808 State

views updated

808 State

Techno group

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

One of the only enduring bands to emerge from Manchester, Englands acid house scene, 808 State create groundbreaking music and remixes. Paving the way for electronic outfits such as Underworld and Prodigy, the group was initially on the periphery of what was known as the Madchester phenomenon. When the press initially discussed acid house, they usually focused on dance music from a guitar angle. Bands such as the Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses received most of the coverage, while 808 State were busy pioneering British techno. Their popularity grew, however, and the group continued to diversify their style. Although 808 States exposure in the United States has only been moderate, they have had 18 top 20 hits on the British charts alone.

808 State formed in 1988 when two customers of the Eastern Bloc, a legendary DJ record shop in Manchester, began talking to the stores owner and founder of the label Creed Records, Martin Price. The customers were Graham Massey, from the 1980s band Biting Tongues, and Gerald Simpson. Once the three realized how much they had in common, it was only natural for them to decide to collaborate. Their first release was a hip-hop style EP, which they recorded under the name Hit Squad Manchester, along with MC Tunes. After this attempt, they renamed themselves 808 State after the Roland TR 808 drum machine they used and for their collective state of mind.

The groups first album as 808 State was Newbuild, released during the summer of 1988 on Prices Creed Records. A raw acid house album, it has become collectible. During the recording of their second album, Quadrastate, Simpson left the band to continue with his side project, A Guy Called Gerald. Massey and Price then recruited two DJs, Andrew Barker and Darren Partington, known as the Spinmasters, to fill the hole in the band. Quadrastate contained a single called Pacific State. At this point, things started to happen for the band. For quite a while, Pacific State had been an anthem at the clubs and raves around Manchester. All of a sudden, the song began to climb up the national charts, and all of England began to dance along with the kids from Madchester. 808 State was signed to the ZTT label, and musicians from around the scene started to make regular appearances on the British Broadcasting Corporations (BBC) music television show Top of the Pops.

In 1990, the band released Ninety on ZTT. It again included Pacific State, which was now a full-blown hit. The album was also released in the United States as Utd. State 90 on Tommy Boy Records. Around this time, the band produced an album for MC Tunes and also released several hit singles, including The Only Rhyme that Bites, Tunes Splits the Atom, with MC Tunes, and Cubic/Olympic.

After a parade of diverse singles, 808 State released Ex:EI in 1991, a major sales success. The album

For the Record

Members include Andrew Barker (born on March 9, 1968), DJ, mixer; Graham Massey (born on August 4, 1960), synthist, producer; Darren Partington (born on November 1, 1969), DJ, producer, mixer; Martin Price, producer; Gerald Simpson, producer, songwriter.

Released EP as Hit Squad Manchester with DJ Tunes, changed name to 808 State 1988; released debut album Newbuild on Prices Creed Records, 1988; Simpson left band and Barker and Partington joined, 1989; released Utd. State 90, 1990; released biggest-selling album Ex:El, 1991; Price departed the band; the group released Gorgeous, 1992; released collaborative effort, Don Solaris, 1996; released 808:88:98, 1998.

Addresses: Management e-mail:[email protected], phone: (+44) 208 964 4778, fax: (+44) 208 968 4861. Booking Value Added Talent, e-mail: [email protected], fax: (+44) 171 226 6135. Website 808 State Official Website: http://www.808state.com. E-mail [email protected].

featured guest vocals by New Orders Bernard Sumner and Björk, who was just beginning her solo career after her departure from the Sugarcubes. These two tracks and the unusual single Lift all showed that the band had depths they could reach outside the boundaries of acid house. This has always been our problem, Massey told Richard Hector-Jones of Melody Maker. After Pacific State we went off at so many tangents, its amazing people stuck with us. Weve never followed a single with another one that sounded anything similar.

