Carl Craig
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Carl Craig Biography
Dancefloor experimentalist and top Detroit techno producer Carl Craig
has few equals in terms of the artistry, influence, and diversity of
his recordings. Few others have recorded so much quality music in such
a variety of styles as has Craig, who jammed distorted beatbox samples
into lo-fi electro riggings, crafted epic house tracks like his remix
of Tori Amos' God, and recorded the most sublime Detroit techno since
godfathers Juan Atkins and Derrick May were at their peak. After an
apprenticeship during the late '80s with May, Craig began releasing his
own recordings in 1989, first on Derrick's Transmat imprint and later
on his own label, Planet E Communications. During the following decade,
Craig spread his work between solo aliases -- Paperclip People,
Innerzone Orchestra, 69 -- and his own name. With each new project and
each change of musical direction though, he distinguished himself as
one of the few artists to consistently hit the mark with productions
whose subtleties in the living room more than matched their infectious
energy on the dancefloor.
When he was growing up and attending Detroit's Cooley High, Craig was
turned on to a diverse musical diet ranging from Prince to Led Zeppelin
to the Smiths. He often practiced on his guitar, but later became
interested in club music as well through his cousin, who worked
lighting for various parties around the Detroit area. The first wave of
Detroit techno had already set sail by the mid-'80s, and Craig began
listening to tracks courtesy of May's radio show on WJLB. He began
experimenting with recording techniques using dual-deck cassette
players, and later convinced his parents to buy him a synthesizer and
sequencer. Craig also studied electronic music, including the work of
Morton Subotnick, Wendy Carlos, and Pauline Oliveros. While taking an
electronics course, he met a mutual friend of May and passed on a tape
including some of his home productions. May loved what he heard and
brought him into the studio to re-record one track, Neurotic
Behavior. Completely beatless in its original mix (since Craig didn't
own a drum machine), the track was just as sublime and visionary as
Juan Atkins' blueprint for cosmic techno-funk yet called on emotions
previously found only on May's material.
The British fascination with Detroit techno was just beginning to take
hold by 1989, and Craig was invited to witness the phenomenon firsthand
by touring with May's Rhythim Is Rhythim project (which supported Kevin
Saunderson's Inner City on several English dates). The trip became an
extended working holiday as Craig helped out on production for a
re-recording of May's classic Strings of Life and the new Rhythim Is
Rhythim single, The Beginning. He also found time to record several
tracks of his own at R&S Studios in Belgium. On his return to the
U.S., Craig released several R&S tracks on the Crackdown EP,
recorded as Psyche for May's Transmat Records. Craig then founded
Retroactive Records with Damon Booker, and despite working days at a
copy shop, continued recording in his parents' basement.
Craig released six singles for Retroactive during 1990-1991 (as BFC,
Paperclip People, and Carl Craig) but the label was dissolved in 1991
due to disputes with Booker. That same year, Craig formed the solo
concern Planet E Communications for the release of his new EP, 4 Jazz
Funk Classics (recorded as 69). Deliberately lo-fi and gritty with the
implementation of funky beatbox samples, tracks like If Mojo Was AM
presented a new leap forward after the compulsive sheen of Retroactive
singles like Galaxy and From Beyond. Besides the distortion of 4
Jazz Funk Classics, his other Planet E work during 1991 contained
off-the-cuff nods to such disparate moods as hip-hop and hardcore
techno. The following year's Bug in the Bassbin unveiled another Carl
Craig alias, Innerzone Orchestra, and added elements of jazz to his
beatbox frenzy. In the process, Craig became an uncommon influence on
the early progression of the British drum'n'bass movement -- DJs and
producers often pitched up Bug in the Bassbin from 33 to 45 rpm for a
do-it-yourself jungle breakbeat.
The release of Paperclip People's Throw added disco and funk to
Craig's growing list of active inspirations; his natural progression
into remixes during 1994 provided the dance world with versions of
Maurizio, Inner City, and La Funk Mob tracks plus a stunning reworking
of the Tori Amos song God that lasted almost ten minutes. Thanks in
large part to the Amos remix, Craig soon signed his first contract with
major-label exposure, to the Blanco y Negro division of Europe's Mute
Records. His first full-length, 1995's Landcruising, opened up the Carl
Craig sound and gave it an epic feel closer in spirit to his earlier
recordings, while the thematic tug of a journey around metro Detroit
mirrored Atkins' Model 500 tracks like Night Drive. Landcruising
opened up the market for Craig's material, and several months later,
R&S Records released 69's Sound of Music, a compilation of two EPs
released the previous year for the Belgian label.
In 1996, the high-profile British house label Ministry of Sound
released a new Paperclip People single called The Floor, composed of
hard, clipped techno beats but an elastic bass line and prevalent disco
sample that earned it much airplay in house venues. Though he was
already one of the most noted names in the world of techno, Craig's
reputation began growing in the more general category of
mainstream/global dance, and he soon became less tied to the mantle of
Detroit techno than many of his contemporaries. Craig helmed one in the
series of DJ Kicks albums released by Studio !K7 and spent several
months based in London. He returned to Detroit later in 1996 to focus
on Planet E, which released a Paperclip People album titled The Secret
Tapes of Dr. Eich (mostly collecting previous singles) and a Psyche/BFC
retrospective titled Elements 1989-1990. The new year brought the
second proper Carl Craig LP, More Songs About Food & Revolutionary
Art. He spent much of 1998 touring the world as Innerzone Orchestra
with a jazzy trio. The project also released an LP, Programmed,
expanding Craig's full-length output to seven -- though only three had
appeared under his own name. Two collections appeared during 1999-2000,
including the Planet E mix album House Party 013 and the remix
compilation Designer Music.
Throughout the early 2000s, he was sporadically active, releasing a
series of mix albums and compilations (2001's Onsumothasheeat and
Abstract Funk Theory, 2002's The Workout, and 2005's Fabric 25), as
well as the occasional production and remix. He overhauled Landcruising
in 2005 and titled the release The Album Formerly Known As.... ~ John
Bush, All Music Guide