I’ve started enjoying working at coffee shops.Β I really don’t have much time in my schedule to study so I just try and get it in whenever I can.Β My job has a coffee shop in the back now so whenever I have to work in the mornings, since I’m already awake, I just go there hella early and study until it’s time for my shift.
I’m reposting this interview Everyday Junglist did with Marcus Intalex cuz it’s a good read.Β Nice one Fonik. π

With his debut album hitting the shops this coming Monday some 21 years after he started his journey into Drum & Bass, EDJ caught up with Mancunian Marcus Intalex for a chat about the project, nerves and just why the hell it took him so long…
EDJ Interview: Marcus Intalex
So, the album is released officially on Monday. Obviously the build up has been quite long so you’ve had time to get used to it but are you nervous/excited at all? You have mentioned in other interviews that you cared too much about what people thought when younger which is why you didn’t embark on such a project sooner β do you really not give a shit now? If it bombed and got panned by critics, you honestly wouldnβt care?
No, I definitely do care of course but only as much as everyone else does you know. The thing thatβs important for me now is to have something to show for myself, my career. Iβve never really had to do anything, or been forced to do something like this before β Iβve always had plenty of gigs and I was just being lazy. I needed a challenge and needed something to commit too. Iβm not trained musically, not trained in the studio, I just make music for me and Iβm enjoying at the moment.
Anyway, I just donβt worry about things like nerves and that, Iβm just doing things. The album is done, Iβm proud of it, itβs good and Iβm happy Iβve done it.
Would you say this is this more of a personal thing for you for you then, the completion of a goal for example, as opposed to a release for the public?
Yes and no. As I said I make music for myself but I did need to get something like this out in the shops. If you donβt then someone else will, someone else will be in the spotlight, and youβd be doing this interview with someone else. Plus I need it out there so people know what Iβm about β it makes it harder to DJ if people donβt know what to expect, and donβt what kind of stuff Iβll be playing, and what Iβm all about. Plus it really was just time I did something like this β itβs me getting involved and being proactive and positive. You canβt contribute or change things if youβre not involved and this is me getting involved…
Do you think that perhaps the lack of an album up to this point has hampered/reflected on you as an artist in any way? Many of your peers have many LPs to their name now….
Yeah maybe, but I never wanted to do something just for the sake of it. Then again as I said earlier, I you donβt do things them other people step in and do them instead.
How have you found the whole experience? Therapeutic/stressful….? Would you attempt to do it again again?
Iβve enjoyed the whole process, and yeah I think I would do it again. Iβve written 15/20 tunes since I finished the album already, Iβm working very quickly at the moment. Iβve gotten away with not doing a lot the past couple of years but I would rather being creating something and yeah, itβs just been me doing something, getting involved and being proactive. The more you put into something the more you get out you know?
The lack of collaborations with ST Files seems like a glaring omission given the number of tracks you have made together in the past, and how well they are liked…Why are there no tunes from you two on there?
You know youβre the first one to ask me that. I suppose it is a bit of an omission yeah, but weβve just been busy, been living separate lives. Heβs had a kid and thereβs just been that bit of distance between us. Itβs not been intentional of course, and our relationship has been a long one. Do I regret it? Yeah maybe a bit, I suppose I would like to have one on there. The album isnβt a reflection of my music over the past 21 years though, itβs not about referencing what Ive done musically, itβs just a statement – Iβve been in the business 21 years, hereβs my album.
Would you say itβs an accurate representation of your ‘sound’ ? Do you think it sums up what you are about musically? What would you say that is?
Tricky question. I donβt really have a βsoundβ I think, and itβs not really for me to say. I donβt want to pigeon hole myself into categories; itβs not my thing at all. I just play music I like and I think Iβm just the middle ground β not too much or one thing or the other. The music I like and play out has to have a good vibe, itβs got to be thoughtful, varied, subtle, and everythingβs got to work well together and I think that comes across in the album so maybe it does me justice there.
