Lionrock: Return of the rude boy
After two years of guitar-twanging gigs, record company politics, personal
tragedy and drinking
sessions with death metal bands, Justin Robertson's Lionrock are back.
And this time, even the
coppers are interested...
Writer: Tim Barr
Photographer: Victor Boullet
ATHIS
is getting surreal. It's after midnight, and we're in a leafy avenue somewhere
in
Didsbury, Manchester. Dressed immaculately in a houndstooth check two-piece,
like he's
just stepped out of a 60s blues club, Justin Robertson emerges from the
darkness.
Pretty soon, a hastily-issued set of instructions breaks the night-time
silence: Justin
sprints back down the street, illuminated only by the soft strobing of
the photographer's
flash. It looks mad, the two of them running up and down in the dark, shouting
a lot and,
occasionally, laughing. And then reality spins back in again. Suddenly
two police panda
cars and a transit van wheel into view. Questions are asked, sheepish explanations
are
offered. We've only been out here a few minutes, but the neighbours, no
doubt alarmed
by the sight of one of Britain's most respected DJs careering up and down
their street,
have called the cops. Back in the safety of his flat, Justin flops down
onto the sofa.
"What a bizarre night..." he says, to no one in particular.
JUSTIN Robertson has had his fair share of bizarre nights. The night
he went drinking with death
metal band Slayer ("I didn't know what they did, so we just got on
with having a good time"). Or the
time he DJed in Uruguay: "ten times better than Ibiza," he reckons.
"I went to this club called the Caf?
Del Mar which they've obviously named after the Spanish version. The
thing is, I don't think they've
ever been there. When I saw the Caf? Del Mar for the first time, I
was so disappointed - it's like a little
pub where they play music. But the one in Uruguay is just out of this
world. It's this fantastic place
which is almost exactly what you'd imagine the Caf? Del Mar should
be like if you'd only heard about it
and never ever been there." And there were those impossibly strange
nights at clubs like Spice and
Most Excellent, where Justin helped the UK club scene's march towards
eclecticism. The Chemical
Brothers were regulars at Spice, maybe even taking notes. "It was like
a social club with a bit of
dancing thrown in," Robertson once said. "I wanted it to be musically
challenging, different."
He could have applied the same description to Lionrock. Their early
singles - the eponymous debut,
'Packet Of Peace' and 'Carnival' - wove huge corrosive beats through
ragga chat and dynamics ripped
from under the skin of house and techno. As you'd expect from a band
who played everything from
Desmond Dekker to Captain Beefheart on their tour bus, their debut
album 'An Instinct For Detection'
was an ambitious, unpredictable record. Tracks like 'Straight At Yer
Head' took genre-busting to its
limit, mainlining on ska, Motown, hip hop, Northern soul and acid house
all at once. Others, like 'Death
Valley Clapperboard', were all surging techno and booming bass. By
the album's release in March
1996, Robertson was on the crest of a wave. His reputation as a DJ,
capable of crafting inspirational
sets from a handful of Balearic, techno or deep house records, made
him one of the biggest draws in
the UK. The word was that Robertson was ready for promotion to the
major league. As the first copies
of 'An Instinct For Detection' landed in the shops, he told Mixmag,
"I want this LP to be nominated for
the Mercury Prize."
TWO years on, it's a quieter, more introspective Justin Robertson who admits,
"I don't think I would say something like that again." He looks thinner,
healthier
and perhaps a little more vulnerable than back then. When he laughs, which
he
does a lot in a self-deprecating way, it's hard not to be reminded of Ade
Edmondson. Like his music, there's much about the '98 model of Robertson
that's unexpected. "I've become a lot more realistic about things," he
confides,
at one point. Partly, this has to do with the fact that, though 'Instinct...'
breached
the Top 40, it didn't exactly get nominated for the Mercury Prize. Nowhere
near.
Partly, it has to do with some of the reactions to Lionrock's early live
shows.
"Maybe people weren't ready for the sight of an acid house DJ strapping
on a
guitar and jumping about onstage," he muses. "The whole thrust of it was
that
the music was gonna be between cutting-edge electronic and classic
song-writing. I sometimes regret the baggage of using that guitar.
