Carl Craig Biography

American electronic music producer and DJFor other people with the same name, see Carl Craig (disambiguation).Musical artist

Carl Craig (born May 22, 1969) is an American electronic music producer, DJ, and founder of the record label Planet E Communications. He is known as a leading figure and pioneer in the second wave of Detroit techno artists during the late 1980s and early 1990s. He has recorded under his given name in addition to a variety of aliases, including Psyche, BFC, and Innerzone Orchestra.

Craig's early releases were collected on the 1996 compilation Elements 1989-1990. He has released several studio albums, beginning with Landcruising (1995). Craig has also remixed a variety of artists including Manuel Göttsching, Maurizio, Theo Parrish, Tori Amos, and Depeche Mode. He was nominated for the 2008 Grammy Award for Best Remixed Recording for his remix of the Junior Boys track "Like a Child." He has released collaborative recordings with Moritz von Oswald (2008's Recomposed) and Green Velvet (2015's Unity).

Early life

Carl Craig was born in Detroit, Michigan, on May 22, 1969. His mother was a teacher's *istant and his father was a post office worker. He attended Cooley High School, where he developed an interest in music. He learned to play guitar and later became interested in club music through his cousin Doug Craig, who worked lighting for Detroit area parties. After hearing Derrick May's radio show on WJLB, Craig began experimenting with recording on a dual-deck c*ette player. Craig met someone who knew May and p*ed along a tape of some of his home studio productions.

Career

Since 1989, Craig has released many recordings under a large number of aliases, including Psyche, BFC, 69, Paperclip People, and Innerzone Orchestra. Many of these early Psyche and BFC releases were collected on the 1996 compilation Elements 1989–1990. Craig founded his own record label called Planet E Communications in 1991. Since then, it has released records by other artists such as Kevin Saunderson, Moodymann, and Kenny Larkin.

His first studio album, Landcruising, was released on Blanco y Negro Records in 1995. In 1996, he released The Secret Tapes of Doctor Eich under the Paperclip People moniker. In 1997, he released More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art. It was placed at number 29 on Pitchfork's "50 Best IDM Albums of All Time" list. In 1999, he released Programmed under the Innerzone Orchestra moniker.

Craig served as co-creator and artistic director for the Detroit Electronic Music Festival in 2000 and 2001. His subsequent dismissal by festival organizers caused substantial controversy within the Detroit techno community, igniting a high-profile campaign in his favor. In 2001, he filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit against festival producer Pop Culture Media.

He released a reworked version of Landcruising, *led The Album Formerly Known As..., in 2005. In 2008, he released a collaborative album with Moritz Von Oswald, *led Recomposed, on Deutsche Grammophon. He returned as artistic director for the 2010 Detroit Electronic Music Festival. In 2015, he released a collaborative album with Green Velvet, *led Unity, on Relief Records. In 2017, he released Versus on InFiné.

Craig created a sound installation, *led Party/After-Party, which opened at the Dia Beacon art museum in March 2020. The culmination of a five-year-long engagement with Dia Beacon, it was his first foray into the art world. In 2023 the installation was brought to The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, Los Angeles and the exhibition was accompanied by Party/After-Party Sessions, a series of three live concerts that were including DJs and electronic musicians DJ Holographic, Felix Da Housecat, King Britt, Moodymann, Kenny Larkin.

Style and legacy

Mixmag called Carl Craig "a leading figure in Detroit techno's second generation," while Exclaim! called him a "central figure" in the genre's second wave. Pitchfork described him as "techno pioneer." He has approached techno using inspiration from a wide range of musical genres, including soul, jazz, new wave, industrial, and krautrock, while his works have spanned ambient techno, breakbeat, house, cl*ical, and modular synthesizer-based stylings. In a 2015 interview, he cited The Electrifying Mojo, Prince, Kraftwerk, Juan Atkins, and Jeff Mills as the major influences on his music.

Craig's 1992 track "Bug in the B*bin", released under the Innerzone Orchestra moniker, was picked up by DJs such as 4hero, Goldie, and J Majik. In the United Kingdom, DJs started playing the track at 45 rpm instead of the intended 33 rpm. According to Now, the track "ended up providing inspiration and in many ways writing the blueprint for what drum 'n' b* was to become in England."

According to Vinyl Me, Please, Craig "managed to not only push the boundaries of Detroit techno, he also introduced an urgency and melodic richness to the sometimes navel-gazing world of IDM" with releases such as More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art (1997).

Discography

Albums

  • Landcruising (1995)
  • The Secret Tapes of Doctor Eich (1996) (as Paperclip People)
  • More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art (1997)
  • Programmed (1999) (as Innerzone Orchestra)
  • The Album Formerly Known As... (2005)
  • Recomposed (2008) (with Moritz von Oswald)
  • Unity (2015) (with Green Velvet)
  • Versus (2017)

Compilations

  • The Sound of Music (1995) (as 69)
  • Elements 1989-1990 (1996) (as Psyche/BFC)
  • Designer Music V1 (2000)
  • Abstract Funk Theory (2001)
  • From the Vault: Planet E Cl*ics Collection Vol. 1 (2006)
  • The Legendary Adventures of a Filter King (2009) (as 69)

DJ Mixes

  • DJ-Kicks: Carl Craig (1996)
  • House Party 013: A Planet E Mix (1999)
  • Onsumothasheeat (2001)
  • The Workout (2002)
  • Fabric 25 (2005)
  • The Kings of Techno (2006) (with Laurent Garnier)
  • Sessions (2008)
  • Masterpiece (2013)
  • Detroit Love (2019)

EPs

  • 4 Jazz Funk Cl*ics (1991) (as 69)
  • Sound on Sound (1993) (as 69)
  • Lite Music (1994) (as 69)
  • The Floor EP (1996) (as Paperclip People)
  • Just Another Day (2004)
  • Paris Live (2007)

Singles

  • "Crackdown" (1990) (as Psyche)
  • "No More Words" (1991)
  • "Oscillator" (1991) (as Paperclip People)
  • "Jam the Box" (1994) (as 69)
  • "Throw" (1994) (as Paperclip People)
  • "The Climax" (1995) (as Paperclip People)
  • "Science Fiction" (1995)
  • "Bug in the B* Bin" (1996) (as Innerzone Orchestra)
  • "Floor" (1996) (as Paperclip People)
  • "4 My Peepz" (1998) (as Paperclip People)
  • "People Make The World Go Round" (2000) (as Innerzone Orchestra)
  • "A Wonderful Life" / "As Time Goes By" (2002)
  • "Sparkle" / "Home Entertainment" (2005)
  • "Darkness" / "Angel" (2006)
  • "Sandstorms" (2017)

Awards and nominations

References

    External links

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carl Craig.
    • Official website
    • Carl Craig discography at Discogs
    Carl Craig