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Gaston Steenkist and René ter Horst – aka Chocolate Puma – are two of Holland’s most celebrated electronic producers. With a career spanning 20 years, 200-odd releases, two significant UK chart hits (‘Give It Up’ and ‘I Wanna Be U’) and countless remixes under their various guises they are a duo whose influence on the European dance music scene cannot be overstated.

In advance of the release of their latest project Chocolate Puma In The House, we caught up them to discuss their involvement in the Dutch acid house scene, keeping things simple in the studio and playing someone else’s record to zombies at the Berlin Love Parade…

^1 Tell us about the things you were listening to that inspired you when you first started making music…

Rene: When I first started listening to music it was Depeche Mode kind of stuff, they were a great inspiration along with Prince who I listened to a lot. Then came new wave like the early Simple Minds and Joy Division. Then there’s Rap/Hip-Hop and from there I discovered Rare Groove which they used for the Hip-Hop beats, then new wave 80s music, then from the very beginning House music.

Gaston: For me I think my earliest musical memories were from the records that my parents played. My mother played a lot of Stevie Wonder and my Dad always played more Jazz oriented records, and I especially liked all the drum solos in those records. From then I kind of discovered electronic music through the radio and whenever there was some kind of synthesizer going on I was always interested. So I started listening to all kinds of Electronic stuff like early Art of Noise, and soon I discovered early Acid House. I remember I bought this compilation which was like the Chicago compilation, from Farley Jackmaster Funk to Inner City and all the early House stuff.

^2 You touched on the Acid House… it’s been well documented in terms of how it took hold in the UK, but maybe not so much in Holland. Were you involved in that at all?

Gaston: I was still a bit too young to be involved in anything, but what I did was play at school parties. I was 15 or 16 and playing at these big Disco parties at my school and one day I started to play this Acid House track and everybody was quite surprised. The teachers didn’t understand why I wasn’t playing Madonna or Pop music. I think Rene was a bit more involved in it.

Rene: Yes, I was completely involved. I was DJing at that time and I was playing in a club in my hometown, and at that time as a DJ you didn’t bring a lot of your own records. You brought a few and the rest was brought by the club. We were really into the music along with the club owner who was not there to sell beers but for the music. So we were all searching for the new records and we got the first Acid track in our hands and it was like “this is strange”. We were going out at The Roxy at that time and they were playing the same music so we heard the first record, then the next and suddenly it was really big in the scene.

Gaston: Yeah, I guess it was more of an elite thing. People were really upfront and the hipsters at that time were going to The Roxy and were not allowed in. There are really notorious stories about Prince and Madonna getting rejected at the door! So it was a really new undiscovered thing at the time.

Defected presents Chocolate Puma In The House Mixtape by Defected Records

^3 How do you think that a life spent in music has affected you as people? Do you think you’d be any different if you were doing anything else?

Rene: Well it’s difficult to judge yourself. I don’t know if I have necessarily changed but being in the music industry you do become more open minded, and you’re doing something you really love to do. It’s not like when you’re learning something at 17 but by the time you’re 25 you don’t like it anymore. This is really what we like and what we feel.

^4 Also meeting as many people as you do, that must bring you into contact with so many different people and cultures. So it must make you open to a lot of different experiences…

Rene: Yes, and also you just start of as two guys making music and having fun and then suddenly you have your own business, you have to deal with record labels. It gives you a lot of freedom as well, you can do as you like.

^5 Some of the tracks you’ve made have been on really basic equipment. I saw a photo that you posted up the other day which was when you made one of your earlier tracks and you commented on the simplicity of your set up back then. Now that there’s so much choice in the way that different people can produce their music, do you think that too much emphasis is put on that?

Gaston: Well, I think that some producers are more focusing on how it sounds or the sound quality or the effects, and they forget that it also has to be musically interesting. So it’s really cool to have all this equipment right now and all these plugins but you still have to be creative. Sometimes I hear records and I think “okay, this sounds really impressive but is it really a good record?” We started off with really basic equipment because we couldn’t afford anything else but it really made us push things and be creative and make the records with next to nothing. Even now we have a really basic studio, we just have a computer with two speakers and a keyboard, logic and some plugins. I think limiting yourself in that way lets you focus on the music and not the bells and whistles.

Chocolate Puma – Destiny feat. Colonel Red (Lorenzo Kurizu Remix) (Snippet) by Chocolate Puma

^6 That’s all you use? I think a lot of people will be surprised by the simplicity of your setup…

Rene: It’s all in the mind!