Thereβs more to me than d&b too β thatβs what Iβm most well-known for, thatβs what I play out, but the thing is today is that you donβt have to be just one thing anymore, thatβs why thereβs a few different styles/tempos on there too. I still buy loads of stuff, house/techno, I still collect music and thatβs reflected in the LP as well.
Youβve mentioned that you wanted it to be a ‘proper’ album – do you think you have achieved that? How hard was it having the format or this process in mind whilst writing it?
Yes I think I have. Thing is though that the album pretty much came about by accident. I was just making a load of music and I just thought that I was pretty close to having an album. 75% of the stuff on the LP was made before I knew I was making an LP you know, I never intended to go into the studio and start writing an album. The idea of it as a format, as a project, kind of takes away the innocence of the music making process though, you have it in the back of your mind when you realise what youβre doing, what youβre working towards.
Youβve obviously been involved in d&b pretty much since the birth of the genre…any era youβre favourite? How have you kept your enthusiasm for it so long – ever thought about sacking it all off?
The beginning was the best bit, but I donβt mean in terms of the music, more just the being young, discovering it all for the first time, the innocence of it, the thirst for more and first experiences with rave culture/drugs/dance music. Being young, and just a fan is more exciting you know. Yeah being on the front line, in the thick of it is cool of course but it can kill your enthusiasm a little; it can be depressing when you see things going in a direction you donβt want them go in. It can be hard to get those initial feelings, that buzz back, although I do still get it from DJβing. The thing for me isnβt getting sent all the tunes, getting a rewind in a club, anyone can do that really, for me itβs about having that special tune that you love, and playing it in the right environment and watching other people losing themselves too it, loving it as much as you.
You know music still excites me, thatβs why Iβm still doing all this. If it didnβt, then Iβm the kind of person to have just have stopped doing it. Itβs always a battle but you got to persevere, it just the way it is, I still just love music.
Whatβs next for you?
All sorts. Writing some 130-ish bits, some house, some techno. Iβd like to get out there into some other scenes β put out a techno record on a big label, a house record. Loefah has mentioned the possibility of maybe getting something on swamp81 which would be fantastic of course.
Iβve just stared a d&b remix for a band called little dragon, and also doing a remix of my track airbourne. That never came out βofficiallyβ, or on vinyl, so might put that and the remix out on wax, who knows. Working closely with SPY too, should be putting his album out in early 2012, and a DRS LP too.
The Silent Dust album?
Theyβre putting that out themselves now, which is a shame, but Iβve just got some much going on that I didnβt think I could give it the care and attention it deserved. The whole package is complete thoughβ Iβve done a remix for them, thereβs a Calibre remix – itβs good to go and they pretty close to sorting it. Itβs just running a label is tough these days, and that project is pretty underground you know and everything Iβm doing with the label has to make business sense to me as opposed to just putting out music I love otherwise I would be doing it. Iβm going to be supporting them as much as I can because I really believe in the product, its fucking excellent.
Random Movement – Podcast 20
Tracklist
Command Strange & Dynamic β Too Hot Lady
dRamatic & dbAudio β Flex Through The Solar Systems
Tokyo Prose & Phil Tangent β Parity
Mutt β ???????
Need For Mirrors β Punch Drunk
MixMaster Doc β Biomimitic
Will Miles β I
Kjell β Lincoln Place
Need For Mirrors β Triangulation Delta
Root Soul feat. Vanessa Freeman β Itβs The Way (Makoto Remix)
Duo Science β Line Of The Drumz
Mutt & Grimm β Focus
J Dilla β King (Sinistarr Remix)
Command Strange & Intelligent Manners β Flirt
Survival & Paul T β Rationale
Jill Scott β He Loves Me (bootleg)
Paul SG β Whats The Time Please
Flaco β Punta Las Marias
Ayah Mara β Follow You (A.I. Remix)
Random Movement β Dropping the Chips