Erol Alkan
Erol Alkan (born 30 May 1974)[2] is an English DJ and producer of Turkish Cypriot descent.[3] He grew up in Archway in North London.[4]
Erol Alkan | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | Kurtis Rush Mustapha 3000 Beyond The Wizards Sleeve Disco 3000 |
Born | London, England | 30 May 1974
Genres | Alternative rock, electronic[1] |
Occupation(s) | DJ, producer, musician, artist |
Instrument(s) | Turntables, synthesiser, sequencer, guitar, bass, drums, voice, CDJ-2000 |
Years active | 1993–present |
Labels | Phantasy |
Website | erolalkan |
Career
DJ and club promoter
In 1993, Erol Alkan started DJing in various indie nightclubs in London. His first ever public DJ set was at The Gass Club[5] in Leicester Square.
In 1995, he was a resident DJ of club night 'Going Underground'[6] co-founded by Glyn Peppiatt and James Dickie. It was held weekly on Mondays at the Plastic People venue which was situated at its original Oxford Street location in Central London.
In 1997, Erol re-launched the club under a new name: Trash.[7][6] Over the next few years, Trash became one of the most influential clubs of its time.[2] Until its closure in 2007, Trash saw performances by Peaches, LCD Soundsystem, Klaxons, Bloc Party, 2manydjs, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Scissor Sisters, Phoenix, Metronomy, Electric Six and many more up and coming bands.
From 2001 onwards, Erol Alkan became one of the most in demand Djs of the time, playing regular DJ sets outside Trash, focusing primarily on dance music influenced by his sets at Bugged Out. Bugged Out are credited as launching Erol's dance music career after offering him a residency halfway through his debut set for them at Fabric, when Erol filled in for David Holmes who had missed a flight into London. His profile increased considerably during 2003 when he was voted 'Best Breakthrough DJ' by Muzik magazine, and in 2006, when he earned the Mixmag 2006 "DJ of the Year" award.[8] Erol has also been voted Datatransmissions 'DJ Of The Year' in both 2008 and 2009, which is seen as an alternative to the DJ Mag Top 100 awards but consists only of British DJs.
Since 2008, Alkan has also hosted a regular radio shows, as a former resident of BBC 6Music's 6Mix until 2015, moving onto a residency for online streaming platform Boiler Room in 2016. He returned to 6Music to for various shows during 2018, filling in for Nemone and Giles Peterson, as well as hosting both 2017 and 2018's New Year's Eve live specials.
In the summer of 2017, Erol programmed a 13-week residency at London's XOYO club, playing weekly alongside live and DJ guests including Boys Noize, Gerd Janson, Daniel Avery, Ellen Allien, Peggy Gou, 2ManyDJs, Francois K, Baris K, Peaches and Jimmy Edgar.[9]
He has released multiple successful DJ mixes, including two editions of 'A Bugged Out/Bugged In' mix, a 2012 mix for revered Belgian festival I Love Techno and a 2014 contribution to the prestigious Fabriclive series that was later awarded 'Mix Of The Year 2014' by DJ Mag.
Remixer
Erol Alkan released a series of mash-ups using the alias Kurtis Rush in the early 2000s, including a mix of Kylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out of My Head" and New Order's "Blue Monday", which was performed by Minogue at the Brit Awards.[10] Erol also used the alias Mustapha 3000,[11][12] and is half of the psychedelic dance-rock act Beyond the Wizard's Sleeve, along with Richard Norris.[13] In 2016, Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve released a long-anticipated debut album, The Soft Bounce, featuring collaborations with artists such as Hannah Peel, Jane Weaver, Euros Childs and celebrated writer Jon Savage. In 2016, London record store Rough Trade featured The Soft Bounce as one of their top ten records of 2016 in their annual end of year list.[14]
Erol Alkan has remixed tracks from artists including Klaxons, Alter Ego, Bloc Party, Daft Punk, The Chemical Brothers, Gonzales, Tame Impala, MGMT, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, ZZT, Fan Death, Digitalism, Scissor Sisters, Justice, Franz Ferdinand, LA Priest, Interpol, Hot Chip, Death From Above 1979, Metronomy, Mylo, Night Works, Margot, Todd Rundgren, Kindness, Connan Mockasin, Depeche Mode and New Order.
