Gilles Peterson

Gilles Peterson

Gilles Peterson.
Background information
Birth name Gilles Jerome Moehrle
Born (1964-09-28) 28 September 1964
Caen, France
Origin France/Switzerland
Genres Disc jockey, Worldmusic, Hip hop, Jazz, Afro, Latin, Electronica
Years active 1986–present,
Website gillespetersonworldwide.com

Gilles Peterson
Jazz pianist Robert Mitchell (left) with Gilles Peterson in October 2008.

Gilles Peterson (born 28 September 1964, Caen, France)[1] is a British-based DJ, record collector and record label owner residing in London. Via his labels Acid Jazz, Talkin' Loud, and since 2006, Brownswood Recordings. Brownswood Recordings have produced artists such as Mala, Ghostpoet, Owiny Sigoma Band, working with artists such as Lefto, Simbad, Four Tet and many more.

Gilles has been associated with the careers of well-known artists of the 1990s such as Erykah Badu, Roni Size and Jamiroquai.

After starting out on pirate radio, and having shows on various legal London-based radio stations, most notably Kiss FM dance music station, he was recruited to the BBC's youth-oriented Radio 1 in 1998. Since 2012, he hosts a 3-hour BBC 6 Music Saturday show, 3-6pm. Peterson's 'Musical Vitamins' range from Jazz, Hiphop, Afro, Electronica, house & Soul featuring visits and guest mixes from such luminaries as Radiohead's Thom Yorke, Brainfeeder boss Flying Lotus, and soul legend, Bobby Womack.

Peterson has a Saturday afternoon BBC Radio 6 Music radio show,.[2] Where guests such as Kamasi Washington, Jamie xx, Howling, Bonobo & Kate Tempest have all had sessions with Gilles himself.

He also broadcasts an Internationally syndicated Worldwide show across seven European countries, including: Radio Nova (France), FM4 (Austria), Radio X (Germany) and Funkhaus Europa (Germany), plus InterFM in Japan, Tysa FM (Ukraine) and FBi Click in Australia. Parallel to this, he hosts frequent DJing gigs around the world.

Gilles Peterson became popular on his soundcloud[3] with a follower base of over 3 million, featuring mixes and artists from Brownswood Recordings

History

Born to a mother from Paris, France and a father from Zürich, Switzerland, he attended the Roman Catholic John Fisher School. He became known on the London circuit as a DJ specialising in the new breed of "acid jazz", drawing on the jazz, funk and Latin fusions (including Brazilian music)[4] of the 1970s. First heard as a DJ on the London pirate radio station Radio Invicta, he went on to host "Mad On Jazz" on BBC Radio London in 1986–87, then ran club night at Dingwalls in Camden Town. Upon leaving BBC London in 1986, Gilles took up a new residency at Dingwalls in Camden, which ran for 5 years. Coinciding with the rise of acid house in UK clubland, the popularity of Sunday Afternoon at Dingwalls grew and grew, establishing itself as a legendary session. This was just one amongst many other significant clubs that Gilles was associated with; Special Branch, Electric Ballroom, Wag Club, Babylon at Heaven, Fez, Talking Loud at the Fridge and not forgetting That’s How It Is at Bar Rumba and his long association with Plastic People. Gilles now curates a number of extraordinary live music events in the UK and internationally including the Worldwide Festival in the south of France, now in its 10th year.[5]

Dingwalls

That club, and one of Peterson's best remembered club sessions, was Talkin' Loud Sayin' Something at the old Dingwalls club in Camden, North West London which ran from the late 1980s until March 1991. The sessions were characterised by jazz dancers in suits hats and spats, well-known jazz dance classics including tracks from Yusef Lateef, Pharoah Sanders, Freddie Hubbard, Airto, Herbie Hancock, and the anthemic In The Fast Lane by Jean-Luc Ponty; but the jazz was fused with hip-hop and the more experimental tracks. Gilles played alongside fellow London DJ Patrick Forge at most of the Dingwalls' sessions, as well as separately at many other underground club nights and music weekenders. On 8 October 2006, both Peterson and Forge played the first of many annual reunion shows at the old site of Dingwalls (now a Jongleurs comedy club), with a compilation album of popular tracks from the club also being released at the same time in 2006 entitled Sunday Afternoon At Dingwalls.[6]