It feels like a heavy load, y'know? I
never thought about it in that way at the time, it seemed completely
natural. I got sucked into that
whole rock n' roll myth." And just as the first Lionrock album tumbled
out into the world, his mother
died. "Even now, everything else seems really insignificant after that,"
he explains. "I went through a
stage of feeling really disillusioned." It took a long time before
he could even face going back into the
studio with long-time Lionrock partners Roger Lyons contributing the
studio trickery and MC Buzz B
delivering his lyrics when required - evolved into an album, originally
scheduled for release last
Summer. But by then the US had picked up on 'Instinct...' and the new
album, now called 'City
Delirious' thanks to its thematic focus on Robertson's adopted hometown,
was put on indefinite hold.
By the time a new release date was scheduled, Robertson had other ideas.
He reworked the album,
added new tracks and scrapped others. "My head was all over the place
when we did it the first time
around," he confesses. But the new, trackier, more club-oriented cuts
have made 'City Delirious' a
more expansive album, that should put Lionrock alongside Underworld,
the Chemicals and the rest of
UK clubland's big-sellers. Tracks like 'Rude Boy Rock' or 'Rock Steady
Romance' are still full of quirky
references to 60s soul, ska and dancehall but there's others too, like
the psychedelic big beat of
'Electric Hairdo' or the blunted 'Amazing New Product' that suggest
Lionrock are stronger than ever.
And if you can resist the sweetly-blissed acid house perfection of
'It's Panoramic' then something's
clearly gone wrong with your stereo. "This album is like 90s modernist
music," explains Justin. "It's
about clubbing and acid house and the people who are part of all that.
It's a soundtrack for urban
living. After finishing the live shows, I got heavily back into DJing.
When I started doing it again, it was
almost like, 'Welcome home!' and I rediscovered all the great things
about acid house. And that fed
back into the album too, alongside the 60s beat music and the reggae
and the soul. I love the rawness
and the grit of that stuff - musically it's possibly my biggest influence."
That rawness is part of the
appeal, of course. Because Justin's version of 90s modernism is all
about switching through time
zones and snatching the best bits - from 60s bluebeat to acid house
and back again - mixing it all up
to create something that's big and visionary and uniquely vital too.
And for all kinds of reasons, 'City
Delirious' is the perfect mesh between Justin Robertson the guitar-playing
producer of maverick urban
hymns and Justin Robertson the mad-for-it DJ who's still in love with
acid house. If you checked his
Essential Mix last November, you'd have heard him mixing up Primal
Scream with Ryuichi Sakamoto, or
the Jimmy Castor Bunch with Global Communication in a way that said
a whole lot about why Lionrock
are special. "A lot of people wouldn't consider what we do to be maverick,"
he says, finally. "But I
reckon we're off our heads. I think what we do is really strange. It
doesn't sound like anyone else. It's
just a weird collection of influences really..."
The single 'Rude Boy Rock' is out March 2nd while the album is out on March 16th, both on Concrete
JUSTIN ROBERTSON FLOOR FILLERS
1. Plastic Avengers 'Nova 17' (NRK)
2. Scott Grooves 'Expansions' (Soma)
3. Kevin Kennedy 'Feedback' (Frictional)
4. Steve Poindexter 'Demolition Man' (DJax)
5. Soul Ascendants 'Tribute' (Nuphonic)
6. Kevin Yost 'Sticks & Stones' EP (i)
7. Rare 'Seems Like' (Lionrock Mix) (Artic)
8. G-Flame & Mr G 'Do It Right' (Metalbox)
9. Maas 'Another Saturday Night' (Soma)
10. Boards Of Canada 'Nlogax' (Skam)
MEANWHILE BACK AT LIONROCK HQ...
1. Dionne Warwick 'I'm Just Being Myself'
2. The Eternals 'Stars'
3. The Beatles 'You've Got To Hide Your Love Away'
4. Chocolate Weasel 'Music For Body Lockers'
5. The Flying Burrito Brothers 'Wild Horses'
6. Anne Sexton 'You've Been Gone Too Long'
7. Black Jazz Chronicles 'Future Juju'
8. Laurel Aitken 'Everybody Suffering'
9. Johnny Harris'Footprints On The Moon'
10. Beth Orton 'Touch Me With Your Love'
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