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Jace Clayton

Jace Clayton, also known as DJ /rupture, is a New York–based American DJ, writer and interdisciplinary artist. In addition to his music, Clayton has established a blog identity with musical and non-musical posts on his website, "mudd up!". His book, Uproot: Travels in 21st-Century Music and Digital Culture, was published in 2016.[1]

DJ /rupture
DJ /rupture in September 2008
Background information
Birth nameJace Clayton
Born (1975-08-18) August 18, 1975 (age 48)
OriginBoston, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)DJ, writer, interdisciplinary artist
Instrument(s)Turntables
Years activeLate 1990s–present
LabelsTigerbeat6
New Amsterdam Records
Websitenegrophonic.com (Mudd Up!)
jaceclayton.com

Life and career edit

Clayton spent his teenage years in North Andover, Massachusetts. In the mid-1990s, Clayton was a member of Toneburst, described as "Boston's most active and visible experimental electronic art/music/DJ collective", pursuing "a steadfastly DIY aesthetic".[2] Clayton graduated from Harvard University with a B.A. in English.[3]

In 2001, Clayton (under the name DJ /rupture) released Gold Teeth Thief, initially as an internet download.[4] The mixtape consists of 43 tracks in 68 minutes, including breakcore, ragga and Arabic folk music. It was named as one of the "50 Records of the Year" by The Wire in 2001.[5] The track was released by the Violent Turd label in 2002.[6] Reviewing Gold Teeth Thief on AllMusic, Joshua Glazer wrote: "Gold Teeth Thief is an impossibly noisy and aggressive set, yet the earthy Jamaican vocals and blunted hip-hop beats counteract the sonic devastation, making it palatable, even at its most dissident."[7]

In 2005, Clayton was asked to write about "the 10 artists that impacted my view of electronic music" and he mentioned: Edgard Varèse, the Hanatarashi, King Tubby, Pere Ubu, Steely & Clevie, Gregory Whitehead, Timbaland, Mannie Fresh, DJ Scud and Wiley.[8]

Between June 6, 2007, and February 27, 2013, DJ /rupture hosted a 1-hour weekly radio program "Mudd Up!" on WFMU.[9]

In 2010, Clayton was a resident at Eyebeam, an arts research organization specialising in the interface between art and technology.[10][11]

In 2012, Clayton received a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award.[12] This grant enabled Clayton to develop Sufi Plug Ins, which he described as "a free suite of music software-as-art based on non-western conceptions of sound and alternative interfaces".[12][13] In Spin, Philip Sherburne described Sufi Plug Ins as "one of the few digital tools I've seen that I would also consider art".[14]

In 2013, Clayton received a Creative Capital award[15] for the development of his project Gbadu and the Moirai Index, which Clayton described as "a performance piece for four vocalists and the stock market".[16] Clayton joined the Music/Sound faculty of the MFA program at Bard College in 2013.[17]

On March 26, 2013, New Amsterdam Records released an album by Clayton, The Julius Eastman Memory Depot. The album includes performances of works by composer Julius Eastman, "Evil Nigger" and "Gay Guerilla" by David Friend and Emily Manzo that have been manipulated and re-arranged by Clayton. The album's final track is a tribute to Eastman titled "Callback from the American Society of Eastman Supporters", which conjures up "a world where supporters of Eastman are so legion that they are turned away via robo-call".[18] In Pitchfork, Jayson Greene described the track as "a supremely Julius-Eastman moment, a short sharp bark of wry laughter fading into dead seriousness, and it caps Clayton's searingly immediate communion with Eastman's vital, contrary spirit."[18]