Gaston: Yeah it is! Obviously you have to know how to use it, but I think people make the mistake that they need all the latest plugins or a huge rack of synthesizers. I mean it’s nice to have it but if your music sucks then a really cool synthesizer can’t solve that.

^7 You’ve experienced quite a bit of mainstream success with a couple of things… you’ve been on the UK’s Top of the Pops which is about as big as it gets. What were those experiences like?

Rene: First of all it was really great that the record did that well, so we were busy already. Then we had to do Top of the Pops where we saw a lot of our own heroes, so I think it was really special to see that scene and we were happy that we didn’t actually have to get on the stage because our singer was doing that.

^8 So did it not come very easy to you, the fame? Would you much rather be behind the scenes?

Gaston: I mean we’re happy to get on a stage if it’s real. We don’t want to get on a stage to fake something. Our singer did sing and have a mike which was connected to the mixer so it was a live performance and we were okay with that. But pretending to play would be really awkward.

Rene: Also at that point we were working in a different way. Just hiding in the studio and putting out music under a bunch of different names.

Gaston: We were really surprised that the Chocolate Puma record “I wanna Be U” got so big at the time, you know it was just another record. I don’t think we really knew what to do with the success of the record. But now we would be more comfortable with it, it’s a different time to then.

^9 So with ‘I Wanna Be U’, you never really intended to make a hit, it just kind of happened. Have you always just intended to make music, and whatever happens, happens?

Gaston: What happens happens. We never set out to make a hit record. We could not do that because we don’t know how. We just know how to make dance records for clubs or festivals and we do that the best way we can. If a lot of people like it then that’s really cool, but a hit is never our goal.

I Wanna Be U (UK Radio Edit) by Chocolate Puma

^10 In terms of your DJ set, does it differ if the show is a club or festival?

Rene: The set up is the same. We play around 50-60% our own records. The other records are edits or records we really like, but we don’t have thousands of tracks because we have our own stuff and a few extras. We play with an SD card, with the players connected and that’s it.

Gaston: we have just three Pioneer CDJs and an SD card. It’s different from the old age where we had to carry our vinyl records, and we would lose them at airports and records would skip or it wouldn’t sound good. Now we just play with SD cards and it always sounds good.

^11 Have you ever turned up to a gig without your records?

Gaston: Yeah, we had to play at Love Parade and our records didn’t come, so we didn’t play but we played at an after party. We went to this really big industrial hole where there were a few hundred zombies left and we just played some random stuff, and had a laugh. We had just showered and were really fresh so looking at those zombies was a really weird experience…

Rene: Before we started DJing together I had to play once with somebody else’s records, and it was so strange because you could have the same record in a different sleeve. I didn’t know all the names but I knew all the sleeves, I mean I managed just by listening but it was really odd.

^12 So you’ve made a couple hundred records together, some well known, some not so much. Are there any that you think have been overlooked?

Gaston: The funny thing is when we first started our own label, we made a lot of strange underground stuff, and some of those records sold like 300 copies, and we thought they were great but the rest of the world didn’t. But like five years ago, people in the German techno scene started to discover those records. Some of them were licensed to different labels and suddenly they became really hip which was a cool feeling.

^13 So was that a reason why you started doing things with Pssst again?

Gaston: Yeah it’s a great output because we make weird or more techno stuff but we didn’t have an output for that. When we signed with Defected we were really focused on getting Chocolate Puma back on the map and build a brand with Defected. Now it’s going well we thought it was time to broaden things a bit and get releasing the weirder stuff again.

^13 What do you think it is about House music that works particularly well with you guys?

Rene: There were some points when the music got boring, it was staying the same. This was ten years ago. But I think with House music there is always something going on, always new young guys who come up with new ideas and old guys who want to play the old stuff. For me going to a club when I was young, it was about dancing, so I’m really into House music as I think it’s strongest.

Gaston: I think the rhythm of House is so strong and upfront and I really like Drum N Bass as long as there is a groove. As a producer I feel really comfortable with producing the four-to-the-floor type of stuff. There is always a new angle and something fresher you can do, or a new kid on the block who inspires you.

^14 So what do you think makes Chocolate Puma different to others making House music?

Gaston: Well, we are just being ourselves.

