When hip-hop first hit the UK in the mid 80’s, Ed Handley and Andy Turner were young teenagers studying at a
school in rural Suffolk. Along with a handful of other misfits, nonplussed by the predominant heavy metal scene and
uninterested in joining the queues buying into pop culture at the local Woolworths, they formed a breaking crew. Their
spare time was spent practicing moves, throwing up pieces under flyovers and putting together cassette tape mixes,
played off portable ghetto blasters aside well polished lino squares. The music they favoured was gathered from
rough snatches of London-based pirate radio broadcasts, John Peel’s infinitely influential playlists or from dusty vinyl
unearthed at car boot sales – many of them left behind by American personnel stationed in the UK during and after the
War.
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When hip-hop first hit the UK in the mid 80’s, Ed Handley and Andy Turner were young teenagers studying at a
school in rural Suffolk. Along with a handful of other misfits, nonplussed by the predominant heavy metal scene and
uninterested in joining the queues buying into pop culture at the local Woolworths, they formed a breaking crew. Their
spare time was spent practicing moves, throwing up pieces under flyovers and putting together cassette tape mixes,
played off portable ghetto blasters aside well polished lino squares. The music they favoured was gathered from
rough snatches of London-based pirate radio broadcasts, John Peel’s infinitely influential playlists or from dusty vinyl
unearthed at car boot sales – many of them left behind by American personnel stationed in the UK during and after the
War.These were happy days, marked by positive expression, integration, bad haircuts and a confused dress sense –
long before hip-hop’s fall into gangster glamour and money hungry right-wing consumerism.
Leaving school and homes a few years later they carried these early ideals with them. A move to London followed
and after meeting Ken Downie, formed a group (The Black Dog) and a label (Black Dog Productions) through which
they released various EPs and their first Plaid album, ‘Mbuki Mvuki’ in 1991. Keeping their company motto ‘For fun
not money’ close to their hearts, they sold their music a few boxes at a time to local independent record stores before
being offered a distribution deal that sent it further afield. These first musical efforts were heavily influenced by East
and West coast electro and the Detroit techno sound. Both born out of the early Hip Hop scene. As well as Acid House
music, a style which was present at the massive warehouse parties now happening almost every weekend around
London.
Soon, ‘Mbuki Mvuki’ came to the attention of Warp Records and led to the signing of “the Black Dog’. The trio
recorded ‘Bytes’ for them later that year followed by ‘Spanners’ but shortly after they split with Ken Downie. Their
relationship with Warp remained strong through, as did the belief that the music would always speak louder than any
name, and they forged on as Plaid.
The duo spent most of 1996 writing and performing with Björk, forming part of her band for much of her ‘Post’ tour
as well as acting as support act. When back in London they returned to the studio to record ‘Not For Three’s’ (often
incorrectly considered their first album). Their interest in live performance increased through this experience and now,
appreciating the importance of a visual element in most live environments, they recruited the help of video artist Bob
Jaroc. He joined them on the touring phases of their following three albums; Restproof Clockwork, Double Figure
and Spokes. Emotive riffs sit proudly over complex syncopated rhythms, the songs have melodic narratives and only
rarely is the human voice used to spell these out. Synthetic layers are heaped on, producing euphoric highs at times
and uncomfortable dark spaces at others. They are not an easy band to pigeon hole but a sense of melancholy often
pervades this work.
Next Plaid took time out to work on their first audio visual release, ‘Greedy Baby’, A collaboration with Jaroc they
financed themselves. Here they explored surround sound using the 5.1 format available on DVD. Their long working
relationship with Jaroc is apparent throughout, the audio tightly edited with the video to complement each other
impressively. From here they went on to score: first ‘Tekkon Kinkreet’, (awarded a Japanese Academy Prize in 2006
for Animation of the Year), and two years later the live action feature ‘Heaven’s Door’. Both of which were masterfully
directed by Michael Arias, who sought them out for ‘Tekkon Kinkreet’ after seeing them play in New York many years
earlier.In the years since, their time has been spent collaborating and touring new works written with the Javanese
composer Dr Rahayu Supanggah and the Southbank Gamelan Players. Composing new material with and for Felix’s Machines. Performing ‘classics’ shows, featuring early work, for Warp’s 20th anniversary celebrations in 2010, whilst
also developing ideas for their latest album project, ‘Scintilli’.
Latin in origin, the word scintilli can be translated as, ‘I am many sparks’. A self-affirming mantra they claim to chant for
two hours every morning, before starting work in their newly built studio shed in North London. Every beat of the work
has been carefully crafted: they’ve calculated that each beat has taken approximately one day to construct – from the
announcement of the laying down of the first foundation beat in early 2009, to the rendering of the final decay earlier
this year. ‘This labour intensive process will guarantee long lasting pieces of music that can withstand the restless
tensions placed upon them by modern playback devices’, they insist. The CD will be initially available in a ‘Muda na
Mono’ puzzle pack, the name taken from a Japanese phrase meaning ‘pointless object’. It contains two rings and a
CD, which after copying, can be suspended from the interlinked rings. If correctly aligned, the desirable sphere created
allows the track titles to be read. The packaging reflects a desire to give the CD an ornamental function, beyond its’
one use as a basic storage device for music. They describe this object as an ‘executive CD Mausoleum’. ‘Scintilli’ is
carved out of a cube on the sleeve’s front cover design, then pulled out into a physically impossible Plaid logo on the
back. The music will escape the grave in Autumn 2011.