A Guy Called Gerald

After a brief stint DJing hip-hop. soul and funk as port of Scratchbeat
Masters for MC Tunes and the After a brief stint DJ-ing hip-hop. soul and funk
as port of Scratchbeat Masters for MC Tunes and the Ruthless Rap Assassins.
Gerald had stumbled on house at a supremely febrile moment in its Stacy
evolution. By the early 90s. Gerald was buzzing on several fronts. signing a
major deal with CBS (Sony) and releasing the influential house album
'Automanik'. His second album however still anguishes in the vaults. "probably
never to be released" and he was dropped. Thereafter he perceived his sampler as
a time machine. something that could induce trance like rhythms with breakbeats.
"an attempt to reflect my frustration to know the truth about my ancestors who
talked with drums." His next project-come-album released in 1993. '28 Gun Bad
Boy'. was an essential document of urban malevolence. gangster posturing.
skull-snapping beats that still sounds like a landmark in the music we now know
as drum & bass.
‘28 Gun Bad Bwoy' laid the foundation for producers like DJ Hype's jump-up sound
but it was his newly established Juice Box 12's that really announced his
intention to write a new blueprint. 'Black Secret Technology'. the album of
evocative African rhythms and phased out voices that followed m % definitively
showed that drum & bass was capable of making a full-length statement of intent
Utterly unique. Gerald Simpson has consistently explored new territory
throughout his 12-year career and has no shortage of admirers amongst house and
drum & bass producers globally.
Yet if you put these facts to him. he looks genuinely shocked and remains
speechless for a few minutes before scratching his head and saying, softly.
'Thank you, but you're wrong. I'm sorry. but reckon There's many other producers
who deserve that term better than I do. like Dego and Marc from 4 Hero. They've
managed to establish a label [Reinforced] for ten years and to do a multitude of
different projects. I haven't." He sighs. bouncing up and down on the sofa in
his new label K7's London office. Interviews seem to make Gerald nervous.
Perhaps it's because he doesn't tend to think about what he does too much or
because he is genuinely embarrassed encountering the lavish praise that his
frankly marvellous new album. 'Essence' has engendered. Then there's the faint
chance that he's worried about being misrepresented. ("it's happened lemony
times I've lost count"). tarred with the wrong brush. aligned with people and
movements barely has any connection to.
A resident of New York ("it's not as glamorous as it sounds. I live in this
neighbourhood where I have to pay protection money to rude boy gangsters just to
get in my flat") he is generally quite denigrating about the current state of
drum & bass. last time he was here it was the era of the noise for noise's sake
practitioners. "Too many of the producers that people rabbit on about these days
don't realise what the roots of the music were." he says. giggling. "It's just
rubbish to believe that can write a good drum & bass track without a funky
element. that you can win people over with bass. A couple of years ago. when
everybody was falling over themselves for that sound. Dego. link (4 Hero) and I
were listening to some radio station and we were just falling about the floor.
laughing. I mean it's just a waste of programming skills and proves that a lot
of drum & bass producers have no imagination."
He calls himself a musical loner. living a hermetic experience in the wilds of
Brooklyn, dabbling and experimenting. so wasn't aware that his new label. !K7
were responsible for the great 'DJ Kicks' series. He only hooked with them
because he was looking for a European distribution deal for his Woe Box and
Rotary Code labels. Generous to a fault. many would be eternally resentful that
they received £200 for a song that became a top ten hit ('Pacific State') but
Gerald isn't having any of it. 'You live and learn and I don't feel resentful
for the rum deals that I've signed or the early years. that makes me an idiot.
but I can't do anything about it now. I can't change anything. 'Things fall
apart sometimes and you have to pick yourself up and move on. The only thing I
was a concerned with was that I might not be able to make music."
His long creative break is put down to 'trouble with my former Juice Box and
studio partner. legal stuff that took forever to sort out. I wasn't sure about
Essence' for a while: I recorded about twice much material and then had to
filter it. A lot of it was recorded five years ago. I mean. Louise Rhodes of
Lamb] came into the studio ages ago for 'Humanity'. (Gerald's backing track was
originally earmarked for Lady Miss Kier). I just wanted to make sure everything
was perfect." Much has am made of Gerald's professional link with former
Dee-Lite singer. Lady Miss Kier who sang on Sock Secret Technology' and appears
alongside Gerald's brother. Dave Simpson. Jennifer Neal. singer/songwriter,
Wendy Page and Louise Rhodes as a featured singer on 'Essence': "Kier is good
fun and. without being disrespectful to the other singers on the album who are
all great. I like her contributions ns the most. I asked my brother to sing on
the album because I've always been perturbed by little investment-is placed in
black male singers in this country and he's a great singer. I was toying with
the idea of a r&b drum & bass album at one stage. but it didn't quite work out
like that"
No instead. A Guy Called Gerald has recorded something more timeless than that,
he's moved on. redefining the parameters of drum & bass yet again. Like a film
shot entirely at golden time. the !sounds on 'Essence'. acquire an extra
luminescence. brightness and clarity at every listen. The soulful songs.
'Humanity'. 'Fever (or a Flame)'. 'Universal Spirit' and 'Could You Understand'
are soulful sultry and sexy but his instrumentals will rattle your flat/office
/club with their earth-shaking basslines and the skitter of ragga and deep house
grooves.
As befits a true innovator. Gerald was asked by Bill Laswell to contribute to a
project he was working on with Herbie Hancock earlier this year. Now. Laswell, a
notoriously finicky producer has arranged to have artists as diverse as John
Lydon (Sex Pistols/PIL), Ginger Baker. Ryuichi Sakamoto on the same record or
even more extremely. Whitney Houston. Archie Shepp and Fred Frith. He's a
pioneer of hip-hop. ambient. avant-funk and world music and has worked with
Africa Bambaata. George. Clinton. Sly & Robbie and Hector Zazou amongst others.
By all accounts. Laswell is an archetypal musical revolutionary who has the
perfect qualifications to rework new named from another archetypal
revolutionary. A Guy Called Gerald. "I haven't met them yet. but trot on honour.
I mean. I worked with a couple of heroes for the album that wasn't released but
-Herbie Hancock, he's on another level. He's written some classic tunes. I've
written the drum .,'-gumming for the track and Herbie is going to play the keys.
how many people can say they're going to work with Herbie Hancock? Not many.
It's like a dream"