[Dynagroove] THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT! (from Billboard Magazine)

BadIYE at aol.com BadIYE at aol.com
Mon Aug 20 17:18:35 PDT 2007


That was cool.  But frankly, so little in terms of House has come out  of New
York, it's not surprising that these couple of kids are making such big
noise.  The Sound Republic fellas reported that New York was by far the
weakest
city they've ever played in terms of  the house scene in  particular, and the
dance scene in general.  What a shame.

Imad.

In a message dated 8/20/2007 11:43:09 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
aaron at tohzt.com writes:

Hey  Everyone-

I just read this article on the Martinez Brothers in this  week's
Billboard.  Check it  out!

love,

_A

BEATBOX: THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT
August 25,  2007

Teenage DJs Become Unlikely Stars On Global House Scene
KERRI  MASON

You'd think DJ Danny Krivit was Jay-Z, the way young Chris  Martinez gazed
at him. The 15-year-old and his 18-year-old brother, Steve  Jr., didn't
move from their spots smack in front of the makeshift DJ booth  aboard an
Aug. 5 Circle Line party cruise around Manhattan.

For  three hours, the 50-year-old, more bald-than-bling Krivit dug into the
deep  well of classic vocal house, while his DJ'ing partner for the
evening, Joe  Clausell, accentuated its percussive elements. Both sweated
over the mixer,  twisting the EQ knobs in classic New York style,
alternately dropping the  bass and bringing out the highs. The Martinez
brothers reacted to every  tweak and mix, Chris clutching his heart for the
confessional R&B  vocals, Steve Jr. gripping the cross around his neck
during "Stand on the  Word," a Joubert Singers gospel track.

"House music definitely speaks  to our spiritual side, of course," Steve
Jr. said the following week.  "That's why they call it 'soulful house,'
because it speaks to your  soul."

The Martinez brothers—actually, the Martinez Brothers—aren't  just young
house music fans, which alone would be special. They're also the  hottest
properties on the international DJ-touring circuit, an  accelerating,
unprecedented phenomenon in what has been, up to now, an  older man's game.

This year alone, they've played every major venue in  New York, as well as
France, Portugal and Canada, and "turned down more  offers than we can
count," Steve Jr. says.

"That's what's blowing  everybody's mind," says accomplished DJ/producer
Dennis Ferrer, who  releases the boys' original music on his Objektivity
label and serves as  their industry mentor. "They're the generation of
hip-hop. To see dance  music being embraced by these kids, it's a great
thing for us older folks.  These kids might be able to turn the tide."

With hip-hop mired in  materialism and angst, and house music graying more
every year, the  soft-faced, Bronx-born brothers are a panacea for both.
They look street  but talk church, and play everything from minimal techno
to crooning soul  with the freight-train energy of Funkmaster Flex. They
blend young style  with old values, and are close to their DJ father, Steve
Sr., who insists,  along with Ferrer (who they say is "like an uncle") that
all touring stops  when school starts in September. (Chris will be a high
school sophomore,  Steve Jr. a junior at Hunter College.)

"My main thing is that they grow  up to be fine young gentlemen. In our
business, that's rare," Ferrer says.  "I want them to be professionals.
School is the most important thing. If  their grades fall, their gigs get
cut."

Benny Soto, promoter of the  Krivit boat party, says, "Nothing as important
as them has come out of New  York in a long time. They make tremendous
excitement. They create energy.  We really want them to succeed." The "we"
he refers to is the greater house  community of New York, a historically
insular crew that's loathe to rally  around anyone, especially two kids who
weren't even born when nightclub  temple Paradise Garage was open.

"I just think it's everybody opening  up, saying, 'Listen, these kids are a
shot at taking this to a bigger  market and demographic,' and almost living
vicariously through them also,"  Ferrer says. "It's a manifestation of all
these different feelings for  us."







************************************** Get a sneak peek of the all-new AOL at
http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour


More information about the dynagroove mailing list