In 2017, Alkan's label, Phantasy, released 'Reworks Volume 1', encompassing twenty of his best-loved remixes, and available as both a double-CD and limited-edition vinyl format. It was nominated for 'Best Compilation' in the 2017 DJ Mag Awards.
Producer
Erol Alkan began producing bands in 2006. Originally cutting his teeth recording B-sides for The Long Blondes and Mystery Jets, he was asked back to work on their respective second albums. His first production credit is the entire Mystery Jets' much loved second album, Twenty One, which contained the 2 top 40 hit singles "Young Love" and "Two Doors Down", Late of the Pier's debut record, Fantasy Black Channel, and The Long Blondes' second album Couples.[15]
His third album production within that 18-month period was Late of the Pier's debut and only album Fantasy Black Channel, released 11 August 2008 on Parlophone Records. Cited as one of the greatest debut records of the 00's, it has reached cult classic status from both music fans and the media. It was awarded an alternative Album Of The Year accolade by Drowned In Sound, in which the public voted.
In 2007 Alkan founded his own label, named Phantasy,[16] which has released music from Daniel Avery, Connan Mockasin, Ghost Culture, Tom Rowlands from The Chemical Brothers, Gabe Gurnsey, Cowboy Rhythmbox, Kamera, U and Alkan's own Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve Project, as well as his first EP of solo club tracks, 'Illumination' in 2013.[17]
In 2017, Alkan produced the comeback LP from seminal British shoegaze band Ride titled 'Weather Diaries', and released to critical acclaim. He reunited with the band again for their 'Tomorrows Shore' EP and sixth album 'This Is Not A Safe Place', which was released in August 2019.
Alkan also worked as additional producer on The Killers' hit single "The Man", providing additional instrumentation.[18] He is currently working with Duran Duran.[19]
Other work
He is also one half of psychedelic rock group Beyond the Wizard's Sleeve.[20] BTWS have remixed tracks (often listed as "Re-Animations") for Peter Bjorn and John, Midlake, Simian Mobile Disco, Franz Ferdinand, Badly Drawn Boy, The Chemical Brothers, Goldfrapp, Late of the Pier, Tracey Thorn, Dust Galaxy, The Real Ones, and Findlay Brown. They've also released an album called "Ark 1" in 2008, and four EPs - "Birth", "Spring", "George" & "West".
Erol compiled a 2xCD mix for the Bugged Out series. The second disc, "A Bugged In Selection with Erol Alkan", is a collection of downtempo tracks. Erol has also released mix compilations for Muzik Magazine and Mixmag. He continues to expand on the much loved 'Bugged In Selection' mixes via a curated Spotify playlist which continues to collect music of a similar vein.
