Peter Van Hoesen

簡(jiǎn)介: Peter Van Hoesen: Bass invader
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The Belgian producer has some of the dirtiest basslines in the world of techno. RA's Richard Brop 更多>

Peter Van Hoesen: Bass invader
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The Belgian producer has some of the dirtiest basslines in the world of techno. RA's Richard Brophy called up Brussels to find out more about the rising DJ/producer.
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You know that moment when you can feel that a producer has nailed a sound that they had previously only hinted at? That's exactly the way I felt when I heard Peter Van Hoesen's &Trusted.& I had come across Van Hoesen's music before, but in truth, &Trusted& had piqued my curiosity only because it included a Norman Nodge remix. That version quickly fell by the wayside, however, as the cavernous, grandiose bass of the original version unravelled, amid austere and ominous synths. Trusted and its follow-up, Casual Care—both on Van Hoesen's own Time To Express imprint—are underpinned by a grimy, flawed sensibility that proved irresistible.
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Unsurprisingly, bass has played a central role since the very start of Van Hoesen's musical journey. As an 11-year-old, he learnt how to play the bass and keyboards after watching a fateful television performance by '80s Belgian act Telex. &It was the first time that I had seen a band playing on stage with huge synths—I was fascinated by what I saw,& he explains. Other local developments shaped Van Hoesen's teenage experiences: The emergence of New Beat during the mid to late '80s, an almost uniquely Belgian pre-acid house dance floor sound, also caught his attention: &The music had an obsession with bass, even the faster tracks were pitched down. For people of my age, my generation, in Belgium, New Beat is still important and I still like to play slower sets, you can feel the space between the beats and bass.&
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Van Hoesen feels that there was only a year or two of good releases before New Beat lapsed into self-parody, but it left a lasting impression, and inspired him to start DJing. &After New Beat, I found Detroit techno and then that whole adventure began,& he laughs. &At the time, there was nothing like it, it was so powerful, and I had no clue as to what kind of city Detroit was. I loved the basslines in New Beat and Derrick May's records also had basslines that were very important, but they were different to New Beat. It (New Beat) wasn't very funky, and that's what the guys in Detroit had, this magic formula. It was the familiar sound of the machines, mixed with the funk.&
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By the early '90s, Belgium had become the unofficial spiritual home on the continent for electronic dance music. R&S Records and producers like CJ Bolland and Frank de Wulf were releasing a unique version of high-octane techno that inspired the nascent rave/hardcore scene and US artists as well as emerging UK names like Bandulu and Kirk Degiorgio were making their first continental appearances at warehouse parties organised by the BWP organisation.
Having attended these parties, Van Hoesen began putting on his own events with friends. He admits that the new wave of hard-edged techno from this period &really had an impact on me,& but as the decade progressed and the music veered into a one-dimensional loopy cul de sac, Van Hoesen started to get bored and turned his attention to production.
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Inspired by the new wave of German glitchy minimalism emerging from Cologne, he set up the experimental/ambient label Foton, and had a number of releases as Object and Vanno. Consequently, Foton forged links with Brussels' strong visual and performing arts community and they were invited to perform sound installations. &I went totally into that direction and I didn't do any techno for quite a while,& he explains. &We started to throw these really cool events where we'd start with experimental music, which we presented to an audience lying down, usually with a four speaker setup so they were 'caught' in the sound. Then we gradually took it up and changed the music into a more danceable style, whereupon we removed the cushions and had people go from horizontal to vertical, all in one night.&
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Foton's reputation for curating unusual events spread, and they were asked to organise parties for other people. They were the first organisers to book the then-unknown Kode9 and Spaceape in Belgium, but eventually Van Hoesen grew tired of the energy required to keep it going. &Foton was most active between 2002 and 2006—it was a big commitment and it didn't give me the time I needed to concentrate on making music,& he says. &By 2006, it was also becoming more difficult to do these type of events because there were fewer venues and the support for experimental music was falling.&?
