Born in 1966, February 1st. A former staffer at the embassy in London, Frenchman Laurent Garnier began DJing in Manchester during the late '80s and became by the following decade one of the best all-around DJs in the world, able to span classic deep house and Detroit techno, the harder side of acid/trance and surprisingly jazzy tracks as well. He added production work to his schedule in the early '90s, and recorded several brilliant LPs with a similar penchant for diversity.
One of the first Europeans to begin mixing American house music in Britain, Garnier was one of the prime cogs in the late-'80s club scene. His DJing at Manchester's legendary Haçienda club provided a major inspiration for the
Stone Roses, The and
Happy Mondays to begin adding house rhythms to rock music. Garnier shifted his attention back to France in the early '90s, running the Wake Up parties at the Rex club in Paris for three years and gradually moving into recording as well. For the
FNAC Music Dance Division label, Garnier released "French Connection" and the "A Bout de Souffle EP"; after the label went under, though, he formed the
F Communications label with
Eric Morand (a friend who had also worked for
FNAC Music Dance Division). He had amassed quite a discography by the mid-'90s, but his first LP "Shot In The Dark" wasn't launched until 1994. His second, "30", appeared in 1997, followed by the retrospective "Early Works" in 1998. After trotting the globe with multiple DJ appearances during the late '90s, Garnier returned to the production realm with "Unreasonable Behaviour", released in early 2000.
In 2002, he launched a web radio, Pedro Broadcast. Since then, he began to look back to his roots by producing several mixed compilations, and an another studio album in 2002, "The Cloud Making Machine", more jazz-oriented. Every year is a new occasion to come back with a new project or live show, appearing in festivals (Montreux, Eurockéennes...), The Rex Club in Paris, or for special performances with friends (
Philippe Nadaud,
Bugge Wesseltoft, or more occasionally
Avril,
Alexkid,
Mathieu Chédid,
Spleen (3)...). This period of intense live creation is materialized by his project album "Public Outburst" released in summer 2007. For his latest show and project, "Gnanmankoudji", he collaborates with
Scan X and
Philippe Nadaud.
Those who had the opportunity to be at Lov.e the last day of October 2003 will never forget his incredible long set with such an impressive and diverse repertoire. Laurent played Techno, House, Drum & Bass, Hip hop, Electro, Ragga, Rock'n roll, Trance-driven tunes and everything you can imagine! I remember hearing so many timeless classics, from ‘Massive Attack – Unfinished Sympathy’ to ‘Choice featuring Laurent Garnier & Shazz – Acid Eiffel’, 'Marshall Jefferson - Move your body', 'LNR - Work it to the bone' mixed with some more recent ones, such as “The Man With The Red Face” and DJ Marky & XRS’s “LK 'Carolina Carol Bela'” (the moment he switched to Drum & Bass caused a real cataclysm on the dancefloor). Suddenly some more unexpected ones and then came another thunder with ‘Nirvana – Smells Like Teen Spirit’, with whole people shocked looking one each other at the dancefloor. But it was a very positive shock. Garnier knew perfectly the way to tell a ‘five-hours’ musical history. Every sequence was perfectly chosen, each style matching harmonically with the next one, and at the same time there was absolutely no schedule or pre-defined tracklist but the most impressive aspect of all was the feeling to know when put each track on the set.
The next day I interviewed him for Beatz Magazine in the Unique Hotel, just some hours before his second gig (this time at the hotel). Synonym for eclectic and talented mind, Laurent really opened his heart and spoke about his career, from the times of the legendary Hacienda Club to that day, which cleared our minds on why he had such a different way of thinking (and conceiving) music. He told that until the eighties, it was very normal to mix different styles on a same set, for example Hip Hop, Funk, R&B and Soul in a same story, and that he always fought for a more eclectic perspective in the electronic scene, suggesting that we couldn’t be restricted to a mono style point of view as if no other existed. The result for this apparently ‘Unreasonable Behavior’ could be noticed in the different events he was invited to play, from a live-act in Montreux to others in Nancy Jazz, EuRockéennes and the ‘Route Du Rock’, venues that not necessarily belonged to an electronic Universe. He also confessed that his quote “Give most DJs an eight hour set and they will shit themselves” was true, and that it reflected his open-mind attitude for music and art in general. We also talked about the current situation concerning distribution chain on the music market, the international scene, music in general, MP3, drugs, labels and other polemic subjects. It was simply amazing to see a historical DJ & Producer with such a strong character.
Some hours later, the crowd invaded the entrance of the majestic hotel. It was nearly impossible to park or to find any ticket. The situation was absolutely justified, though: again, the French did a very serious set with precious tunes such as 'Nitzer Ebb - Join in the chant' and a devastating sequence of electros which included 'Hashim - Al Naafish', Afrika Bambaata & The SoulSonic Force’s “Planet Rock”, among others – also melted with more recent tracks like 'The man with the red face', 'Crispy Bacon' and a remix for 'Inner City - Big Fun'. At the end of the party, he played with the Brazilian DJ Mau Mau on the decks spinning one treasure after the other: ‘Jeff Mills – The Bells’, Prodigy’s “Out Of Space”, etc.
Real musical lessons for the younger generations. If you by any means have the chance to be present in a night like these mentionned ones, don't forget to say thanks later...