Jazz FM

In March 1990, Peterson became a disc jockey on London's first-ever dedicated jazz station 102.2 Jazz FM. The three-hour show was stripped into sections including the "Samba 60" and the "Vibrazone". Artists as diverse as the Freestyle Fellowship, Sérgio Mendes and Leon Thomas would all appear on the same playlist. He was forced to leave the station after making anti-war comments during the first Gulf War.[7]

Kiss 100 FM

September 1990 saw London pirate dance music station Kiss 100 FM become legal when it acquired a licence and started to broadcast from the Holloway Road in North London. Patrick Forge was then given the space to create his own show, with the two DJs continuing to work together at Dingwalls until the "last dance" on 3 March 1991. Peterson moved over to Kiss FM himself after being fired by Jazz FM. In his shows on Kiss FM he played acts as diverse as Josh Wink, Gang Starr and Horace Silver in the space of a single programme. He was then hired by BBC Radio 1 in 1998.[7]

Radio 1

From 1998 to 2012, through his BBC show Worldwide - which was originally produced by longtime collaborator Benji B, Karen P (Folded Wing), Ben Cave, Beccy Grierson, Alex Kenning and currently Dave O'Donnell - Peterson continued to present a wide range of music that may be new to its young audiences. The show always presented a combination of new, older and often very rare records from the late 1950s to 1980s. Every three months or so, Peterson dedicated a whole show to older vinyl releases in a special version of his show he subtitles as Brownswood Basement; two associated compilation albums with the same name containing older personal classics have been released on the United States label Ubiquity Records's offshoot Luv N' Haight. He has been associated with two Brownswood labels - the name comes from the road in north London where his house was located. This building is now primarily a place Peterson uses to store his huge record collection. In August 2004 the show moved from Wednesday (midnight til 2am) to an earlier Sunday slot (11:00 to 01:00) with a spectacular live outside broadcast from The Big Chill at Eastnor Castle Herefordshire featuring Bugz In The Attic performing a DJ set, and interviews with house DJ Tom Middleton and Mr. Scruff.

One of the highlights of the new format BBC Radio 1 show was the special sessions from the BBC's Maida Vale Studios. These have included artists such as Roots Manuva, Björk and Floating Points. In September 2006, Peterson's show on Radio 1 was moved from Sunday night to Wednesday night (more precisely the early hours of Thursday morning), 02:00 to 04:00 (GMT). The first show included a live appearance from Lupe Fiasco. The show was broadcast live between 2am-4am on Wednesday mornings.

In 2002 he released a compilation album, "Impressed with Gilles Peterson", featuring rare and forgotten about British Jazz from the 1950-1960s, that Peterson had collected over the years. This led to many of the records being re-released to a new audience. This in turn led to a series of concerts featuring some of the artists and a documentary about the history of British jazz ("Jazz Britannia").

In late 2011 Peterson announced that after 13 years at the station he would be leaving BBC Radio 1, following his last show in the early hours of Wednesday 28 March, 02:00 to 04:00 (GMT),[8] and moving to a new show on BBC Radio 6 Music.

Radio 6 Music

Following his departure from Radio 1, Gilles started a new 3 hour Saturday afternoon show on BBC Radio 6 Music, beginning on Saturday 7 April 2012, running weekly from 15:00 to 18:00 (GMT), and giving him an extra hour of broadcast time.[9] Like his previous Radio 1 programme, it is made by independent production company Somethin' Else for the BBC.[10][11]

Worldwide Awards

Main article: Worldwide Winners

The Worldwide Awards is an annual event wherein Gilles Peterson chooses his favourite records of the year. His listeners then vote for the top 10 via the Radio 1 website. The event has been held at London venues including Cargo and KoKo with full broadcast coverage by Radio 1, and has expanded to include sections such as "Best Clubnight", "Best Record Shop", "Best Compilation Album", and a special award called "The John Peel'Play More Jazz' Award" given to an artist, often a newcomer, who has displayed special noteworthy work over the year.[12]

