Jordan

AMF Interview with Jordan

NOEDIT002 Release date 21st Feb 2020

Hey Jordan, thanks for taking the time to answer some questions for AMF. We’re really excited to chat with you about some of your upcoming projects, running Nocturne, and the Belfast music scene.  

A lot has been happening in NI in the past few years. AVA had its inaugural year in 2015 and there been no shortage of talent coming out of Belfast since (and before) then. What, in your opinion, is driving this explosion of talent? 

N.I. has always had a very active counter-culture, from the punk movement in the late seventies through to the Circus Circus, Kellys & Art College raves. All this was set against the backdrop of the troubles, and this always has a trickle-down effect through generations. Couple this with music production software being more accessible and having the internet at our disposal to shout about our music and it’s a great time to be making music.

You’re also a resident and promoter at The Night Institute. It must be nice to hold a residency and practice your craft week in week out to a club crowd. It seems like we’re seeing less and less resident-led, community-based club nights now as people move towards large festivals and big clubs to consume dance music. How has a weekly residency helped you? And how can promoter combat this shift away from big summer event festivals?

I had a whole lotta fun when we were running The Night Institute on a weekly basis, but I’m finding myself in a much better headspace creatively now that we throw our parties much less frequently. I think the weekly element was important in terms of nurturing a community and creating an affordable alternative music experience. We have a lot of regulars that have been going to the parties from it’s very first venue!

We’ve had girls who have met their boyfriends at the parties, and are still together. More importantly, as a DJ it gives you scope, flexibility that is transferable outside the residency. In answer to your question on how to combat ‘large event’ syndrome, I’d say afford opportunities to talent on that basis, but maintain a quality control on who you book. We rarely booked guests and for our residents parties had numbers of right up to 500 capacity at points (50 at points too – who wants to be DJ’ing the first week in January?!). 

Despite this, we were able to create opportunities for at least 30 new artists over the 3 years without sacrificing the musical direction of the night. This builds a scene that naturally supports good people and isn’t ‘exclusive.’ Throwing crazy money at internationals is just fighting fire with fire if you want to steer things away from ‘big events.’ Balance is key.

Jordan’s Boiler Room set from the 2017 AVA festival

If DJ’ing and producing weren’t enough you also run your own Label, Nocturne. When did you start the label and what is the ethos behind it?
I started the label in 2016, without a clue what I was doing. I had guidance from Timmy Stewart who runs Extended Play and is co-promoter of The Night Institute. It’s been a lot of trial and error on my part, but the offshoot Nocturne Edits series was a real success and has inspired me to kickstart the original’s side of things and bring other artists on board in the process. Oh aye, and we’ve had Gerd Janson, Lauer contribute stuff as Tuff City Kids which I was quite proud of!

EP’s like Belfast Belters and your Nocturnes edits draw on rave, Italo and acid sounds among many others. Where do you get your musical inspiration from?

The Huntleys & Palmers record was never meant to be called “Belfast Belters” for the record. Not quite sure how that happened! I listen to all sorts of music, Talking Heads, Prince & The Libertines are mainstays in the car and I’m just constantly consciously or subconsciously finding music. There’s no real process. My music collection is a complete mess.

Jordan
Can you give us some insight into your creative process and studio set up? How do you go about creating a track? And what tools do you use to make music?

I tried hiring a range of studio spaces over the years when renting one-bedroom apartments and needing space. I was buying equipment that was amazing, but unnecessarily expensive and borrowing desks I couldn’t use, thinking this was the right way of doing things. Nowadays I have a home studio space I work in daily, and due to lack of space, I now work solely in the box on Ableton. I use the likes of Diva, the Korg Legacy package, the Tal synths and the Arturia range on a day to day basis. For processing I find Rough Rider, OhmBoyz Delay, the Valhalla reverbs and the whole Waves pack are go-to’s.

Rightly or wrongly I start with an unnecessary amount of drum tracks through the Ableton “Impulse” sampler, meaning I can play in drum hits via my keyboard and just keep layering and layering. The bassline will usually come next, then lead synths, before a rough arrangement then FX and fills.

This whole process will usually result in me sending a thousand 15 second video clips to Bobby Analog, Timmy Stewart, Ejeca & Holly Lester until they start ignoring me. 

Once the track is ready to go, I bring it to the fantastic Dave Lievense for mixing and general wizardry. He’s been an essential part in the development of my music education since I was 14, and inspired me to go to Leeds to study a Music Technology degree. 15 years on I still have his head melted with constant technical questions every day on messenger.

With summer festival season only a few months away can you give us the low down on any events you’ll be playing at? Do you have any other projects or plans in the pipeline you can tell us about too? 

Over the next few weeks I’m in Berlin, London, Limerick & Leeds, and release the second Nocturne Edits as well as my first original EP of the year “Believe” on Loose Fit, and finally the first Nocturne release featuring a producer that isn’t me – The Viper Patrol “Bizarre Feeling” record.

Pre-order your copy of NOEDIT002 from the Lobster Theremin shop now. 

Written By – Liam Donoghue

AMF Head Honcho – Author Bio

AMF founder, resident, writer, and podcaster.

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