DJ Hell - Playboy Mix (Death Disco Radio.com)
Published on Feb 16, 2007 in none
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DJ Hell - Playboy Mix (Death Dis...
February 16, 2007
Death Disco Radio is proud to present: DJ Hell live on deathdiscoradio.com HELL is 43 years old, has 1 internationally successful record company, t... More
Death Disco Radio is proud to present: DJ Hell live on deathdiscoradio.com HELL is 43 years old, has 1 internationally successful record company, thousands of DJ gigs, 3 albums as an artist, 1 football coaching license, 4 renowned music awards, 1 Ford Mustang, 1 club. Can success be quantified? Probably. Can DJ Hell be quantified? No. Even though the above mentioned figures are impressive, the Hell phenomenon isn’t explicable by numbers. But you can explain it by telling his life story. Born 1962 in the village of Altenmarkt, Upper Bavaria, Germany, Hell achieved a worldwide breakthrough without compromising, without bending himself in any way. After so many years as a DJ and label boss he is still cutting edge, still lives today, is still hipper than any twentysomething. A star DJ without an interest in drugs, an ardent supporter of the FC Bayern Munich football team who collaborates with Donatella Versace, who adores his mum’s pork roast, kicked off the eighties revival almost singlehandedly and rocked just about every club from New York to Tokyo. All that in a single lifetime. That is DJ Hell. It all started with Hell spinning records. First at the legendary Libella club, out in the country, where he was so innovative, so exciting that it only was a question of time before he moved on to nearby Munich. There he went through EBM and the initial stages of techno and by that time it was already him who influenced people rather than him being influenced. And that was noticed in other cities, other clubs. That’s how he got to see the world. The first releases came about in a flash: “My definition of house music” – still valid today – and “Geteert und Gefedert” (“Tarred and Feathered”), the first album. He put a meaning to the terms serious, tough and minimal and when everybody had understood he moved on immediately. That’s why he founded his own label, International Deejay Gigolos, and started to release new and exciting music: Miss Kittin & The Hacker, Fischerspooner, Zombie Nation, Psychonauts, Terranova, all household names within the international electronica community by now. Meanwhile he still found some time to work on his own artist career. “Munich Machine” was a manifesto and love letter to a city he’d made his own, including the Barry Manilow cover version “Copa”, a massive hit. By 2000 it was time for his own club, out in the bavarian countryside of course, the “Villa”. The people look different compared to a regular techno club, it is there that you begin to understand that innovation is a question of your state of mind and not your origin. Summer 2003 sees the release of his new album “N.Y. Muscle”. Fresh again, different again, re-inventing himself again. Hell collaborates with the legendary Playboy founder Hugh Hefner and with P. Diddy. All that in a single lifetime. I never met Hell. But I saw him on a lot of occassions. At Munich’s Ultraschall Club, during the mid-nineties. Focussed, a part of the music, fluid. Or on TV, when they broadcast the Love Parade 2000, towering above a million people. In Munich, too, twice, rushing along the streets in a high collared coat, first you think of a businessman with good dress-sense and then you look back a second time. Seeing, visualising, that is of enormous relevance to Hell. He managed to convey pure music as well as pure style during his twenty-five year DJ career. Quite understandable for someone who entered the stage during the era of punk and new wave. The individual look, the do-it-yourself approach, the elitism. That’s how it grew. Somebody from that background doesn’t get behind the decks in a muscle shirt with sunglasses and a tribal tattoo. Later on it was all about high fashion. Black suits, tailor made