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Biography of Mr C

Real name / Richard West
Moniker(s) / Mr.C, Sycophant Slag's

International dj, innovative producer, founder of plink plonk , Shamen frontman and co owner of the end, Mr C emerged as a pioneering force in the house music scene in 1987 and has continued to be instrumental in the proliferation of dance music on a global scale.

His commitment to experimentation and credibility in setting the standards for sophistication in all sub-genres of dance music has earned him world-wide prestige as he endeavours to take the sounds of the underground to new and more accessible heights.

At 16, Richard, a keen Chelsea fan and aspiring rapper decided to ditch his CB radio moniker Chelsea Boy. "C goes with everything. It's easy to rhyme," he says. Richard gave up a job as a roofer at 20 and famously became a milkman - the perfect job for someone who had fallen head-first into London's vibrant club scene because he could stay up all night, then go straight into work. It was soon after this he started working with Jasper the vinyl junkie, Jazzy M & Ron Tom all on LWR pirate radio in London. He became MC for Evil Eddie Richards & Colin Faver working as an MC on Kiss FM. He made his first record in 1987 with Eddie Richards. Called 'Page 67', it came out under the name Myster-E & it was then he decided to take to the turntables & became a DJ. "The mixing was spot on - straight away," he says. "Before you know it, I was one of the biggest names in London." He played at Enter The Dragon at The Park, TransAtlantic at the Wag, and at the famous RIP parties in a recording studio at Clink St near London Bridge. The Clink St parties played a key part in the genesis of acid house and are detailed in Matthew Collin's book Altered State: The Story Of Ecstasy Culture And Acid House. They were a grungier alternative to Danny Rampling's more famous Shoom - but it was here, at parties throughout 1988, that streetwise London clubbers who'd grown up on reggae, hip hop and warehouse parties raved next to loved-up football hooligans, gangsters, fashion victims and city boys.

THE Shamen started life in the mid-80s as a Scottish psychedelic act, founded by former psychiatric nurse Colin Angus and inspired by groups like Pink Floyd. After releasing their debut album 'The Drop' in 1986, the band were joined by Will Sinnott, who bought an interest in sampling and hip hop rhythms. In 1988, The Shamen, slimmed down to a duo of Colin Angus and Will Sin, moved to London and became regulars at Clink St. Inspired by acid house, their second album, 'In Gorbachev We Trust', amalgamated guitars, samples and programmed beats. "The influence for them was me, Eddie Richards and Colin Faver," says Mr C.

When the Shamen wanted a rapper to appear on their track 'Move Any Mountain', Paul Oakenfold recommended Mr C. It was one of those combinations of disparate characters that acid house threw up. "The Shamen were grungey rock turned into an acid house outfit. My friends were all casual boys into reggae, funk, disco and soul," says Mr C. "But everything was totally in line with my Buddhist / experimental beliefs." Their third album 'Entact' featured the single 'Pro>Gen', a dynamic techno-house number which starred Mr C rapping. It became a club anthem. In 1989, The Shamen turned the worlds of clubbing and live rock music upside down with a rolling tour called Synergy which fused live shows from themselves, Orbital and Pentatonik with DJs like Paul Oakenfold and Mixmaster Morris and rap from Mr C. Between 1988-90 Mr C also found time to play as resident DJ at Mangled at The Barn in Braintree, Essex. A young Liam Howlett and his pal Keith Flint used to hang out. "I remember Liam Howlett handed me a mix tape. It was early rave stuff. I said to him, lose the breaks, lose the cheese, and you'll go a long way," says Mr C. Howlett went on to form The Prodigy. "Thankfully," laughs Mr C now, "they totally ignored my terrible advice."

The Shamen recruited Mr C as a full member and the band re-recorded 'Pro>Gen' with his rapping, and one eye on the pop charts. But while shooting a video for the song in Tenerife, Will Sin tragically died in a drowning accident. Inspired by fans who wrote and told them not to split and Will Sin's family, The Shamen decided to carry on. 'Move Any Mountain - Progen 91' was released in July 1991 and became a Top Five hit. In 1992 they released the 'Boss Drum' album, produced & written by Colin Angus & Mr.C & starring Mr C and new vocalist Jhelisa Anderson. It featured the cult author and psychedelic thinker Terence McKenna on the techno track 'Re-Evolution', but it also featured a song that combined pop gimmickry, techno and a Dickensian pastiche of the rave scene called 'Ebeneezer Goode'.