Other productions: Whitey's "Do The Nothing", Franz Ferdinand's "All my Friends (LCD Soundsystem Cover)" and producing 'I'd Rather, Jack' for London noise band Teeth Of The Sea
Alkan was working on remixes for Björk and Interpol in summer 2007, but lost them due to a hard drive failure.[21]
Discography
Original releases
Year | Title |
---|---|
2009 | "Waves / Death Suite" (with Boys Noize) |
"Waves" (Chilly Gonzales Piano Rework) | |
2010 | "Lemonade / Avalanche" (with Boys Noize)[22] |
2011 | "Avalanche (Terminal Velocity)" (with Boys Noize feat. Jarvis Cocker) |
2012 | "Roland Rat / Brainstorm" (with Boys Noize) |
"A Sydney Jook" (with Switch) | |
2013 | "Illumination" EP |
2015 | "Sub Conscious" |
2018 | "Spectrum / Silver Echoes" |
Mix and compilation albums
Year | Title |
---|---|
2001 | Trash Companion #1 |
2003 | One Louder (Muzik Magazine Covermount) |
2004 | A Bugged Out Mix |
2006 | Disco 2006 (Mixmag Magazine Covermount)[23] |
2008 | Ark 1 (As Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve) |
2009 | Re-Animations Volume 1 (As Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve) |
2012 | Another "Bugged Out" Mix & "Bugged In" Selection |
2014 | FabricLive.77 |
Remixes as Erol Alkan
Year | Artist | Track | Title |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Mylo | "Drop the Pressure" | Erol Alkan's Extended Re-Edit |
Alter Ego | "Rocker" | Erol Alkan's Death Disco Re-Vised | |
Death from Above 1979 | "Romantic Rights" | Erol Alkan's Love From Below Re-Edit | |
2005 | The Chemical Brothers | "Believe" | Erol Alkan's Feel Me Rework |
Bloc Party | "She's Hearing Voices" | Erol Alkan's Calling Your Name Dub & Vocal Re-Works | |
Mystery Jets | "Zoo Time" | Erol Alkan Re-Work | |
Franz Ferdinand | "Do You Want To" | Erol Alkan's Glam Racket | |
2006 | Daft Punk | "The Brainwasher" | Erol Alkan's Horrorhouse Dub[24] |
Justice | "Waters of Nazareth" | Erol Alkan's Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr Re-Edit[24] | |
Hot Chip | "Boy From School" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework[24] | |
Scissor Sisters | "I Don't Feel Like Dancin'" | Erol Alkan's Carnival Of Light Rework | |
2007 | Klaxons | "Golden Skans" [25] | Erol Alkan's Ekstra Spektral Rework |
Digitalism | "Jupiter Room" | Erol Alkan's Simple, Yet Effective Re-Edit | |
Interpol | "Mammoth" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
La Priest | "Engine" | Erol Alkan's Transonic Re-Edit[24] | |
2008 | Fan Death | "Veronica's Veil" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework |
Sebastian | "Momy" | Erol Alkan's Murrr/O/Durrr Re-Edit | |
ZZT | "The Worm" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework | |
2009 | Yeah Yeah Yeahs | "Zero" | Erol Alkan Rework |
2010 | Chilly Gonzales | "Never Stop" | Erol Alkan's Piano Pella[24] |
Chilly Gonzales | "Never Stop" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
MGMT | "Congratulations" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
Eurythmics | "Sweet Dreams" | Erol Alkan Re-Edit #1 | |
2011 | Tame Impala | "Why Won't You Make Up Your Mind?" | Erol Alkan Rework[24] |
Erol Alkan & Boys Noize | "Death Suite" | Erol Alkan Edit | |
Connan Mockasin | "Forever Dolphin Love" | Erol Alkan Rework[8] | |
Metronomy | "The Bay" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework[24] | |
Ladytron | "Flicking Your Switch" | Erol Alkan Remix | |
2012 | Justice | "Canon" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework |
Saint Etienne | "Last Days of Disco" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework | |
Kindness | "Gee Up" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework | |
Connan Mockasin | "Forever Dolphin Love" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework Version 2 | |
Spandex | "The Bull" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
2013 | Night Works | "Long Forgotten Boy" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework |
Tame Impala | "Be Above It" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
2014 | Manic Street Preachers | "Europa Geht Durch Mich" | Erol Alkan's Mesmerise Eins/Zwei Rework[8] |
The Emperor Machine | "RMI Is All I Want" | Erol Alkan's Extended Rework | |
Klaxons | "Love Frequency" | Erol Alkan's Mild Pitch Remix | |
Margot | "Waldorf" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
2015 | Emil Nikolaisen, Hans-Peter Lindstrøm, and Todd Rundgren | "Runddans" | Erol Alkan Rework |
New Order | "Singularity" | Erol Alkan Rework | |
2016 | Beyond The Wizards Sleeve | "White Crow" | Erol Alkan Rework[26] |
2017 | Todd Terje & Det Glyne Triangel | "Maskindanse" | Erol Alkan Rework[27] |
Depeche Mode | "Cover Me" | Erol Alkan White Light Rework | |
Depeche Mode | "Cover Me" | Erol Alkan Black Out Rework | |
2018 | Tuff City Kids ft Joe Goddard | "Reach Out" | Erol Alkan Rework |