In 2016, Clayton published Uproot: Travels in 21st-Century Music and Digital Culture, described by the author as "a user manual for the world created by Mr MP3 and Ms Internet". Reviewing the book in The Guardian, Sukhdev Sandhu described it as "a travelogue of sorts",[1] which covers the music of Monterrey, north-east Mexico, capturing "emo kids and reggaeton fans on his way to hear thundering tribal guarachero played by a DJ behind whom is projected a Harry Potter movie". Clayton looks at the music culture of the Berbers in Morocco, who make showy use of Auto-Tune and "ponders the popularity of Whitney Houston-style melisma across the Maghreb."[1] Sandhu writes, "When Clayton talks about techniques such as transcoding and compressing – the art of squeezing recorded music into easily exportable and copyable packets of data – he could almost be talking about the journeys of refugees and migrants. Clayton, like many club goers, embraces the idea of music as a zone of mutation and adaptation, of new rhythms as thrillingly contagious, of the dancefloor as a place of both affirming and redefining community."[1]

Personal life edit

Clayton is married to fashion designer Rocio Salceda. They have lived in Madrid and Barcelona before settling in New York City in 2006.[3]

Discography edit

Albums edit

Singles & EPs edit

  • "Rummage About" (split 12-inch with Config.sys) (Soot Records, 1999)
  • "$ Vol. 7-inch (split 7-inch with Kid606) (Tigerbeat6, 2001)
  • "Rude Descending a Staircase" (7-inch) (Tigerbeat6, 2002)
  • Split EP (split 12-inch EP with The Bug vs. The Rootsman) (Tigerbeat6, 2003)
  • Special Gunpowder EP 1 (12-inch EP) (Tigerbeat6, 2004)
  • Special Gunpowder EP 2 (12-inch EP) (Tigerbeat6, 2004)
  • "No Heathen" (split 12-inch with Com.a and Wicked Act) (Shockout, 2004)
  • "Dem Nuh Know Me" (split 12-inch with Team Shadetek and Wayne Lonesome) (Shockout, 2004)
  • Little More Oil (12-inch EP with Kid606 and Sister Nancy) (Soul Jazz Records, 2005)
  • Redux (12-inch EP) (Brooklyn Beats, 2005)
  • "Miss Nemesis" (7-inch) (Ek-ke, 2006)
  • "Quémalo Ya" (split 12-inch with Filastine) (Shockout, 2007)
  • Shallows EP (12-inch EP with Matt Shadetek) (theAgriculture, 2009)

DJ mixes edit

  • 1 + 1 = 3 (cassette) (self-released, 1999)
  • Gold Teeth Thief (self-released/Tigerbeat6, 2001)
  • Minesweeper Suite (Tigerbeat6, 2002)
  • 58.46 Radio Mix (self-released, 2003)
  • Post Election Mix (radio broadcast on Resonance FM, 2004)
  • Shotgun Wedding Vol. 1: The Bidoun Sessions (with Mutamassik) (Tigerbeat6, 2004)
  • Low Income Tomorrowland (Applecore Records, 2005)
  • Soot Fall Tour 06 (with Filastine) (self-released, 2006)
  • Improvisation for Guitar + Turntables (with Andy Moor) (Soot Records, 2006)
  • Shotgun Wedding Vol. 6 (with Filastine) (Tigerbeat6, 2007)
  • Live in France (with Andy Moor) (Soot Records, 2007)
  • Porque Soy Sonidero Y Voy a Muchos Lugares (self-released, 2008)
  • Uproot (theAgriculture, 2008)
  • New York Tropical Vol. 1 (with Geko Jones) (self-released, 2009)
  • K-K-Kumbia (self-released, 2009)
  • Solar Life Raft (with Matt Shadetek) (theAgriculture, 2009)
  • Curiosity Slowdown (self-released, 2010)
  • Harlem Is Nowhere (with Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts) (self-released, 2011)
  • Dreamachine / Beyond Digital (cassette with Palm Wine & Maga Bo) (Palm Wine, 2011)
  • Change the Mood (self-released, 2012)
  • Sunset Park Rent Strike Mix (self-released, 2012)
  • 1100 vs. 2200 (with Sonido Martines) (self-released, 2013)

Appearances edit

  • "RKK13" – Natti Tone Scat (2000)
  • VA – Paws Across the World 2003 Tour (2004)
  • VA – Open Up and Say...@<%_|^[!] (2004)
  • The Wire Tapper 12