shirts, black and whiteT-shirts that never complied with the smilie madness of the rave generation. Still, it never was about the indecisive shopping sprees through luxury boutiques either. It’s about individuality. Today Hell Djs at all couture and pret-a-porter shows for Versace, spins for Dirk SchÔø?rger in Paris and works on a music project with the belgian fashion star Raf Simons. Hell owns a Ford Mustang, built in 1965. Hell gets filmed by leading german director Romuald Karmakar in a single shot during a club set at Berlin’s WMF club, the resulting film “196 bpm” earns critical acclaim at the Berlinale film festival. A DJ who predominantly plays electronic music doesn’t have a lot of space to explain himself. Hell doesn’t need to explain himself. An individual style, an “everything goes” approach have got him where he is today. I am sure that if I asked him where the limit is, he simply wouldn’t understand. A phenomenon. DISCOGRAPHY 1992 DJ HELL MY DEFINITION OF HOUSE MUSIC 12“ R + S RECORDS 1993 DJ HELL RED BULL FROM HELL – EP 12“ VORTEX/DISKO B DJ HELL & ELECTRIC INDIGO ULTRAWORLD EP VOL.1 12“ DISKO B DJ HELL SPRUNG AUS DEN WOLKEN 12“ DISKO B DJ HELL FUTURESHOCK 12“ DISKO B DJ HELL SPRUNG AUS DEN WOLKEN/BUTTERSÄURE 12“ KICKIN RECORDS DJ HELL THREE DEGREES KELVIN / LIKE THAT! 12“ MAGNETIC NORTH 1994 HELL GETEERT UND GEFEDERT 2xLP/ CD DISKO B DJ HELL HELL ÄRGERE DICH NICHT REMIXES JEFF MILLS/DAVE CLARKE 12“ DISKO B DJ HELL LIKE THAT / 3° KELVIN 12“ MAGNETIC NORTH 1995 DJ HELL ALBINO EP 12“ DISKO B HELL & JONZON EP NO.1 12“ DISKO B HELL ORIGINAL STREET TECHNO 12“ DISKO B 1996 HELL TOTMACHER 12’’ DISKO B HELL TOTMACHER INTERPRETATIONEN 12“ DISKO B BABY FORD, UR, REGIS 12“ DISKO B 1997 DJ HELL DIESE MOMENTE WERDEN NICHT VERLOREN SEIN WIE…12“ SATIVAE DJ HELL & R. BARTZ TAKE A SHOT 12“ KURBEL 1998 HELL SUICIDE COMMANDO 12“/CDM DISKO B/ V2 HELL SUICIDE COMMANDO REMIXED 12“/ V2 HELL MUNICH MACHINE 2X12’’/ CD DISKO B / V2 CHICKS ON SPEED/ HELL WARM LEATHERETTE 7“ GO RECORDS 1999 HELL COPA 12“/ CDM DISKO B/ V2 HELL COPA REMIXED 12“/ CDM DISKO B/ V HELL THIS IS FOR YOU REMIXED 12“ DISKO B HELL & R. BARTZ ROCK MY BODY TO THE BEAT 12“ INT. DJ GIGOLOS HELL REPASSION 12“ PROMO ONLY INT. DJ GIGOLOS 2000 BANDULU / DJ HELL PRESENCE / EAT MORE HOUSE BABY 12“ REWIND THE CLASSICS 2003 HELL N.Y. MUSCLE ALBUM 3X12“/ CD INT.DJGIGOLOS/ UNIVERSAL HELL FEAT. ERLEND OYE KEEP ON WAITING 12“/CDM INT.DJGIGOLOS 2004 HELL LISTEN TO THE HISS 2X12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL & HEIL P.D.D. JH LIMITED 02 2005 HELL PRESENTS MY DEFINITION OF HOUSE PART1 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL LET NO MAN JACK 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL PRESENTS MY DEFINITION OF HOUSE PART 2 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL FEAT. BILLIE RAY MARTIN JE REGRETTE EVERYTHING 12“/CDM INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL GRÖßENWAHN 1992-2005 2XCD INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL FINAL COUNTDOWN 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL TRAGIC PICTURE SHOW 7“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL PRESENTS MY DEFINITION OF HOUSE PART 3 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS 2006 HELL&ANTHONY ROTHER GERMAN BODYMACHINE 12“ DATAPUNK HELL FUN BOY 3 12“ INT.DJGIGOLOS HELL JACK YOUR BODY / CD COCOON Death Disco Radio with Non-Stop Podcasts of Chicago house, disco, acid house, Electro, CLASSIC ELECTRO, Synth wave, Detroit Techno, Dark Wave, Minimal tech, Miami Bass, Electro pop, Dark Electro, ELECTRO NU WAVE, NEO WAVE, PUNK FUNK and NO WAVE, ELECTROPUNK, DANCEFLOOR NU WAVE, CLASH DISCO, AVANTGARDE NU WAVE, NEO POP, ELABORATE POP ELECTRO, GOTHIC ELECTRO . D.E.A.T.H. D.I.S.C.O. RADIO of the 1980s Detroit, Bronx, New York City, Los Angeles, with weekly dj’s and artists broadcasting on our podcast. Simulcasts can also be frequently heard on 93.1 FM Twin Cities Radio. 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Tags: Techno, Berlin, electro, house music, gigolo, dj hell, disco b, vitalic, munich machine

