The musician and artist, 49, on the joy of yoga, getting even with his maths teacher and starring in a James Bond film
I see electronic music as loads of monkeys pushing buttons and me being one of them. But I think my album Timeless stands the test of time. If in 1995, when it was released, Timeless was a blueprint written on a steel cylinder, now it’s a chrome ball reflecting what’s happened in the last 20 years of electronic music.
When I was growing up in the 1980s in the Midlands, I felt abandoned and misunderstood. Then I chose drum ’n’ bass and graffiti as my subcultures – which didn’t really help.
Continue reading...by Alice Fisher via Electronic music | The Guardian
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