Remixes as Beyond the Wizards Sleeve
Year | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|
2006 | Peter Bjorn and John | "Young Folks" |
Dust Galaxy | "Come Hear the Trumpets" | |
Midlake | "Roscoe" | |
2007 | Findlay Brown | "Losing the Will to Survive" |
Tracey Thorn | "Raise the Roof" | |
Badly Drawn Boy | "Promises" | |
The Chemical Brothers | "Battle Scars" | |
2008 | The Real Ones | "Outlaw" |
Late of the Pier | "The Bears Are Coming" | |
Goldfrapp | "Happiness" | |
Simian Mobile Disco | "Love" | |
2009 | Franz Ferdinand | "Ulysses" |
2010 | De De Mouse | "Station to Stars" |
2014 | Temples | "Sun Structures" |
Daniel Avery | "New Energy" | |
2015 | Noel Gallagher | "Ballad Of The Mighty I" |
Noel Gallagher | "Riverman" | |
2016 | Shock Machine | "The Shock Machine" |
M Craft | "Chemical Trails" | |
Doom Squad | "Pyramids" |
Producer / mixer
Personal life
Alkan is married, lives in London,[28] and has been teetotal since 2012.[29] His wife ran the East London club night Durrr.[30]
References
- Murray, Robin (6 September 2012). "Erol Alkan Tackles 'Forever Dolphin Love'". Clash. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
- Cooper, Leonie (6 January 2007). "Trash regular Leonie Cooper looks back on the decade's hippest rave up". Theguardian.com. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
- "T in the Park: Erol Alkan". BBC. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
- "Diary at the Centre of the Earth » erol alkan". Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan Delivers Phantasy's 100th Release, "Automatic"". Selector. 19 February 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan Contact Info | Booking Agent, Manager, Publicist". Booking Agent Info. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- Hutchinson, Kate (17 January 2017). ""Remembering Trash: the London club night that defined the rock'n'rave era."". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan: "Running a club or a label was never a dream of mine"". Mixmag. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan is XOYO's next resident". Data Transmission. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Kylie mashes up Can't Get You Out of My Head with Blue Monday at the Brits". the Guardian. 14 June 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan - Samples, Covers and Remixes". WhoSampled. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Mustapha 3000". Discogs. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Beyond The Wizards Sleeve Unveil 'Diagram Girl'". Data Transmission. 1 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Rough Trade announce their top 100 best albums of 2016". NME. 16 November 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Erol Alkan – the man who changed the face of indie clubbing – still refuses to welcome celebrity over his compulsion to create". Loud And Quiet. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- Unlisted, Christian (13 August 2019). ""Erol Alkan talks three decades of London club culture"". Fabric London. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Phantasy Sound website: Erol Alkan". Phantasy Sound. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "The Killers: The Man". Genius.com. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "#495:John Taylor / Duran Duran,The Power Station, Neurotic Outsiders" – via soundcloud.com.
- "Erol Alkan's Beyond The Wizard's Sleeve project returns with a new single". Fact. 4 May 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
- "Erol Alkan". Erolalkan.co.uk. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
- "Boys Noize Gives Away 'Lemonade' Edit". Data Transmission. 26 January 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Mixcloud". Mixcloud. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Keeping Kids Dancing: 10 of the best Erol Alkan reworks". Mixmag. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Klaxons : Music". Archived from the original on 31 August 2012. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
- "Beyond The Wizards Sleeve release 'Black Crow'". Data Transmission. 8 October 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- "Todd Terje shares new single 'Maskindans', teasing second album". Data Transmission. 5 June 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- Corner, Lena (8 March 2009). "How We Met: Richard Norris & Erol Alkan". The Independent. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
- @erolalkan (5 July 2022). "10 years no booze… not a single drop… love and strength to those who are on the same path.. stay on in… I can assure you it leads to somewhere better. E x" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- Briggs, Elise (4 May 2015). "First Night But No Nerves | Rising East". Retrieved 1 June 2023.