He's been A&R man at London records for over twenty years, has
hosted Radio 1's Essential Selection since 1991 and his name is used as colloquial
rhyming slang! Meet the man who has been instrumental in a generation of music,
Pete Tong.
By Rachael Hannan.
Not every DJ has their name used as colloquial rhyming slang! When
did you first hear your name used in that context?
It came out of the rave days from a fan base around at the time, run by a
mad bunch of enthusiastic clubbers and music makers. But I always say it was
down to one guy in particular called Gary Hayesman. I ended up doing a record
with D-Mob called, We Call It Acieed, a loony, loony record which Gary did the
vocals for. He was a real 'apples and pears' kind of guy, even though he wasn't
a cockney, he was from Slough. All that group were from Slough, Staines and
Windsor and were absolute hardcore! One of them was Andy Weatherall who went
onto become a legendary producer, but it was probably down to Gary that 'It's
All Gone Pete Tong' came about.
Tell us more about the film, It's All Gone Pete Tong?
The producers of it are the same, or one and a half of the same team who did
the film Human Traffic, which I did the music for a few years ago. They always
wanted to do a follow up but never got round to it due to loads of problems.
Eventually they came back to me and said they had decided not to do a follow
up to Human Traffic, but a next in the series that would be in the spirit of
Human Traffic and about DJ's.
About two years ago they asked if I minded them using the name. I said that
I couldn't really complain because at that stage there wasn't a director or
a script. I didn't want to dive into it and really work on it from day one and
then end up not liking it and be stuck with the name, so I waited and waited,
until a point when I was comfortable with it, which was the summer of 2003 when
they actually started to film it in Ibiza.
So I became more involved then, but I wasn't soundtrack supervisor because
they were a company already making movies so they had one of those. What I did
was work with Mike Dowse the Director on a number of cuts and the soundtrack,
because although I have made a pretty major contribution to it, I wouldn't put
myself down as the guy that did the score or the soundtrack. I've ended up with
three cuts of my own and I introduced Mike to Schwab who did the opening track
of the movie which I think is really powerful so there is collaboration
Have you always been into music?
When I was born, my dad was a feverish record collector and well into music
and my mum says that I was very aware of any music on TV and radio, and was
always banging drums or strumming the air-guitar. At school I tried to learn
a conventional instrument but never really had the concentration, staying power
or discipline to stick with it. I ended up a 15 year old with a drum kit, playing
in a small bad rock band, then one day I saw a DJ and I just went crazy about
it, really immersing myself in it. Then as a teenager, I started running discos
in village halls which I would DJ at.
I started from very humble beginnings, literally playing for anyone's party,
wedding or barmitza - you name it! In those days, unless you were a mobile DJ
wearing a bow-tie, going round in a transit van, everyone thought it was a hobby.
Even I thought it was hobby! No one ever dreamed you could make a living being
a DJ at that time. The biggest DJs influencing me, people like Chris Hill and
Greg Edwards, they all had others jobs, so I followed suit and got myself into
a magazine, writing about music. It wasn't until 2001 that I DJ'd full time,
and that's probably one of the reasons I'm still doing it because it never became
boring to me.
Tell us more about your job at Blues & Soul magazine?
Blues & Soul gave me a good grounding because it was a real hands-on-deck
magazine, so even though I was a writer, I also booked some of the advertising.
I was thrown into the deep end of the reggae world but it was a great time and
a changing time for the club scene. It was quite a worthy, serious publication
when I started but I was one of the first people to introduce a DJ club chart,
and write about the club scene as a social scene. I actually stole what Paula
Yates was doing at the time in The Mirror, you know a kind of gossipy, what's
happening type of column, but before that it was, here's an interview with Marvin
Gaye, here's an interview with Diana Ross. It was quite po-faced, but it was
a good fun time.
You were instrumental in creating Ffrr Records in 1998, a label within a label
at London Records, which hit the charts immediately with Salt 'n' Pepa's Push
It. You and Ffrr Records went on to sign names like Orbital, The Brand New Heavies,
Utah Saints, The Cookie Crew, Goldie, Asian Dub Foundation, Armin Van Helden
and many others. In many ways Ffrr Records shaped a whole generation of music.
"I was there to assist, really rather than shape - that's a daunting word!
It was probably part judgement, part luck and partly good timing.
When I started the Ffrr label in '87 there really wasn't that much competition.
There were only a couple of other labels I would be competing with for any record
or band that I wanted to sign. Then before we knew it, we found ourselves in
the middle of acid house, the rave scene and the whole explosion of dance music
in the early 90's and that kind of ties in with me being taken from Capital
Radio to Radio 1. I arrived at Radio 1 when there was no club culture as such
or dance culture awareness, and I was able to exploit that really, really quickly.
Can you imagine arriving on the national stage in 1991 when no one else had
really been writing about what had been going on all over the country for the
last 3 or 4 years? I was doing it on Capital Radio but that was just London
based, so Radio 1 and the Essential Selection was just good timing.
Any advice for aspiring DJs?
Don't wait for someone to knock at your door and invite you to do it - you've
got to be driven, single minded and as entrepreneurial as possible. We are in
the entertainment business first and foremost and I think that gets lost sometimes.
It's a virtuoso, not a sport!
It's not about being the fastness or the quickest. I think young people get
a bit daunted and think they have to be the most amazing technical mixer, or
have the rarest or newest records. All of those things have a bearing but really,
the best DJs in the world are the ones who know how to rock a room, and that
isn't necessarily about being the best mixer or having records no one else has
got. It's a melting pot that make the best DJs in the world.
What is it that makes Ibiza so special?
Ibiza is just a Mecca for music loving party people and is one of the most
inspiring places to DJ. I've travelled around the world and get to go to some
amazing places but I still see Ibiza and Pacha on a Friday night, as the best
residency in the world.
Its become much more of a weekend place than maybe it used to be with more
direct flights from the UK making it easier and easier to get to. So now you
get people coming in and out a number of times in the season, whereas back in
the day, you would wait and wait for your summer holiday. You'd do your one
week, go crazy and come home.
It's also very international. If you DJ in South America, South East Asia,
Russia or America or wherever, there's the different crowds, different parties
in amazing cities and at amazing clubs, but no where gets the mix of people,
cultures or languages that you get in Ibiza.
I think people feel more and more that it's the place to be. Not necessarily
for the whole season; you get ebb and flows throughout the 24 week summer but
I think early August is becoming just as magical as St Tropez or places like
that. The opening in June and the closing in September is as fanatical as any
of those hot spots and holiday destinations around the world. The atmosphere
is just great!
Which countries would you like to DJ in that you haven't?
There's still a couple of places around the world I'd like to play, such as
India and China. It's opening up very quickly and I'd like to be able to say
I have truly played everywhere.
Best piece of advice anyone has ever given you?
Don't worry too much. I am one of these people who constantly thinks, you
never do enough, or you should be doing something different, or it wasn't worthy
enough. The older I get I realise it's such a waste of your energy, and the
more relaxed I am, the more good things happen.
Find out where Pete is playing by visiting his website www.petetong.com
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