DJ Krush
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| DJ Krush | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Hideaki Ishi (石 英明) |
| Born | 1962 |
| Origin | Tokyo, Japan |
| Genre(s) | Instrumental hip hop, Trip-hop, Hip-hop, Turntablism |
| Occupation(s) | Producer, DJ |
| Instrument(s) | Sequencer,Turntable, sampler, Mixer |
| Label(s) | Mo' Wax |
| Website | www.mmjp.or.jp/sus/Krush Official site |
Hideaki Ishi (石 英明 Ishi Hideaki?), commonly known as DJ Krush, was born in 1962 in Tokyo. After watching the film "Wild Style" in the early 80s, he was inspired, bought some turntables, and started to learn the art of turntablism. In 1987, along with DJs like DJ Muro, he formed the Krush Posse, which made numerous appearances as a group in late 1992 and gained him recognition by becoming the first DJ in Japan to perform with live musicians. He released his first album "Krush", which stated his presence in the scene, and he has since released eight more. He has had recording contracts with Chance Records, Ninety Nine Records, Mo' Wax (he was the first Japanese artist to join), Apollo and Sony/Columbia. He works internationally as a producer, re-mixer, DJ and recording artist, bringing the unique flavour of Japanese hip hop to the world.
Contents |
[edit] Early Life and "Wild Style"
Ishi was born in 1962 in Tokyo. Ishi dropped out of school at an early age and joined a local gang, and a few years later, the Yakuza. Early into his career as a Yakuza underling, Ishi discovered a severed finger wrapped in paper on his desk. Later, after discovering that it had belonged to his best friend, he decided to leave the Yakuza and cut ties with the criminal underworld.[1]
One day in the early 1980s, Ishi went to the movies with his girlfriend and saw the film "Wild Style", the first hip-hop motion picture directed by Charlie Ahearn. It was here that he got the inspiration to become a hip-hop musician. Despite others doubts, he made a firm decision to become a DJ. The day after seeing this movie, he headed to instrument shops looking for equipment. At this time the term "mixer" was unknown to most of Tokyo's electronic store salesmen. After having a hard time buying the things he needed, Ishi started his career as one of the first hip hop pioneers in Japan.
[edit] Role in the Music Industry
Aside from being considered one of the pioneers of Japanese hip hop[1], Ishi has established himself as one of the most respected artists and producers in the hip-hop industry, both in Japan and abroad. One of the reasons for this is that he approaches the music with a very humble perspective, and by not allowing over three decades of success to hinder his abilities, he constantly seeks out new styles and sources of inspiration, which expand his craft further. This kind of attitude is the explanation for his reluctance to identify his music with any particular genre, for it would place limits on his listeners and on his talents. He has been regarded as ambient, trip hop, some combination of the two, and hip-hop. DJ Krush prefers to exercise an ideological distance from the genres he is usually grouped into, while maintaining a healthy appreciation for all music forms and styles. [2]
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- Krush (1994, Chance)
- Strictly Turntablized (1994, Mo' Wax MW025)
- Meiso (1996, Mo' Wax MW029)
- MiLight (1997, Mo' Wax MW077)
- Back in the Base (1997, Hancuts, 2CD Set, other CD Coldcut & DJ Food)
- Kakusei (1999, Sony/Columbia)
- Code 4109 (2000)
- Zen (2001, Red ö
Ink)
- The Message at the Depth (2003, Sony/Columbia)
- Jaku (2004, Sony/Columbia)
- OuMuPo 6 (2007)
[edit] Singles
On Mo'Wax
- Lost And Found / Kemuri 12" (With DJ Shadow, MW024)
- A Whim / 89.9 Megamix 12" (With DJ Shadow, MW033)
- Meiso 12" (MW042)
- Headz 2 Sampler 12" (With Zimbabwe Legit, MW052)
- Only The Strong Survive 12" (MW060)
[edit] Remixes
- Rebore Vol.3 Dj Krush Giga Mix A remix of the Boredoms
[edit] Mixtapes
[edit] Compilations
- ColdKrushCuts - DJ Krush + DJ Food + Coldcut (1996)
- Reload-The Remix Collection (2001)
- Stepping Stones - The Self Remixed Best: Lyricism (2006)
- Stepping Stones - The Self Remixed Best: Soundscapes (2006)
[edit] Collaborations
- Bad Brothers (1994) (with Ronny Jordan)
- Ki-Oku (1996) (with Toshinori Kondo)
- Ryu (1999) (with DJ Hide & DJ Sak)
- sweetest coma again feat.DJ Krush (2000) (with LUNA SEA)
- Kiss feat.DJ Krush (2000) (with LUNA SEA)
- Zero Landmine (2001) (with Ryuichi Sakamoto and others)
- Blue Fantasy DJ Krush Remix (2002) (with Tetsuya Komuro)
[edit] DVD
- Suimou Tsunenimasu (2007)/History of DJ Krush (US Title - 2007)
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Condry, Ian. Hip-hop Japan: Rap and the Paths of Cultural Globalization. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006.
- ^ Asia Pacific Arts: Krushing Labels
- ^ http://www.vinylnet.co.uk/record-label-discographies.asp link