Mistral Productions

Gilles Peterson is the creative director of Mistral Productions, launched in November 2013, which produces Gilles' internationally syndicated radio shows as well as audio and video content for brands.[13]

Record labels

Gilles Peterson has played a role on four record labels. In 1987, together with DJ Baz Fe Jazz, he was recruited by Ace Records to create the soul, funk and jazz dance sublabel BGP Records.[14] In 1988 he and Eddie Piller founded Acid Jazz Records, a label whose roster included the Brand New Heavies, Jamiroquai, Corduroy, the James Taylor Quartet and Snowboy. After growing disillusioned with the scene that grew up around the label, he went on to run Talkin' Loud,[15] enlisting the help of fellow DJ Norman Jay who formed his own Global Village label. The Talkin' Loud roster included Nuyorican Soul (a side project of the producers Masters At Work), Courtney Pine, MJ Cole, Young Disciples, Incognito, Terry Callier, The Roots, Galliano and Roni Size's project Reprazent.

Peterson's most recent record label, Brownswood Recordings, was launched in 2006. It was named after the road in North London where the house he used to live was. To date the label has released records by British singer/songwriter Ben Westbeech, 45 piece live act The Heritage Orchestra, Japanese punk jazz band Soil & "Pimp" Sessions, Brooklyn based pianist Elan Mehler, jazz vocalist José James and Zara McFarlane; Ghostpoet, This label should not be confused with another imprint called Brownswood Records which was used to release music from the United Future Organization as well as other Japanese associated projects.

Festivals

Peterson has made many regular appearances at music festivals across the world including Lovebox in east London, The Big Chill in Hereford and the Southport Weekender[16][17] in the north west of England. Away from the UK he has appeared at the Exit Festival in Serbia, INmusic festival in Croatia, and in 2006 the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. Gilles also curated his own stage at Montreux Jazz Festival for 10 years during the 1990s. Recently Gilles has appeared in festivals such as Tramlines, Standon Calling, Summerstage, Slide Festival.

Peterson and Freshly Cut, a French event production company from Montpellier, collaborated to create the Worldwide Festival.[18] This started out as a small intimate festival during the summertime in the coastal town of Sète in France in 2006. It was expanded to include a winter versions which is now hosted in the Swiss Alps - Leysin.

Production

In the world of production, Peterson has collaborated with Switch (DJ) and DJ Clipz in the past, and most recently Gilles produced two tracks for Roberto Fonseca’s grammy nominated album ‘Yo’. Peterson also produced Danay Suarez's album and has remixed artists such as Raphael Gualazzi, The Bees and Fatoumata Diawara and most recently Gregory Porter's Grammy winning album 'Liquid Spirit' alongside Alex Patchwork. Gilles continues to develop his studio sound with his in house partner Simbad.

Sonzeira

Released in May 2014 via Talkin’ Loud / Virgin EMI, Sonzeira's Brasil Bam Bam Bam is a journey through the different flavours of authentic Brazilian music culture. Sonzeira is the collective name for the group of Brazilian artists who feature on the album. Gilles turned from DJ to producer for this ambitious venture, settling in Rio de Janeiro with young UK production associates Sam Shepherd (Floating Points); Dilip Harris and Rob Gallagher from 2 Banks of 4; and Kassin from Rio collective Orquestra Imperial. The album features Brazilian artists such as Seu Jorge and Elza Soares.[19]