C0LIN Angus got the idea at a Synergy show, where a charged-up raver insisted to him that "the E's are good". He told Mr C they should create a character called 'Ebeneezer'. As the record shot to Number One and stayed there for the month of September 1992, there was a national outcry about its subject matter. It turned The Shamen into heroes for some, villains for others.

But the while the press focused on the chorus - which celebrated 'Ebeneezer' "the main geezer" - they failed to spot that it was the verses that talked about the drug. You just had to drop the 'H' from 'he'. "No one ever got it," Mr C declares. 'Boss Drum' sold 750,000 copies in the UK and the singles 'Love, Sex, Intelligence', Bossdrum and 'Phorever People' became anthems. To put that into perspective, Leftfield's 'Leftism' and Chemical Brothers 'Surrender' - both regarded as classics - did significantly less: 500,000 each. Now celebrated as great pop pranksters, The Shamen were the first group to release a remix album and created the kind of stadium techno shows that made groups like the Chemical Brothers and Underworld possible. "We opened the doors for many, many people," says Mr C. "If we'd have carried on in the same vein as the 'Boss Drum' album, we probably would have been the biggest electronic band in the world now." In 1992, they even won the Ivor Novello Songwriters Of The Year Award.

But after 'Boss Drum', future albums like 'Axis Mutatis', 'Hempton Manor' and 'UV' moved in progressively less populist directions. Colin Angus stopped doing personal performances and interviews, communicating with the press only via e-mail. The Shamen finally disbanded in 1998. THROUGHOUT Mr C continued his life as an underground activator. In 1992, he formed the Plink Plonk label. "I was trying to break good, experimental, electronic dance music into the clubs," says Mr C. No artists were even allowed to use their own names, and the label pioneered producers, like Derrick Carter & Stacey Pullen, who have become international names today. Plink Plonk came to an end in 1996, after 40 releases and made a welcome return in '99. In 1993, while still an international popstar, Mr C also ran a series of illegal, all-night parties in Farringdon called The Drop. These were cool parties that in attitude predated his club The End: cool music in a stylish venue. Mr C was often to be found on the dancefloor. On one occasion, he brazenly fronted off a nosy posse of policemen by telling them he was rich enough to throw this bash for free. So when Mr C's friend Layo came to him and said his dad, the architect Douglas Paskin, had a space in central London to convert into a nightclub or restaurant, Mr C didn't hesitate. He could see the potential for a well-designed West End nightclub that played the kind of underground music he loved - not the populist 'handbag' styles that DJs played at the time. The End opened in 1996.

"We wanted to do a club that represented our beliefs in music and electronica," says Mr C. In 2002, clubs like Fabric and 333 Old St thrive on a menu of underground music, but The End was first to make a formula of underground techno, house and drum n' bass into a success. For the first year the club struggled financially. "In the 90s, people got used to dirty, nasty warehouses, and getting that underground crowd into a nice venue in the West End was very difficult," says Mr C. But now The End represents an international standard for high-quality electronic dance music: the original, and still the best. It was the first British club to give out free drinking water. The first to do a live ISDN link up - between Detroit legends Claude Young and Derrick May. And The End has programmed the best marquees for techno and drum n' bass at dance festivals around the world. 1998 they opened the bar/restaurant AKA next door. "The End has been a direct influence on the whole of club and bar-restaurant culture in London," concludes Mr C. The End launched its own record label two days after the club opened, End Recordings (the first release being the Killer Loop black label from Layo and Mr C). The End label has now released over 40 records of high-quality house and techno and featured artists as diverse as DJ Sneak, Robert Owens, plus Mr C himself. The End even launched its own genre: tech house. The phrase - which can mean anything from house and techno, to breaks and tribal - signifies more of a mindset that a type of music. "It's an attitude. Like acid house was an attitude." Tech house has come to represent the style played by End DJs like Layo and Matthew Bushwacka! But it was Mr C who was the catalyst. "I phoned round the main movers and groovers in the tech-house scene and said, 'Look, if we all start using this word to create a genre for ourselves, the press can jump on it. All of a sudden we're going to be seen as the leaders of this music.' And it worked." It's a story that's typical of someone who's always been a scene leader, who's spent most of his career being ahead of his time. "I've got a very low boredom threshold," he grins.

Mr.C started promoting underground house music parties in London in early 1988. these have included Fantasy (88), Base (89), Release (with Nathan Coles in 91), Harmony (92), The Drop (93), Vapourspace (94), Subterrain (95-2002), Superfreq (2002-present).
He DJ'd weekly on Kiss FM, London from 1994 to 2002.
He now spins underground, trippy, haunting, sexy, stripped back, electro, maximal, tech house.
Mr.C has also recorded under the names Myster-E (with Eddie Richards), Nu Jacks (with Femi B), The Shamen (with Colin Angus), Somnambulist (with Paul RIP), Mantrac, Animus Amor (with JY), Killer Loop (with Layo), Mr.C & Tom Parris & now he records Solo as Mr.C or with his production partner Adultnapper as the Sycophant Slag's.

