| |
|
Over the course of 20 years his determination and willingness to re-invent
himself have led him to a point that has now included a Grammy nomination,
remix work for artists such as Madonna, Garbage, New Order and Giorgio
Moroder; to DJ gigs at the world’s most prestigious music festivals.
Born in Detroit in 1971 and raised in Park Forrest, outside Chicago, Felix
Stallings, Jr.'s earliest influence was his father, a saxophonist who
turned him on to classic '70s funk and soul by artists like Stevie Wonder
and Earth, Wind & Fire. His next major musical epiphany came about
when Purple Rain dropped and he became the keyboardist for Shades of Blue,
a band that covered Prince & the Revolution songs.
In Chicago during the early '80s, the House music revolution grabbed Felix’s
attention. For Felix, it centered around Chicago's 102.7 and the pioneering
Hot Mix DJs. "I remember listening to Farley ‘Jack Master’
Funk, Mike ‘Hitman’ Wilson, Micky ‘Mixin'’ Oliver,
and Kenny ‘Jamming’ Jason," Felix says rattling off the
city's House pioneers. By 14 he too was recording house music on his four-track.
A school friend introduced him to DJ Pierre who he collaborated with on
their classic house track "Phantasy Girl".
But Felix's tastes weren't limited to a single genre. His senior year
he played in Uncut, a band with an R&B-like vibe. After graduation
he enrolled at Alabama State and began making hip-hop. After two years
in the Deep South (an experience he compares to “prison") he
flunked out. In 1991, Felix moved into his parents' basement, studied
audio engineering at Columbia College and worked at Eduardo's pizzeria.
"It was rough," he says. "I hated those ovens and I kept
thinking something's got to give."
What finally gave was Pierre’s once-in-a-lifetime offer. "Once
I got to London and saw all those punk rockers," Felix says, "I
thought `this is where it's going to happen.'" Armed with a box of
DATs, Felix made the rounds. "It was crazy," he says, "I'd
walk into a label cold, play a track, and they'd sign it!" He quickly
sold "What's Love About" to Freetown Inc and "Thee Dawn"
to William Orbit's Guerilla label and returned to the states with more
money then he'd ever seen. In 1992 "Thee Dawn" became a European
smash and Felix blew-up overseas. "I was producing a track a week
for different labels," he says. The next year, the success of "Thee
Underground Made Me Do It," and "In Thee Dark We Live,"
helped further cement his fame. The latter track, released under Aphrohead,
was just one of Felix's many production aliases which would come to include
Wonderboy, Rocketmann, Outerrealm, Thee Glitz and Thee Maddkatt Courtship.
Felix scored an album deal with Deep Distraxion in 1993 and dropped By
Dawns Early Lite, one of the first full-length dance music artist albums
ever. Unlike other dance artists, Felix didn't start DJing until midway
through his career. "My first DJ gig was in London in 1994 and it
was horrible," he says laughing. "I was train-wrecking all over
the place." (Now, of course, with DJ of the year honors from Spin
and Urb it's a different story.) In 1995 Felix started Radikal Fear records
with European distributor Play it Again Sam. Between 1995 – 96,
he made four full-length records Alone In The Dark, Metropolis Present
Day? Thee Album, Thee Underground Made Me Do It and Rocketman.
1
2 3
>>
|
|