Tomcraft

Thomas Brückner[1] (born 12 June 1975), known by his stage name Tomcraft, is a German DJ and producer. He specializes in progressive house and progressive trance music and is better known for having created the tracks "Loneliness" and "Prosac", working alongside Eniac.

DJ Tomcraft
Tomcraft, 1994
Tomcraft, 1994
Background information
Birth nameThomas Brückner
Born (1975-06-12) 12 June 1975
Munich, West Germany
GenresHouse, techno, trance
Occupation(s)
Years active1994–present
LabelsGreat Stuff
Websitewww.tomcraft.de

Music career

Tomcraft began working as a DJ in Munich in 1994, shifting between techno and the emerging progressive trance style. The following year, he released his first track, "This Is No House".[2] He first met Eniac in 1996, and the two immediately started producing music together, beginning with "Viva". The same year yielded the track "Prosac", but this did not achieve success until it was re-released in 2001. For a decade or so, he worked alongside fellow German producer Eniac as a studio team, steadily releasing tracks on, among others, local label Kosmo Records.[3]

From the end of the 1990s to 2003 Tomcraft was resident DJ in Munich's techno club KW – Das Heizkraftwerk.[4]

In 2002 Tomcraft released "Loneliness", a progressive vocal track that topped the charts in the United Kingdom in May 2003.[1][5] His DJ career was greatly boosted by this success,[6] and Tomcraft released several club tracks, including Prozac and Overdose, with regular singles releases as well as 4 albums released across the space of 6 years. He also worked regularly with English DJ/Producer Tim Healey (formerly known as 'Coburn'). Over the years he also collaborated with artists such as Jimmy Pop (Bloodhound Gang's singer), German soul sensation Xavier Naidoo, the USA’s Tommie Sunshine and local rapper Sido. He set about building his reputation in the underground scene with the launch of Great Stuff and subsequent signings of such a talents as Lutzenkirchen, Coburn, Oliver Koletzki, The Egg and Ramon Tapia.

Other musical highlights over the years included playing to 1.3 million people at Berlin’s Love Parade in 2003, Japan’s Fuji Rock Festival,[7] festivals in Brazil, and clubs in Singapore, Tokyo, Los Angeles, São Paulo, Rio, Cape Town, San Francisco, and several European cities.[8]

2005 saw the launch of Craft Music, a new outlet for his productions with all other signed releases treated to a remix by the man himself – with the label undergoing a major relaunch in 2010 to bring it back to the forefront of house and techno music.

His sound has morphed over the years from trance into electro house and now since 2007 into a balance of those influences with a progressive house backbone, returning to the melodic sound that he came from originally.[9]

Tomcraft has released four albums to date, All I Got (2001), MUC (2003), HyperSexyConscious (2006) and For the Queen (2007), all on Kosmo Records.

His 2007 album, For the Queen, was a collaboration with Tobias David Lützenkirchen from their Great Stuff label, and while similar in style with previous Tomcraft releases, it is distinctive in a more narrative way, with less of the dance floor dimension of his previous works; he calls it a "feature album" and it is rich with collaborations and two covers.[10]

Discography

Albums

  • All I Got (2001) No. 97 Germany[11]
  • MUC (2003) No. 41 Germany[11]
  • HyperSexyConscious (2006)
  • For the Queen (2007)

Compilation albums

  • Tomcraft – The Mix (2003 remix album of other artists, with two exceptions, where other artists have remixed his tracks)

Singles

  • "This Is No House" (1995)
  • "Rollercoaster" (1995)
  • "Viva" (1996)
  • "Unicum" (1996)
  • "Prosac" (1996)
  • "The Circle" (1997) No. 52 Germany[11]
  • "Mind" (1997)
  • "Gothic" (1998)
  • "The Mission" (1998) No. 43 Germany[11]
  • "Powerplant" (1998)
  • "Flashback" (1998)
  • "The Lord" (1998)
  • "Punk Da Funk" (1999)
  • "Ezekiel 25.17" (1999)
  • "Versus" (vs. Sunbeam) (2000) No. 50 Germany[11]
  • "Silence" (2000) No. 39 Germany[11]
  • "Prosac" (re-release) (2001) No. 50 Germany[11]
  • "All I Got" (2001)
  • "Overdose" (2001) No. 38 Germany[11]
  • "Bang Bang" (2002)
  • "Loneliness" (2002) No. 1 UK (2003 release),[1] No. 10 Germany[11]
  • "Brainwashed (Call You)" (2003) No. 43 UK[1]
  • "Into the Light" (2003) No. 65 Germany[11]
  • "Great Stuff" (2003)
  • "Another World" (by "Sonique On Tomcraft") (2004) No. 57 Germany[11]
  • "Dirty Sanchez" (2005)
  • "Sureshot" (2005)
  • "Quelle Heure Est Il" (2005)
  • "Da Disco" (2006)
  • "Sureshot 2006" (featuring Sido and Tai Jason) (2006) No. 34 Germany[11]
  • "Katowice" (2006)
  • "Broadsword Calling Danny Boy" (featuring Jimmy Pop) (2006)
  • "People Like Them" (featuring Xavier Naidoo) (2007)
  • "Naked on Clouds" (2009)
  • "Disco Erection Pt.1" (2009)
  • "Disco Erection Pt.2" (2009)
  • "Room 414 (Can't Get Away)" (2010)
  • "A Place Called Soul" (2010)
  • "Written High" (2011)
  • "I Need Love" (2011)
  • "Tell Mummy" (2011)
  • "Taco" (2012)
  • "Zounds of Arca" (2012)
  • "Rock 'n' Roller" (2012)
  • "Supersonic" (featuring Sister Bliss) (2012)
  • "Like a Roller" (2013)
  • "U Got 2 Know" (2013)
  • "Happiness" (with Ilira an Moguai) (2020)

References

  1. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 561. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  2. "DJ Tomcraft* & Mephisto (2) – This Is No House". Discogs.
  3. "Kosmo Records Label". Discogs.
  4. "Feature: Tomcraft". dmcworld magazine. Retrieved 2017-06-27.
  5. "Loneliness". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 2 July 2010.
  6. "Feature: Tomcraft". dmcworld magazine.
  7. "History 2007". Fuji Rock Festival 14.
  8. "Tomcraft Biography". Resident Advisor.
  9. "Tomcraft Biography". Resident Advisor.
  10. Slomowicz, Ron. "Tomcraft Interview". dancemusic.about.com. Retrieved 2 July 2010.
  11. "Discographie von Tomcraft". offiziellecharts.de. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
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