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Dr. Bob Jones Interview

DR. BOB JONES: This is a tough one, considering the amount of great parties that I've had the pleasure of playing over my 40 years in the business. The original Caister Soul Weekenders (1979 to around 1983) were superb parties, twice a year. The Caister Weekenders were the pre-runners to the Southport Weekender Parties. My own Surgery parties were special, purely because they were a weekly party and also I gained a Best Club and Best Club DJ award from Blues & Soul magazine from co-hosting this weekly event with a good friend, Mr Sav Remzi of Nuphonic Records/Tirk Records fame. Another weekly club I was involved with was Shake It Loose held at London's Bah Rumba Club every Thursday for over two years during the mid-90s. Large parties, or more like music festivals have been Tribal Gathering (1996), attracting over 30,000 party people! I was headhunted to play in the back room at Hard Times, in Leeds UK. The residency lasted from 1996 to 1998. I was also chosen to DJ at the opening of a new Culture Centre in St Petersburg, Russia in Nov 2001 and returned for the city's Nu Jazz Festival alongside musician Nathan Haines and his band in 2002. The year 2003 I DJed at The Gijon Soul Festival and also made another return to Tenerife in May for a 3rd successive appearance at the island's Inspiracion Canaries Festival playing to an audience of over 11,000 black music lovers.

Recent parties have included The Big Chill (UK, 2005), another 25,000+ event; Electric Picnic (Dublin, 2005); and the Isle Of Wight Music Festival (UK 2006). I had a monthly residency at 'Soul Sides' in Cork, Ireland for about 2 years in the late 90's. I recently played at a party in The Hague, Holland with good friend & DJ Keb Darge. This party is a yearly event celebrating Holland's Queen Beatrice's birthday. A massive event that caters for nearly 100,000! Over nine outside stages. Keb and I played back-to-back for around 20,000 partygoers. Last New Year was spent in Moscow - an incredible experience playing in a converted restaurant to around 350 people, the atmosphere was electric and the party was superb.

I am at present one of only four resident DJs at The Southport Dance Weekender, held twice a year in the UK (around May and November) and I also play at a few yearly smaller weekenders in the UK.

 

 

5: How has the UK house scene evolved or changed over the years?

DR. BOB JONES: UK House evolved from the heady days of Acid House parties in the mid- to late-1980s. This scene was predominantly fuelled by drugs - mainly Ecstasy. The music back then was a more "freestyle" approach to dance, where the odd hip-hop cut and soft rock track would sit alongside "Love Is The Message".

As the drugs got harder in the early '90s, the music followed, with dancers wanting music of a less soulful variety and more of a "harder" feel to the floor. Out of this scene came Drum and Bass and Break Beat parties. The real Soul and Inspirational parties were driven completely underground. During the early 2000s, UK dance music became completely mainstream - almost a watered-down commodity compared to its black underground roots of the late '80s. Music from the US of A was supplemented heavily with European dance music and also the Techno music of Detroit. Nowadays, there's a real interest in "How did it all start?" with a whole new generation in the UK wanting to know the history of American House Music from New York and Chicago. But most of the large House clubs have folded and the scene has again moved underground with the smaller clubs proving them selves, musically speaking. The "real UK House scene" definitely lies beneath the streets, and that which remains "above" is a poor watered-down copy of a good House Party with very few exceptions.

There's a real interest in Gospel Dance Music, hence the rise in interest in the inspirational sounds of Baltimore, Washington and also Chicago and parts of Detroit.

Yes, UK House is very healthy at the moment, but apart from the larger parties such as The Southport Dance Weekender, it's still more of an underground vibe.

5: Can you recommend any good/great weekly parties in London for those of us on the other side of the pond?

DR. BOB JONES: There are various parties around London that are definitely worth a visit. Firstly, for some of the smaller parties, there's Faith, held at The Lodge in Harlesden (West London). It's an intimate affair with a superb audience, and pure underground vibes. Faith always attracts DJs from across the pond and is one of Quentin Harris' favourite places to go if he's in London.

Two other small, but highly inspirational clubs are Body Music and Soul City, held at various venues around the city on a monthly basis. These two parties are highly inspirational and very soulful in the mix and are more of a word-of-mouth affair, but they always put their parties on the Southport Weekender Forum site. Check southportweekender .co.uk/forum/ for further info.

Larger parties are Defected at the Ministry Of Sound. These are usually a monthly jam, and regularly play host to Timmy Regisford, Frankie Knuckles, MAW, Kerri Chandler, Dennis Ferrer and DJ Spen. I f you like your music a little on the hard side then check out Fabric. Fabric has an incredible sound system and hosts two large dance rooms, a capacity of around 1200 in each with a small room that is ideal for smaller parties. I've had the pleasure of hosting Chilli Funk parties at Fabric and cannot recommend it enough - a superb venue, staff, etc. and definitely worth a visit on a Saturday night.

 

Dr. Bob Jones can be reached at myspace.com/drbob06. For bookings, visit mona-rennalis.de.

 

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Dr. Bob Jones at Southport Weekender