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Sandhu, Sukhdev (October 27, 2016). "Uproot by Jace Clayton review". theguardian.com. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  2. ^ Tweney, Chris (February 23, 1998). "The weird science of Toneburst". Boston Phoenix. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Pellegrinelli, Lara (November 2016). "World Music 2.0: Jace Clayton reflects on musical technological trends across the globe". Harvard Magazine. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  4. ^ "DJ/ rupture: Gold Teeth Thief (2001; 43 tracks, 68 minutes, mixed live on 3 turntables)". negrophonic.com. May 10, 2005. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  5. ^ "2001 Rewind". The Wire. January 2002. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  6. ^ "Gold Teeth Thief release". allmusic.com. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  7. ^ Glazer, Joshua (April 10, 2011). "Gold Teeth Thief overview". allmusic.com. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  8. ^ Clayton, Jace (April 29, 2005). . negrophonics.com. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  9. ^ "Mudd Up! with DJ/Rupture: Playlists and Archives". wfmu.org. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  10. ^ . Eyebeam. eyebeam.org. Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  11. ^ . Eyebeam. eyebeam.org. Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Foundation for Contemporary Arts: Jace Clayton". foundationforcontemporaryarts.org. January 31, 2013. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  13. ^ "Sufi Plug Ins". beyond-digital.org. April 10, 2015. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  14. ^ Sherburne, Philip (June 13, 2012). "DJ /Rupture Hacks Western Musical Institutions:Sufi Plug Ins give audio software a multicultural twist". Spin.com. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  15. ^ Taylor, Charles (April 10, 2013). . creative-capital.org. Archived from the original on March 14, 2017. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  16. ^ . jaceclayton.com. April 10, 2015. Archived from the original on March 14, 2017. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  17. ^ "Jace Clayton: Music/ Sound". Bard College. March 10, 2013. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  18. ^ a b Greene, Jayson (March 28, 2013). "The Julius Eastman Memory Depot". pitchfork.com. Retrieved March 13, 2017.

