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Words by Erez
Reuveni
Image provided by Brian Liu
Thievery Corporation
is renowned for its internationally-influenced electronic music.
The Washington D.C.-based group, consisting of Rob Garza and Eric
Hilton, formed in 1995 when Rob and Eric met at the Eighteenth Street
Lounge and discovered a mutual love for Brazilian musician Antonio
Carlos Jobin and 1960s bossa nova sound.
The duo began collaborating
on several tracks that would later contribute to their first album,
Sounds From the Thievery Hi-Fi, an eclectic mix of house
grooves, experimental hip-hop beats, Jamaican dub, and bossa nova.
The album gained the group immediate credibility and launched Thievery
Corporation as one of the premier DJ/Producer duos, all from the
pulpit of their own independent record label, Eighteenth Street
Lounge Music.
Their most recent
album, The Richest Man in Babylon, continues their tradition of
drawing upon a diverse set of musical influences and genres. Their
passion for bossa nova is fused with a chill-out sensibility. Passionate
female vocals are spliced with exotic instrumentation, and sitars
augment a series of vocals sung in Farsi. The album is often seductive
and enchanting, introspection and politics subtly mixed with funky
beats guaranteed to get your head bobbing and your feet moving.
Their sound has matured
and grown over the years through the release of several compilations
and three studio albums. Thievery's musical styles are distinctively
varied. The duo insisted on creative control of their music, thus
forming Eighteenth Street Lounge Music. Rob Garza notes, "The record
label is a vehicle for putting out our own music. We wanted to have
creative control and just enjoy the whole process of doing it ourselves."
The label has grown into something much larger than either Rob or
Eric ever anticipated. "We started doing compilations and putting
out a few artists, and now it has grown into something a lot bigger.
We have artists from all over the world. It just comes down to what
we like."
And what do Rob and
Eric like? What influences their music? "We like a lot of music
from the mid and late 1960s. It was just a very experimental time
with music in general. There was just a great source of experi-mentation,
especially when you listen to soundtrack composers like Henry Mancini
or Francis Lye. They might do things like mix bossa nova or have
a sitar in their music. The sense of freedom, musically, is definitely
a source of inspiration for us.
"The freedom to create innovative music is what fuels Thievery Corporation.
While electronic music is generally cold and mechanical, Thievery
takes inspiration from various musical genres to create music that
is engaging, relaxing, and entertaining. Their belief is that music
is an entity available to all. So music should be constantly examined
and interpreted, creating new musical hybrids to explore. "Our record
collection is very diverse. There is definitely an Indian influence,
Middle Eastern music, Afro-Cuban music, Jamaican dub, all sorts."
Thievery skillfully blends these various influences, crafting records
that have been labeled everything from "the thinking man's chill-out
album," to "down-tempo utopians."
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Labels aside, it's
actually quite difficult to categorize the group's music. Thievery
also draws inspiration from the jazz singers and musicians from
the 1960s. One of their recent albums, Sounds From the Verve Hi-Fi,
pays homage to Verve Records' storied catalogue of jazz musicians
ranging from Ella Fitzgerald and Charlie Parker to Astrud Gilberto
and Maria Toledo. On the album, Thievery takes classic jazz songs
and mixes them using their producers' sensibilities. The result
is a sultry elegy exulting the memory of Thievery Corporation's
antecedents. Ironically, the group first got attention in Europe
before ever being noticed in the United States. Their music seemed
to fit more within the rubric of European giant Kruder and Dorfmeister,
who they are often compared to, than within the confines of the
emerging electronica of the States. Rob notes that at first "we
weren't selling any records here." Thievery's music received a warm
reception in their hometown of Washington D.C., but failed to garner
widespread recognition outside the underground scene following their
debut release. "The people here (in D.C.) are very receptive to
what we do. Every time we play in Washington, it's really crazy,
and gets out of hand." In the years since, word of mouth about the
consistent excellence created by Rob and Eric has led album sales
to snowball. Shows are now packed and Thievery received recognition
in their home country.
Thievery are ardent
Mac users. Rob notes, "For serious artistic applications, I've always
found the Mac preferable to the PC. The PC was created as a business
computer. I actually have a G4, the standup model, and a Powerbook
too." In fact, Thievery creates some of its music on their Macintoshes.
DJ Kicks, a 1999 compilation disc on which the group mixes such
artists as Dj Cam, Up, Bustle and Out, and Rockers Hi-Fi, was done
entirely on Rob's Powerbook. "We use Digital Performer. In the studio
we also have a Mac, and use Logic."
As for future plans?
Thievery Corporation would like to host a DJ gathering in the Caribbean
sometime in 2003. "We haven't worked out the details, but we're
going to invite some friends who've appeared on our records and
some other people we'd like to work with." In addition, the group
will continue to produce top-notch quality music that defies categorization.
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