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Despite this, Van Hoesen believes that Belgium remains one of the creative hotbeds for electronic music, and that techno is instilled in the national psyche. &On the whole, people here are well connected to electronic music. I know people who don't go out at all but still listen to house and techno at home. They carry that virus with them!& Unfortunately, he also feels that Belgians are classic underachievers. Maybe it's the fact that the country is sandwiched in between Europe's two biggest countries that gives them an inferiority complex, but even though it hosts the world's biggest techno party —I Love Techno in Ghent—and its capital is home to the world-renowned Fuse club, Peter thinks that his peers need a confidence boost.
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&It's also part of being Belgian, not realising your potential,& he says. &This is especially true in electronic music; there is a lot of good music being made here, a lot of talented people, but they just don't believe in themselves enough. There is a tight community around Dr Vinyl, the last record store in Brussels, and some of the music the people in that group are making has blown me away. Fuse is also one of the beacons for techno in Europe,& he adds, &and in the past few years, the club has had more to boast about than ever before.&
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Yet despite these claims, Van Hoesen could never be described as immodest or arrogant. Softly-spoken and considered, his persona seems at odds with the brutally effective, surging basslines that characterise tracks like &Casual Care,& &Empire in Decline& and &Face of Smoke.& It's the sound of someone that is wholly confident in what they're doing. &By 2005/2006, I had tried every possible genre, so many musical directions—breaks, bass, dubstep—and I felt a bit lost because the music I was making just wasn't satisfying,& he explains. &I asked myself what I did best, where my heart was, and the answer was techno. I had flirted with dubstep a bit, but it wasn't for me—techno is so much a continental sound and once I'd made the decision to stop making dubstep, it felt like I was coming home, but I had all this extra baggage with me that I'd picked up along the way and that helped shape what I do.&
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Indeed, Van Hoesen's flirtations with experimental electronic music are audible on 2006's &Increments& for Lan Muzic, a release that he says was &a big deal,& but his previous experiments are also evident on subsequent material—check the swinging, lurching bass on the more recent &Attribute One& if you're in any doubt that he has abandoned his varied background. At its core, though, Van Hoesen believes his music is still heavily influenced by the &golden age& of techno. &I am still inspired by the music from that period of around 1994 to 1995 and by the manifesto—you're at a warehouse party, all your friends are gone, but you are in the moment, with just a kick drum and a strobe. Sure, it's an old school vibe, but techno has a grimy feeling and for me techno is forever connected to that space and feeling.&?
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Which neatly brings us to contemporary techno. In the wake of the recent minimal explosion and subsequent implosion, the genre seems to be reverting to classic sounds, and even adopting early '90s presentation, evident in the wealth of anonymous, hand-stamped releases emanating from Berlin's Hardwax record shop. Van Hoesen's music has been compared to this purist strain of techno, popularised by the city's Berghain club. Does he feel an affinity with Klock, Dettmann and Nodge? &The people you mention have been around for a while and realise that you have to connect to the past to move forward. They live in an environment where they are inspired by music all the time, so we have that in common and I feel connected to those people, yes,& Peter replies, before quickly adding &at the same time, I hear a difference between what all of the Berghain artists do, even if they have a shared aesthetic.&
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While techno may have shifted focus in the past two to three years, with new school purism now vying for attention with technology-powered minimalism, and their competing manifestos trying to make themselves heard, Peter doesn't believe in the &us versus them& mentality, a battle between furrowed-brow authenticity and Cube-style gimmickry. &The older I get, the less I see the divides. It's just different people with different ways of making music,& he feels. &It's hard to say that one group has a more genuine motivation than the other. That's more to do with the individuals themselves, but of course there are people in it for the right and wrong reasons. If there is a divide, let it be there and maybe the bad music will inspire producers to make great music. I know it happened to me—I heard certain techno music and I thought to myself 'you can't be serious that you're making that' and it gave me a reason to make my own music.& he says, adding that when at home, &I listen to everything from Slayer to Frank Zappa.&
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This explains a lot about why Van Hoesen's music has struck a chord; instead of just getting nostalgic about '90s techno, his productions are laced with glitchy percussion, cloaked in layers of ambient, droning noise and while indebted to the jack-knifing relentlessness of UK producers like Luke Slater and Bandulu, also make nods to Basic Channel's cavernous echo chamber.

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