External links edit

  • Jace Clayton website
  • mudd up! blog by DJ/ rupture
  • Soot Records

jace, clayton, also, known, rupture, york, based, american, writer, interdisciplinary, artist, addition, music, clayton, established, blog, identity, with, musical, musical, posts, website, mudd, book, uproot, travels, 21st, century, music, digital, culture, p. Jace Clayton also known as DJ rupture is a New York based American DJ writer and interdisciplinary artist In addition to his music Clayton has established a blog identity with musical and non musical posts on his website mudd up His book Uproot Travels in 21st Century Music and Digital Culture was published in 2016 1 DJ ruptureDJ rupture in September 2008Background informationBirth nameJace ClaytonBorn 1975 08 18 August 18 1975 age 48 OriginBoston U S GenresBreakcore dubstep electronic hip hop jungle turntablismOccupation s DJ writer interdisciplinary artistInstrument s TurntablesYears activeLate 1990s presentLabelsTigerbeat6New Amsterdam RecordsWebsitenegrophonic wbr com Mudd Up jaceclayton wbr com Contents 1 Life and career 2 Personal life 3 Discography 3 1 Albums 3 2 Singles amp EPs 3 3 DJ mixes 3 4 Appearances 4 References 5 External linksLife and career editClayton spent his teenage years in North Andover Massachusetts In the mid 1990s Clayton was a member of Toneburst described as Boston s most active and visible experimental electronic art music DJ collective pursuing a steadfastly DIY aesthetic 2 Clayton graduated from Harvard University with a B A in English 3 In 2001 Clayton under the name DJ rupture released Gold Teeth Thief initially as an internet download 4 The mixtape consists of 43 tracks in 68 minutes including breakcore ragga and Arabic folk music It was named as one of the 50 Records of the Year by The Wire in 2001 5 The track was released by the Violent Turd label in 2002 6 Reviewing Gold Teeth Thief on AllMusic Joshua Glazer wrote Gold Teeth Thief is an impossibly noisy and aggressive set yet the earthy Jamaican vocals and blunted hip hop beats counteract the sonic devastation making it palatable even at its most dissident 7 In 2005 Clayton was asked to write about the 10 artists that impacted my view of electronic music and he mentioned Edgard Varese the Hanatarashi King Tubby Pere Ubu Steely amp Clevie Gregory Whitehead Timbaland Mannie Fresh DJ Scud and Wiley 8 Between June 6 2007 and February 27 2013 DJ rupture hosted a 1 hour weekly radio program Mudd Up on WFMU 9 In 2010 Clayton was a resident at Eyebeam an arts research organization specialising in the interface between art and technology 10 11 In 2012 Clayton received a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award 12 This grant enabled Clayton to develop Sufi Plug Ins which he described as a free suite of music software as art based on non western conceptions of sound and alternative interfaces 12 13 In Spin Philip Sherburne described Sufi Plug Ins as one of the few digital tools I ve seen that I would also consider art 14 In 2013 Clayton received a Creative Capital award 15 for the development of his project Gbadu and the Moirai Index which Clayton described as a performance piece for four vocalists and the stock market 16 Clayton joined the Music Sound faculty of the MFA program at Bard College in 2013 17 On March 26 2013 New Amsterdam Records released an album by Clayton The Julius Eastman Memory Depot The album includes performances of works by composer Julius Eastman Evil Nigger and Gay Guerilla by David Friend and Emily Manzo that have been manipulated and re arranged by Clayton The album s final track is a tribute to Eastman titled Callback from the American Society of Eastman Supporters which conjures up a world where supporters of Eastman are so legion that they are turned away via robo call 18 In Pitchfork Jayson Greene described the track as a supremely Julius Eastman moment a short sharp bark of wry laughter fading into dead seriousness and it caps Clayton s searingly immediate communion with Eastman s vital contrary spirit 18 In 2016 Clayton published Uproot Travels in 21st Century Music and Digital Culture described by the author as a user manual for the world created by Mr MP3 and Ms Internet Reviewing the book in The Guardian Sukhdev Sandhu described it as a travelogue of sorts 1 which covers the music of Monterrey north east Mexico capturing emo kids and reggaeton fans on his way to hear thundering tribal guarachero played by a DJ behind whom is projected a Harry Potter movie Clayton looks at the music culture of the Berbers in Morocco who make showy use of Auto Tune and ponders the popularity of Whitney Houston style melisma across the Maghreb 1 Sandhu writes When Clayton talks about techniques such as transcoding and compressing the art of squeezing recorded music into easily exportable and copyable packets of data he could almost be talking about the journeys of refugees