Rene: For us it’s our normal way of life and making music. For a good biography it’s okay to say you’re better than the others, but it’s difficult to why say why you’re different. If you listen to a lot of DJs, without insulting them, they play the same stuff. We play our own stuff, and I think that makes it different. Everybody is different in their own way.

Gaston: We have different life experiences. We’re both from a different musical era so putting that together makes something very interesting.

Much thanks to Defected for providing us this great interview! Be sure to check Defected presents Chocolate Puma In The House on 15th of October 2012

Defected @ Official Site

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Today we have an interesting and rather mysterious artist from Croatia under name – Pyero. He just dropped for Scream & Shout Recordings a massive bigroom tune called “Ole” that features some serious breakdown synths with a little touch of latin “Ole” vocals. His production is really great and the style of his debut tune can be compared to those that do Axwell, Avicii, SHM, Nicky Romero, John Dahlback and others. Who is Pyero and what are his future goals are something that we will reveal in next few sentences, so sip some drink and enjoy reading!

^1 Hello Pyero, we are glad that we have you here in “Who is…” section – you are a true surprise for us since we closely follow Balkan scene. Can you introduce yourself a bit to our readers and tell us what your music background is?

- In Croatia it`s common to sing and party together a lot. Since I was a little boy I was surrounded day by day with a lot of singing, instruments and music. Later on I started learning how to play the piano for a few years, but to be honest, I never became the best piano player, but it still gave me a basic feeling for compositions and harmonies. I got in contact with electronic music a couple of years ago, when I made my first club experiences and started to listen to radio shows from guys like Roger Sanchez and Pete Tong. I was so thrilled by the energy this music delivered that I started to record the tracks week by week. One day a friend who was also interested in electronic music came up with a program which allows you to build your own beats. I was so excited about the possibilities that I started to sample beats out of the radio shows. This might sound crazy today, but it gave me a good understanding in constructing beats and sounds. When I finished school, I started several side jobs, but I never lost passion to music and always kept building my sounds! If I wouldn’t have spend all that time and sweat into this thing, my music would never sound like it does today! After a while I met a lot of other people who were also involved in the music scene. One of these people gave me the possibility to dj in a small club.

^2 What or who influenced you the most to make tune like “Ole” and what are you preparing for us in future?
– I tried to combine sunny Ibiza vibes with current progressive elements. I also spent a lot of time creating an enthusiastic feeling that you can experience on festivals in the summer.
I am currently working out some ideas, but I am not sure which one will be next. All I can say, is that you will be the first one to know!

^3 Can you tell us, what is the best advice that you can give to young producers and DJs?
– Keep on going! Never lose your focus, if you want to reach something you believe in, you will achieve. It`s important to focus on yourself, without looking too much at what’s going on to your left or your right, concerning what others are doing.

Pyero – Olé (Preview) by PYERO

^4 What are you top 5 tunes at the moment?
– Pyero – Olé (Original Mix)
– Deniz Koyu – Bong (Original Mix)
– Bobby Burns – Next (Original Mix)
– Wolfgang Gartner – Flexx (Original Mix)
– Hardwell – Three Triangles (Original Club Mix)

^5 What is your attitude towards blogs that post music freely? What are the bad and the good sides of that?
– This is very tricky. On one side, these blogs are able to push the music by their free offering, but on the other side there is the fact, that the artists have to work hard to earn their money with the music they create. In my opinion the blogs should focus more on upcoming releases and promote them. In return the artist could share those postings on their social networks for mutual support.

^6 If you could collaborate with any house or non-house artist which one would it be?
– I could imagine having a cool collaboration with a house vocalist in the near future. But for the moment I am mostly focusing on pure electronic music.

^7 Thank Pyero for your time – any last shout outs for people who follow the scene or maybe friends/family?
– Thanks to all supporters of my first single release “Olé”, the follow up is going to be even bigger!

Pyero – Ole will be released on Scream & Shout Rec. on July 23th! Big thanks to Sarah from Scream & Shout Rec. for making this interview happen!

Pyero @ Official Site
Pyero @ Facebook
Pyero @ SoundCloud

Scream & Shout Rec. @ Official Site
Scream & Shout Rec. @ Beatport

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Oskar Baeten Bio:

Breda, The Netherlands, delivered already some big names in the EDM industry like Tiesto and Hardwell; it seems to be a real greenhouse for electronic dance music artist, because the next one is already coming up; Oskar Baeten (23 years old).

This young producer started writing music 5 years ago. After being inspired by the modern sounds of Pryda, Thomas Gold and Axwell, he found his own set of sounds. his sounds are new, danceable and melodic with a sense of progressive in it.

