| 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.
So
where did it all go right for Richard?
Skip
back to the late Nineties, when as a schoolboy he got his first
introduction to club culture through his elder sibling. "He used
to go out clubbing and have his mates come round the house" he
recounts. "They would be on the decks and then when they'd go
out, I'd stay up listening to radio and recording sets" He was
hooked. Which, given his family's own love of music, is unsurprising.
"Even when I was very young I remember my mum used to listen to
old Motown records!" Disco's clearly in the Dinsdale blood.
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.
Practice
makes perfect, and Richard was going great guns - but not just
in the clubs, either.
He'd
been working on music with Brighton-based friend James Day, who
gave him studio time
in
the studios of Skint Records, and started producing his own material.
Now, not only has he released tracks and mixes for the aforementioned
labels, he's also remixed the title track of
2005
horror flick 'The Skeleton Key', creating an Ibiza backroom favourite
in the process.
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."
With
his residency at Type continuing unabated, not to mention plans
for his own artist album, Richard is all set to break through
big time this year. In fact, he's going to be writing his name
across 2006 very large indeed.
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