and migrants Clayton like many club goers embraces the idea of music as a zone of mutation and adaptation of new rhythms as thrillingly contagious of the dancefloor as a place of both affirming and redefining community 1 Personal life editClayton is married to fashion designer Rocio Salceda They have lived in Madrid and Barcelona before settling in New York City in 2006 3 Discography editAlbums edit Special Gunpowder Tigerbeat6 2004 Patches with Andy Moor Unsuitable Records 2008 The Julius Eastman Memory Depot as Jace Clayton New Amsterdam Records 2013 Singles amp EPs edit Rummage About split 12 inch with Config sys Soot Records 1999 Vol 7 inch split 7 inch with Kid606 Tigerbeat6 2001 Rude Descending a Staircase 7 inch Tigerbeat6 2002 Split EP split 12 inch EP with The Bug vs The Rootsman Tigerbeat6 2003 Special Gunpowder EP 1 12 inch EP Tigerbeat6 2004 Special Gunpowder EP 2 12 inch EP Tigerbeat6 2004 No Heathen split 12 inch with Com a and Wicked Act Shockout 2004 Dem Nuh Know Me split 12 inch with Team Shadetek and Wayne Lonesome Shockout 2004 Little More Oil 12 inch EP with Kid606 and Sister Nancy Soul Jazz Records 2005 Redux 12 inch EP Brooklyn Beats 2005 Miss Nemesis 7 inch Ek ke 2006 Quemalo Ya split 12 inch with Filastine Shockout 2007 Shallows EP 12 inch EP with Matt Shadetek theAgriculture 2009 DJ mixes edit 1 1 3 cassette self released 1999 Gold Teeth Thief self released Tigerbeat6 2001 Minesweeper Suite Tigerbeat6 2002 58 46 Radio Mix self released 2003 Post Election Mix radio broadcast on Resonance FM 2004 Shotgun Wedding Vol 1 The Bidoun Sessions with Mutamassik Tigerbeat6 2004 Low Income Tomorrowland Applecore Records 2005 Soot Fall Tour 06 with Filastine self released 2006 Improvisation for Guitar Turntables with Andy Moor Soot Records 2006 Shotgun Wedding Vol 6 with Filastine Tigerbeat6 2007 Live in France with Andy Moor Soot Records 2007 Porque Soy Sonidero Y Voy a Muchos Lugares self released 2008 Uproot theAgriculture 2008 New York Tropical Vol 1 with Geko Jones self released 2009 K K Kumbia self released 2009 Solar Life Raft with Matt Shadetek theAgriculture 2009 Curiosity Slowdown self released 2010 Harlem Is Nowhere with Sharifa Rhodes Pitts self released 2011 Dreamachine Beyond Digital cassette with Palm Wine amp Maga Bo Palm Wine 2011 Change the Mood self released 2012 Sunset Park Rent Strike Mix self released 2012 1100 vs 2200 with Sonido Martines self released 2013 Appearances edit RKK13 Natti Tone Scat 2000 VA Paws Across the World 2003 Tour 2004 VA Open Up and Say lt 2004 The Wire Tapper 12References edit a b c d Sandhu Sukhdev October 27 2016 Uproot by Jace Clayton review theguardian com Retrieved March 13 2017 Tweney Chris February 23 1998 The weird science of Toneburst Boston Phoenix Retrieved March 13 2017 a b Pellegrinelli Lara November 2016 World Music 2 0 Jace Clayton reflects on musical technological trends across the globe Harvard Magazine Retrieved March 13 2017 DJ rupture Gold Teeth Thief 2001 43 tracks 68 minutes mixed live on 3 turntables negrophonic com May 10 2005 Retrieved March 13 2017 2001 Rewind The Wire January 2002 Retrieved March 13 2017 Gold Teeth Thief release allmusic com Retrieved March 13 2017 Glazer Joshua April 10 2011 Gold Teeth Thief overview allmusic com Retrieved March 13 2017 Clayton Jace April 29 2005 Hotel Rwanda Varese and friends negrophonics com Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved March 13 2017 Mudd Up with DJ Rupture Playlists and Archives wfmu org Retrieved March 13 2017 New 2010 Eyebeam Resident Artists And Fellows Eyebeam eyebeam org Archived from the original on 15 February 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Jace Clayton Eyebeam eyebeam org Archived from the original on 26 March 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b Foundation for Contemporary Arts Jace Clayton foundationforcontemporaryarts org January 31 2013 Retrieved March 13 2017 Sufi Plug Ins beyond digital org April 10 2015 Retrieved March 13 2017 Sherburne Philip June 13 2012 DJ Rupture Hacks Western Musical Institutions Sufi Plug Ins give audio software a multicultural twist Spin com Retrieved March 13 2017 Taylor Charles April 10 2013 Creative capital Jace Clayton creative capital org Archived from the original on March 14 2017 Retrieved March 13 2017 Gbadu and the Moirai Index jaceclayton com April 10 2015 Archived from the original on March 14 2017 Retrieved March 13 2017 Jace Clayton Music Sound Bard College March 10 2013 Retrieved March 13 2017 a b Greene Jayson March 28 2013 The Julius Eastman Memory Depot pitchfork com Retrieved March 13 2017 External links editJace Clayton website mudd up blog by DJ rupture New Amsterdam Records Jace Clayton Soot Records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jace Clayton amp oldid 1178939386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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