Back in 2011, he released his first tech-house track San Lorenzo on Kynatix Records. Hereafter he released a couple of originals and remixes. For instance the progressive banger together with Maximo called Sweeping Away on O.C.K. Records (Sweden) and a remix for Exile of Silence – Ignite Me, featured on the fresh Complexx Vibes Compilation of Nu Elements Digital Records?!

Future plans:

He has a lot in his pipeline, recently his Marc@Garden – Conclusion Remix (with Support from several USA DJs) has been released, courtesy of the great Kynatix label. Afterwards, the original track Tresor will reach the digital music shop portals including a pack of remixes of Kynatix artists and friends. He recently finished his big-room remix for Dan Mckinley – BIN!

Free tunes and upcoming projects by Oskar Baeten:

Bookashade – In White Rooms (Oskar Baeten Bootleg) FREE DOWNLOAD by Oskar Baeten

Incognet & Fedor Smirnoff – First Kiss (Oskar Baeten Unofficial Remix) FULL FREE DL by Oskar Baeten Download

Oskar Baeten Feat. SHM & Knife Party – TwentyThree Antidote (Oskar Baeten Bootleg Mix) FREE DOWNLOAD by Oskar Baeten

Rene Kuppens, Dyro feat Max C’ – Raid One for Me (Oskar Baeten Edit) FREE DOWNLOAD

Oskar Baeten @ Beatport
Oskar Baeten @ Facebook
Oskar Baeten @ SoundCloud
Oskar Baeten @ Twitter

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French talent that just got 18 is getting more and more popular with his crazy minimixes that features 50+ songs, all packed and served incredibly that you have a feeling that you are listening to one mashup tune. He already caught attention of the big producers like Deadmau5 and Martin Solveig and will probably be in few years on the scene with the biggest producer stars and DJs. Check below minimix that he did for Annie Mac on Radio 1. You will for sure enjoy!

Note for mix:

Most of these tracks are sampled in really small ways, sometime under a second. The purpose wasn’t to reference all these songs clearly but to use samples as an instrument. Tracks are listed chronologically, but elements that are reused several times are only listed once.

Tracklist:

Madeon – Shuriken
The Beatles – A Day In The Life
M83 – Intro
Surkin – Ultra Light
Groove Armada – Look Me In The Eye Sister
Madeon – Icarus (Minimix Edit)
Röyksopp – Happy Up Here
The M Machine – Immigrants
Daft Punk – Outlands
Julian Perreta – Wonder Why (DatA Remix)
Ellie Goulding – Starry Eyed (Russ Chimes Remix)
Phonat – Set Me Free
Justice – New Lands (A-Trak Remix)
Skrillex ft. The Doors – Breaking A Sweat (Zedd Remix)
Yuksek – Extraball
Foster The People – Pumped Up Kicks (Gigamesh Remix)
Oliver – Dirty Talk
Sebastian – Greel
Anoraak – Nightdrive With You (Grum Remix)
Martin Solveig – C’est La Vie
BWO – Sunshine In The Rain
Knife Party – Tourniquet
Para One – Wake Me Up
Feed Me ft. Gemini – Whiskers
Michael Gray – The Weekend
ABC – The Look Of Love
Woodkid – Iron
Gorillaz – Feel Good Inc.
Pendulum – Hold Your Colour
Chic – Stage Fright
La Roux – In For The Kill (Danger Ocean Remix)
Dirtyloud – Needle
Black Kids – Boyfriend (The Twelves Remix)
Kanye West – All Of The Lights ft. Rihanna, Kid Cudi
Justice – Let There Be Light
Sub Focus – Rock It
Kill The Noise – Talk To Me
Capsule – More More More
Justice – Helix
Kavinsky – Nightcall
Madeon – For You
Radiohead – Paranoid Android
Porter Robinson – Say My Name
Muse – Hysteria
Sebastian Ingrosso & Alesso – Calling (R3hab & Swanky Tunes Mix)
Daft Punk – Da Funk
Zedd – Slam The Door
Volta Bureau – Alley Cat
Alan Braxe & Fred Falke – Intro
Wolfgang Gartner – Flexx
The Ting Tings – Shut Up And Let Me Go
Justice & Simian – Never Be Alone
Michael Jackson – Beat It
Rihanna – Russian Roulette
Clock Opera – Once And For All
The Paradise – In Love With You
Clock Opera – Belongings
Madeon – Finale
Lifelike & Kris Menace – Discopolis
Deadmau5 – Raise Your Weapon (Madeon Remix)
Queen – We Will Rock You
Michael Jackson – Billie Jean
Miike Snow – The Wave (Thomas Gold Remix)
Martin Solveig – The Night Out (A-Trak Remix)
Lady Gaga – Bad Romance
Yelle – La Musique
Metronomy – The Look (Camo & Krooked Remix)
Danger – 3h11
Nari & Milani – Atom
Unicorn Kid – Lion Hat
Daft Punk – Short Circuit
Yuksek – On A Train
Kylie Minogue – Get Outta My Way (Penguin Prison Remix)
Martin Solveig – The Night Out (Madeon Remix)
Stardust – Music Sounds Better With You
The Killers – Bones
Russ Chimes – Back 2 You
Madeon – Icarus (Original Mix)
Chic – You Are Beautiful
Perfume – Take Off
Earth Wind & Fire – Let’s Groove
Deadmau5 & Wolfgang Gartner – Animal Rights
Frankmusik – Confusion Girl (Russ Chimes Remix)
Wolfgang Gartner – Illmerica
Daft Punk – Revolution 909
Calvin Harris – The Rain
Mylo – In My Arms
Kanye West – Power
The Killers – This Is Your Life
Kanye West ft. Jay Z – H.A.M
Green Day – Are We The Waiting
The Killers – A Dustland Fairytale
Green Day – 21 Guns
The Clash – London Calling
Alphabeat – What Is Happening

