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Felix da Housecat’s 2001 album, Kittenz and thee Glitz, turned
the dance music world on its side as his collaborations with the now infamous
Miss Kittin on “Silver Screen” and “Madame Hollywood”
and Melistar on “Harlot” and “What Does it Feel Like”
spawned a synth club revival. Along the way, Felix gained mainstream press
acceptance and was heralded by Entertainment Weekly, Rolling Stone and
Spin as one of the most creative artists in music today.
With DEVIN DAZZLE AND THE NEON FEVER (2004, Emperor Norton), Felix once
again has sewn together an album a la hip-hop’s Dan The Automator
and Prince Paul which taps the talents of varied producers and vocalists
and creates a thoroughly enjoyable ride. Boasting guest vocals from James
Murphy of DFA/LCD Soundsystem (“What She Wants”) – “He’s
a cool white boy with lots of funk,’ states Felix, Tyrone "Visionary"
Palmer (“Ready to Wear,” “Neon Human”), Kate Wax,
and an all-girl group known as The Neon Fever (“Rocket Ride,”
“Short Skirts,” “Everyone is Someone in LA,” “Hunting
Season”) Devin Dazzle and the Neon Fever transcends simple dance,
rock or pop music.
While Kittenz had it’s framework squarely built upon DJ and club
culture, Devin Dazzle and the Neon Fever is an album built upon punk/post
new-wave culture and is deliberately more song oriented. To accomplish
this Felix took a new approach. “I decided I wanted to use live
musicians for this album,” Felix explains. “I got so tired
of the arpeggiated bass lines everyone's using, so I went out an got proper
live musicians. I play keyboards because I really wanted to get a live
feel for this record."
Talking about some of the cast of characters he enlisted for the album,
Felix relates how each had an effect on the superego of the album. The
tracks on Devin Dazzle fluctuate between an upbeat spiritual side versus
the temptations of the excess of nightlife under neon lights - partying
and sex.
The Neon Fever (formerly known as Glamarama) represents the latter. “The
Neon Fever are five girls from around the world that represent five different
types of women,” states Felix, “I wanted to capture their
individual personalities within the lyrics and make their voice a collective
through each song. I wanted to capture the inside scoop of guys looking
into a woman’s world. I think the result is some lyrics that aren’t
what guys would typically write.”
Felix’s Kittenz cohort, Dave the Hustler, introduced Felix to Kate
Wax. “I was real impressed with her because although she is a talented
and impressive producer in her own right. She was willing to listen and
work to improve with me. She’s real pretty and ambitious and for
her to go with the vibe it was amazing. ‘Let Your Mind Be Your Bed’
is just the tip of the iceberg given her talent.”
“Tyrone ‘Visionary’ Palmer was the spiritual leader
of the entire album and kept me writing about things that were meaningful.
He brought a good balance to the record,” relates Felix.
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