Green Velvet makes his UAE debut at Blue Marlin this weekend
Green Velvet’s career has very much been in two halves. Depending on your age, you will know him either as a freaky cyber-punk with a penchant for dark but tongue-in cheek house anthems, or as a more serious and mindful preacher who champions a religious way of life. That doesn’t keep him out of the clubs – he’ll make his UAE debut here at Blue Marlin this weekend – but it has changed the sort of experience he offers when he gets behind the decks.
Born Curtis Alan Jones, Velvet’s story is intrinsically linked with that of house and techno music. His labels Cajual and Relief were some of the most prominent and prolific in all of Chicago in the early ’90s. After the first house wave with acts like Frankie Knuckles and Ron Hardy, then a second wave of tougher acid sounds that eventually spawned rave, his place was to strip things back to a mean and kicking sound that could be thought to be a precursor to modern evolutions like juke and footwork.
All this is more impressive given that Jones didn’t actually want to start a label at all but did so under pressure from his friends. “I didn’t know what I was doing – just like everybody else,” he has said before. “I did it because there was nobody else to do it.”
This story is from the Issue 170, 2017 edition of Hype.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 170, 2017 edition of Hype.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
The Stars Come Out
From the best-selling female artist of all time to a Latin music heartthrob, the line-up for this year’s Emirates Airline Dubai Jazz Festival is eclectic
Full-On Funk
The face of a hybrid sound designed for the dancefloor, Purple Disco Machine is primed and ready for Dubai.
Desert Island Discs
Deep Like celebrate 100 parties with 25 hours of non-stop music at Snoopy Island.
The Perfect Papa
Ten good reasons to love Sven Väth.
Crazy Diamond
Buckle up for a raucous ride when The Dub Pistols play in Dubai this weekend, carrying the flame of reggae-driven sound system culture and wearing their ska influences on their sleeve.
Feeling Creative
Creative Culture vocalist Jae Franklin on how Dubai’s newest supergroup found their sound
Everything's In Order
Legendary Brit band New Order’s career spans four decades, ten studio albums and a handful of NME awards. They land in Dubai this weekend to play their greatest hits.
Changed Days
Zero fomo factor over miami.
The Pleasuredome
Prepare for a (friendly) clash of the superclub titans.
The Road Less Travelled
Dubai-based beats ‘vagabond’ Zajazza on his new album.