After Mr.C stopped doing the Subterrain events in 2002 he started doing his Superfreq parties which currently run on the last Sunday of every month at The End / AKA (www.endclub.com) & on the 3rd Saturday of every month at Junk Club, Southampton (www.junkclub.com). Superfreq also does parties with MADE Event in New York, check www.madeevent.com Superfreq also does regular events at Avaland in LA & has had 5 fantastic seasons in Ibiza, 3 at Underground & 2 seasons at DC10. Superfreq will no longer be doing in events in Ibiza as Mr.C feels that the climate on the island is no longer correct for his type of events.

Mr.C has also been studying "Spirituality & the art of acting" for 3 years now which has opened up many doors in his personal life as well as improving all aspects of his artistic life. Observing the objectives to purposes rocks. He did his debut run on stage in Portobello Panto's "A Twisted Carol" in December 2007 & have landed a great part in a movie which he'll let us know more about when the time's right.

Mr.C has always been streets ahead when it comes to spinning cutting edge dance music & as he settle into a more club friendly version of his trippy electronic sound, it seems the rest of us are finally catching up.





Selected discography of Mr C

MR.C DISCOGRAPHY:

EP's/singles (original productions):
Anti Sailing - Sycophant Slags - forthcoming on Get Physical
Keep Off - Sycophant Slags - forthcoming on Poker Flat
Telling - Sycophant Slags - Poker Flat
Starts with an S / Ends with a T - Sycophant Slag's - Bombis
Angel - Mr.C - Superfreq 2007
Glutius Minimus / Numb numb numb - Sycophant Slag's - Superfreq 2006
Dharma Fields / Crawl UP - Sycophant Slag's - Hallucination Ltd 2006
That Look - Mr.C & 16B - Sexonwax 2005.
Cklanger / Trick or trick? - Sycophant Slag's - Superfreq 2005
Sycophant_c Man / I like - Sycophant Slag's ft Gene Serene - End Rec 2005
Disco 2 Disco / Underground 2 The End - Mr.C - Superfreq 2005
Digital Love - Sycophant Slag's - Sexonwax 2004
You're a freak - Mr.C - End Rec 2004
Dubbed Question / Straight answer - Sycophant Slag's - Sexonwax 2004
Terricola - Mr.C - End Rec 2003
More than just a dream - Mr.C - Matter://form 2003
Circles of love - Mr.C ft Victoria Wilson James - End Rec 2002
Siren - Mr.C & Tom Parris - Sexonwax 2002
Bang to the beat of the drum - Eddie Locke ft Mr.C - Alphebet City 2002
The Club - Mr.C ft Robert Owens - End Rec 2002
Click / Dizzy Spell - Mr.C - Alola 2002
Nice 'n' nasty / Class A - Mr.C & Tom Parris - Plink Plonk 2001
Fondue Free / Warmth - Mr.C - Tide 2000
Searchin' - Mr.C & Tom Parris - Plink Plonk 2000
Electroniche - Mr.C - End Rec 2000
Organism - Killer Loop - End Rec 2000
Hydropanic / Insect Kingdom - Mr.C - Plink Plonk 1999
Birds & The Bees / Motion - Mr.C - End Rec 1999
Music Inside - Killer Loop - End Rec 1999
A thing called Love - Mr.C ft Robert Owens - End Rec 1998
Because / Amazone - Mr.C - End Rec 1998
Blue Hour - Killer Loop - End Rec 1998
U-Nations - The Shamen - Moksha 1998
Broken - Killer Loop - End Rec 1997
Keep on - Killer Loop ft Glamazone - End rec 1996
Indica / Sativa - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1996
Someone - Killer Loop - End Rec 1996
Black Label - Killer Loop - End Rec 1995
Heal - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1995
Trans-Amazonia - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1995
Destination Eschaton - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1995
Ambush - Somnambulist - Plink Plonk 1995
And On - Animus Amor - Plink Plonk 1994
In R EP - Mantrac - Plink Plonk 1994
Nightflight - the Somnambulist - Plink Plonk 1993
Coaster - Mantrac - Plink Plonk 1993
Re-Evolution - The Shamen ft Terrence McKenna - One Little Indian 1993
Comin' on strong - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1993
Phorever People - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1992
Bossdrum - The Shamen - One little Indian 1992
Ebeneezer Goode - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1992
Love Sex Inteligence - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1992
Make it Mine - The Shamen - Sony US 1991
Move any mountain (Progen 91) - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1991
House Sensation - Nu Jacks - Focus US 1990
Free South Africa - Unity 2 - WGAF 1990
Comin' Hardcore - Bass Bureau - Bass Bureau 1990
Progen - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1989
Page 67 - Myster-E - Baad 1987

