WHY GERALD CHILLED
THE INFLUENCE OF DETROIT TECHNO, MUSLIM PRAYER CALLS AND
THE VIBRANCY OF HIS ADOPTED CITY OF BERLIN CAN ALL BE FOUND IN ACID HOUSE
PIONEER A GUY CALLED GERALD'S LATEST ALBUM. DJMAG FINDS OUT WHY IT'S HIS MOST
CHILLED LONGPLAYER TO DATE.
Words: Paul Clarke

HISTORY as Tony Blair is wont to remind us will be our judge. But whereas the PM
might have some, explaining to do when posterity comes calling, A Guy Called
Gerald need have no such worries.
For when the annals are written Gerald Simpson is sure to occupy pride of place
as a genuine hero in the history of dance music. Not that you'll have much luck
getting the modest Mancunian to admit it, however.
“I've maybe influenced a few individuals a little bit,” he says, in a clear
contender for understatement of the year. “But I don't know about the course of
music itself. All I've ever done is try to channel the energy of the music
surrounding me into something different. When I work on a track I'm not even
thinking about people playing it. My original ideas are very selfish things
which I want to keep for myself – like a cook making a cake just to eat
himself.”
But Gerald doth protest too much. For almost all of dance music's most
progressive pushes over the last decade-and-a-half have had Gerald's
fingerprints on them somewhere:
• Exhibits A and B: 'Pacific State' and 'Voodoo Ray', recorded as a member of
808 State and as A Guy Called Gerald respectively, the two tracks which, more
than any others, lit the touch paper for the British acid house explosion
centred on his native Manchester in the late 1980’s.
• Exhibit C: his 1993 LP '28 Gun Bad Boy' - which coalesced the energy of
hardcore with intricate breakbeats and techno minimalism into the first fully
recognisable blueprint for drum & bass.
• Exhibit D: 2000's 'Essence' LP, whose eclectic textures reconciled Gerald's
dancefloor roots with abstract experimentalism. It's a weighty pile of evidence
for sure, and one to which we can add his new LP 'To All Things What They Need',
another magnum opus which - wandering through electronica, broken beat and
techno as it does - once again proves that Gerald is impossible to pin down.
“I'm not interested in making another 'Voodoo Ray' or ‘Essence',” he explains.
“The only common trait in my music is the desire to always do something
different. That and the fact that I tend to go overboard on the bass! That comes
from growing up in a household surrounded by reggae - I just love swimming in
bass.
“When I first got into house it was really gritty and mechanical but towards
the: mid-9osit became too safe so I had to duck out of it. Which is why ‘28 Gun
Bad Boy’ happened because I needed the energy of the underground, and breakbeats
were exciting me. You have one category of people whose goal is to make money
and another of people who are basically adventurous and like to create sounds
without a set formula. I haven't got the focus to say ‘OK - this track will make
this position in the charts if I put this bassline in at this level’.”
TECHNOPHILE
However, whilst all of Gerald's previous LPs were genuinely groundbreaking,
'To All Things What They Need' sounds less like a step into uncharted territory
than before. Not that it's lazy or outdated - far from it in fact, as tracks
like 'Tajeen' and 'Meaning', with their elaborate percussive programming, are
clearly still the work of a man in love with the possibilities of electronic
sound. But at other moments the atmosphere is less coldly futuristic than warmly
nostalgic - especially on 'First Try', which comes soaked in melancholic strings
and a 4/4 rhythm reminiscent of vintage Detroit. Always an avowed technophile
determined to push his equipment to its limits, Gerald ascribes the sound of his
new LP to the fact that technology has now evolved to such a level that even the
most intrepid sonic explorer is hard-pushed finding new boundaries to break.
“It's definitely my most chilled-out LP,' Gerald says. “With all the LPs
beforehand I've been trying to push the technology. Ever since I was working
with a 303 the machinery has always provided the personality of the music. But
now I feel that technology has moved on so much that the influence from the
machines has gone because if you've got the skill you can make any sound you
want or can imagine. For 'First Try' I spent some time imitating some of my old
machines from the Detroit era which is why it came out sounding like that.”
So rather than fixing his gaze on the future, 'To All Things What They Need’ is
more the sound of Gerald looking around and taking stock of where he is today.
Currently residing in Berlin, Gerald is enthused about the sounds he is
absorbing in a city which - as home to labels like Kanzleramt and City Centre
Offices - is emerging as a hotbed of cutting-edge talent. There’s a vibrancy in
the air which Gerald likens to the second summer of love in Manchester or the
birth of techno in his beloved Detroit.
“If you live in a city you take on the energy and spirit of that environment so
people who live in places where there's a lot of machinery absorb mechanical
sounds and it becomes a part of what you are,” he believes. “It’s a spiritual
and biological thing. Detroit techno was always soul music to me and now a lot
of the younger generation in Germany are rediscovering that original sound and
getting as excited about it as I was.”
BUGGING
Yet darker forces have also shaped the LP, for before moving to Berlin Gerald
called New York home and what he witnessed there - before, during and after 9/11
- has clearly left its mark.
“When I started doing the LP it was really inspired by being a fly-on-the-wall
to all this madness,” he elaborates. “Before I lived there I thought that
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King had had at least some influence and that there
was some equality. But there's nothing and when you're a foreigner there you
start thinking that there's something seriously wrong with the place. By the
time 9/11 happened I was already convinced that they were reading my mail and
bugging my phone."
But whilst a disquieting ambience pervades tracks like ‘American Cars’ – whose
seemingly serene beatlessness hides darker depths – or ‘Millennium Sanhedrin’ –
where Philadelphia poetess Ursula Rucker intones an ominous invitation to “The
apocalypse party/ at Sodom and Gomorrah” – the album is ultimately a redemptive
experience. It's best expressed in ‘Call For Prayer’ where a muezzin wail is
intertwined around an ethereal electronic echo equally as haunting as the
vocals.
“I'm not a religious person but I thought someone should do something with the
call to prayer in it because Muslims seem to be having a hard time of it at the
moment. If Christians were being attacked in the same way then I’d probably do a
track with Gregorian chants! But the album was intended as spiritual therapy,
which is why it sounds so soft and mellow. With all the hurt and anger in the
world the answer isn't to try and multiply it with more of the same but to go
the other way and try and create a balance.”
His latest album tips the scales in Gerald's favour once again.
‘To All Things What They Need’ is out 31st January on K7.