As the Madchester phenomenon grew larger, it also grew more commercial. 808 State headlined Manchesters massive G-Mex festival in 1991, but the initial culture had been lost and the scene was dying. 808 States contemporaries the Happy Mondays were decimated by drug problems and personality conflicts. The Stone Roses had contractual problems and also suffered from drug burnout and disappeared for five years. Also, Price decided to leave the band and work as a solo producer, forming the label Sun Text.

In 1992, the band released the album Gorgeous, which included a remake of the UB40 classic One in Ten. Around this time, the group was also extremely busywith a variety of remixing work for various artists including David Bowie, Soundgarden, and Bomb the Bass. They then embarked on a tour with New Order, opening their eyes to a world of possibilities outside of England. The tour included a huge show with New Order at the Hollywood Bowl in California. We saw the way dance music was going, Barker explained to Hector-Jones, and we just f***ed off around the world. If we hadnt done all this traveling, we wouldnt have lasted five years, let alone ten. All of this exposure expanded 808 States style, making their work broader and more eccentric as time progressed. After extensive touring, the band took a break and released nothing until the single Bombadin in 1994. They also released a fan club-only CD called Statetostate, which included previously unreleased material.

Over the next two years, the band worked on a new album, which proved to be much more experimental than their previous work. Released in 1996, Don Solaris included collaborations with artists such as James Dean Bradfield of Manic Street Preachers, Louise Rhodes of Lamb, and Michael Doughty of Soul Coughing. This album showed the band to have a darker side. To celebrate its release, a free concert was held at the Castlefield Amphitheatre in Manchester in June of 1996.

On the tenth anniversary of 808 States inception, 808:88:98 was released in May of 1998. This album coincided with the tenth anniversary of the genesis of acid house as well. It was preceded by and featured two new remixes, Pacific808:98 and Cubic98, and one new song, Crash. You know, the weirdest thing about putting together this compilation, Massey told Hector-Jones, is realizing how mad half the singles we put out really were. I threw on the compilation the other day and just shook my head going Why? Why? Why? At the time, I was mystified that a track like Lift couldnt get in the charts. But listening to it today, the reasons simple its about 18 different tracks nailed together!

808 State re-released Newbuild on the Rephlex label in 1999, marking their first release in a triple vinyl pack. The groups schedule stays busy with remixing production work as well, having completed a track for the Stone Roses remix album called the Made of Stone 808 State Mix, in October of 2000. They also frequently appear as DJs around England.

808 States studio and stage talents have pleased crowds and helped the group to consistently pioneer and push the envelope of the techno genre. Their list of remix credits is also endless, with the bands favorite collaborators being David Bowie, Jon Hassell, Quincy Jones, R.E.M., Rolf Harris, and Tom Jones. Through it all, 808 State have never stopped expanding their style and have never been afraid of surprising their audience. As of 2000, the group left ZTT Records and was looking for a new recording contract.

Selected discography

Newbuild, Creed Records, 1988; reissued, Rephlex, 1999.

Quadrastate, Creed Records, 1989.

Ninety, ZTT, 1989.

Utd. State 90 (U.S.), Tommy Boy, 1990.

The Extended Pleasure of Dance (EP), ZTT/WEA, 1990.

MC Tunes: The North at its Heights, ZTT/WEA, 1990.

Ex:EI, ZTT/WEA, 1991.

Gorgeous, ZTT, 1992.

Forecast (Japanese compilation), ZTT/WEA, 1993.

Statetostate (fan club promo), State to State, 1994.

Don Solaris, ZTT/WEA, 1996.

Thermo Kings (Japanese remix compilation), ZTT/WEA, 1996.

808:88:98 (compilation), ZTT, 1998.

Sources

Periodicals

Melody Maker, June 6, 1998, p. 18; March 13, 1999, p.20.

Online

GlobalState-The Official 808 State Website, http://www.808state.com (November 13, 2000).

Ultimate Band List, http://www.ubl.com (November 13, 2000).

Thomas Dorst