Mr.C remixes:
Southern Charge (Sycophant Slag's rmx) - Reverse Commuter - Hallucination Ltd. Coming Soon allegedly.
Feels Closer (Sycophant Slag's rmx) - Layo & Bushwacka! - Omelto 2006
Fecund (Mr.C rmx) - Adultnapper - Dirt Crew 2006
Sublimate (Mr.C rmx) - Adultnapper - Matter://form 2005
Top is dead (Mr.C rmx) - The Flame - The Flame 2005
Shake it (Mr.C rmx) - Ray Wilburn ft FYTA - Briquerouge 2004
Love-E club (Mr.C rmx) - Mau Mau - BTRAX 2004
Deep South (Mr.C rmx) - Layo & Bushwacka! - End Rec 2003
Brilliant Circles (Mr.C rmx) - Aubrey - End Rec 2001
Mystical Rhythm (Mr.C rmx) - Vince Watson - Alola 2001
Stop 'n' search (Mr.C rmx) - Steve O'sullivan - Mosaic 2000
For the Lords (Mr.C rmx) - James Barth - End Rec 2000
Fandango (Mr.C rmx) - Victoria Wilson James - White label 2000
Afterglow (Mr.C rmx) - It's Thinking - EC records 2000
Nightshift (Mr.C rmx) - Makesomebreakesome - Plank 2000
Mintage (Mr.C rmx) - Michel De Hey v Literon - Plink Plonk 1999
Egyptian Magician (Mr.C rmx) - Armand Van Helden - Eukahouse 1998
Day dreaming (Mr.C rmx) - Layo & Bushwack! - End Rec 1998
Baby wants to ride (Killer Loop remix) - Jamie Principal - Just Say/UCA 1997
Delirous (Killer Loop remix) - OHMSS - Confusion records 1997
In my sky (killer Loop remix) - the Appleheads - Reverberations 1997
Acid Lab (Mr.C rmx) - Alex Reese - Island 1996
Find the Child (Mr.C rmx) - Victoria Wilson James - Sony 1995
We know who we are (Mr.C rmx) - Victoria Wilson James - Sony. 1995
Hiatas (Mr.C rmx) - Inner City - Network 1995
Limbo of vanished possibilities (Mr.C rmx) - Tone Theory (Derrick Carter) on Plink Plonk 1995
C 2 C (Mr.C rmx) - Kosmic Messenger (Stacey Pullen) - Plink Plonk 1994
Transendental Rhythm (Mr.C rmx) - Victoria Wilson James - Metamorphasis 1993
Firecracker (Shamen remix) - Yellow Magic Orchestra - Internal 1993
Tudor Sky (Mr.C rmx) - East Born - Tu-Kan-Dance 1992
Eyes (Mr.C rmx) - Midi Rain - Vinyl Solution 1992
The Pendilino (Mr.C rmx) - Beautyon - Irdial Discs 1991
Make it mine (Mr.C rmx) - The Shamen - Sony 1991
Possible Worlds (Mr.C rmx) - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1991
Big City (Mr.C rmx) - Trevor Fung - WGAF 1990
Progen (Mr.C rmx) - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1990

Albums:
Change - Mr.C - End Rec 2002
Don't Run Unless God says - Animus Amor - Ellipsis Arts 1999
Ultimate voyage - The Shamen - Moksha 1998
Collection - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1997
Hempton Manor - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1996
Axis Mutatis / Abor Bona Abor Mala - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1994
Bossdrum - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1992
Progeny - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1991
Entact - The Shamen - One Little Indian 1990

Mix Compilations:
Superfreq Express - Mr.C on Superfreq Records
Face Off - Mr.C & 16B - DJ Mag 2005
Subterrain 100% unreleased - Mr.C - End Rec 2000
The End 1 - The End Sound System (Mr.C, Layo & Bushwacka!) - XL 1998
Electronic Storm X Mix 6 - Mr.C - Studio K7 1996
House Classics - Mr.C - Fantasia 1995
Psychotrance - Mr.C - Moonshine 1994




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