Havana Cultura

2009 saw the birth of a new collaborative project and long-term partnership between Peterson and Havana Club or “Havana Cultura”. Havana Cultura is a global initiative developed by Havana Club International which gives a platform to Cuban artists from all disciplines. The website, www.havana-cultura.com, was launched in 2007. Gilles Peterson and Brownswood's involvement began two years later, resulting in four album releases and three international tours. ‘Havana Cultura: New Cuba Sound’, was the first album to come out of the project, released in 2010. Travelling to Cuba in 2009, Gilles teamed up with the award-winning Cuban jazz pianist Roberto Fonseca to find the best up and coming musical talent in Havana. The double CD album was a celebration of Cuba’s musical forces spanning Latin, Afro jazz and fusion to hip-hop, funk, reggaeton and soul. In support of this project, Gilles began a European tour in June/July 2010, accompanied by Fonseca, his band and vocalists Danay Suarez, Ogguere and Obsesión. This was the first of three tours organised in close collaboration with Havana Club. The Gilles Peterson Havana Cultura band has now travelled through Europe and beyond with shows in London (Barbican), Paris, Amsterdam, Istanbul, Berlin and Madrid, as well as many festivals. Travelling with the rest of the 2011 crew, Mala (Digital Mystikz) was also invited to Cuba with Gilles Peterson to record and collaborate with local musicians as part of the ongoing Havana Cultura project. The results are found on the album ‘Mala in Cuba’ – which was released on Brownswood Recordings in partnership with Havana Cultura on 10 September 2012.[19]

Awards

Remixes

Production

Books

Discography

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Gilles Peterson, Esq, MBE's Authorised Biography". Debrett's. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  2. "BBC Radio 6 Music – Gilles Peterson". BBC Radio 6 Music. BBC. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  3. https://soundcloud.com/gillespeterson. Missing or empty |title= (help); External link in |website= (help);
  4. Slater, Russ (2014-05-26). "Brazilian Love Affair: An Interview with Gilles Peterson | Sounds and Colours". Soundsandcolours.com. Retrieved 2014-08-19.
  5. "Gilles Peterson & Patrick Forge Present - Sunday Afternoon At Dingwalls". Discogs. 9 October 2006. Retrieved 26 May 2006.
  6. 1 2 "Gilles Peterson profile". BBC Radio 1. BBC. Retrieved 26 May 2006.
  7. "Gilles P to leave BBC Radio 1 after 13 amazing years". gillespetersonworldwide.com. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  8. Patchwork, Alex (10 March 2012). "Gilles announces new radio show on BBC Radio 6 Music". Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  9. Plunkett, John (9 March 2012). "Gilles Peterson finds home on 6 Music". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  10. Moss, Rowan (9 March 2012). "Gilles Peterson on BBC Radio 6 Music". Somethin' Else. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  11. "BGP Records History". acerecords.co.uk. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  12. "Southport Weekender lineup". southportweekender.co.uk. Retrieved 28 Sep 2006.
  13. "Southport Weekender 43 - 7. 8. 9. November 2008". Southport Reporter. 27 October 2008. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  14. "Worldwide Festival". worldwidefestival.com. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  15. 1 2 "Partnerships | Gilles Peterson". Gillespetersonworldwide.com. 2012-09-10. Retrieved 2014-08-19.

2014 BBC Radio 6 Music

Date Performer(s) Mixes Additional Notes
1 November Interview with Kon
25 October Interview with Somi Archive
18 October Gaslamp Killer Archive Listen Back
11 October Jarrod Lawson in session Archive Listen Back
4 October Northern Soul Special Archive Listen Back
27 September Words and Music with Chaka Khan Archive Listen Back
20 September All Winners 2014: Part 2 Archive Listen Back
13 September Session rewinds and a Significant Album from ESG Archive
6 September Lonnie Holley in session Archive
30 August Album of the Week double: Raury and Julian Bahula Archive
23 August Flying Lotus Exclusive
16 August FaltyDL in conversation
9 August Words and Music with Theo Parrish
2 August Musical vitamins!
26 July Words and Music with George Clinton
19 July Fatima in session
30 June GP meets Bobby Womack
21 June Sun Ra Special
14 June Gilles celebrates South America
7 June Saturday afternoon mix
31 May Saturday afternoon mix
24 May Kate Tempest in session
17 May 75 Years of Blue Note
10 May Mélanie De Biasio in session
3 May Album of the Week from Neneh Cherry

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