracklist for this?