Madeon – Minimix (Annie Mac Radio 1) by Madeon

Madeon @ SoundCloud

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Patrick Hagenaar & Alistair Albrecht went into my focus when I curiously downloaded Hagenaar’s tune “Criminal” back in 2007. I started following this guy since his production sounded good and then I went into MASSIVE  hit “What Would You Do” which he did with his colleague Albrecht and the stars were born… They continued pumping like they never made a bad tune. Supported from Axwell to Pete Tong these guys tunes were in case of almost every serious DJ on planet. There’s just too much about them right now but we are here for their latest release, set and bootleg!

Their killing fresh tune “Won’t Let You Down” is released for Warner UK and played by Paul Oakenfold, Roger Sanchez, Steve Angello, Erick Morillo, Sander van Doorn, Marco V – just to name a few. Axwell even made a bootleg of this tune!

Official Preview “Won’t Let You Down” by Hagenaar & Albrecht

Axwell’s bootleg of “Won’t Let You Down”

You can support this big tune and BUY IT HERE! And that’s not all!!! As a big thanks for all people who were supporting these talented guys, they give us their latest set and a free bootleg to mess with the people’s emotion on the dancefloor! Enjoy!

Hagenaar & Albrecht Exclusive OMT / Bigbeat Mix Tracklist:

1. Hagenaar & Albrecht Exclusive OMT Mix1. Hagenaar & Albrecht – Won’t Let You Down (Original Mix) [OMT]
2. Chris Montana & Etienne Ozborne feat. Polina Griffith – Don’t Give Up (Christian Luke ReDub) [House Session Records]
3. Sam La More – Paradise (Hagenaar & Albrecht Remix) [Ministry of Sound Australia]
4. Switchfoot – Your Love is a Song (Sven Kirchhofs Footstep Remix) [Bigbeat]
5. Adrian Lux – Teenage Crime (axwell & Henrik B Remode) [Axtone/OMT]
6. Patrick Hagenaar – feat. Jon Junior – We Feel The Same (Leventina Mix) [Global Productions]
7. Martin Solveig, Dragonette – Hello (Michael Woods Remix) [Mixture]
8. Tyken feat. Awa – Every Word (Hagenaar & Albrecht Remix) [Hed Kandi / MOS UK]
9. Pendulum – The Island (Steve Angello Remix) [Size / OMT]
10. Chris Kaeser – What We Gonna Do (Mode Ck Mix) [In & Out Recordings]
11 Hagenaar & Albrecht vs John Dahlback – Sfinx Let You Down (Axwell Bootleg Romain G Re-Edit) [Bootleg]

Hagenaar & Albrecht Exclusive OMT / Bigbeat Mix by Hagenaar & Albrecht Mixes

+ bonus bootleg
Hagenaar & Albrecht vs The Prodigy – Everybody in the Place (Witch Doktor Mashup) by Hagenaar & Albrecht

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