Mat Zo’s Past Influences His Future

British progressive house DJ/producer Mat Zo has music in his blood. Literally. His mother is an accomplished violinist and at an early age began soaking up music like a sponge. Fast forward to the present and Zo is regarded as one of the most up-and-coming jocks on the global scene, thanks to a slew of smoking hot remixes and productions. After his tracks found themselves in heavy rotation in the sets of renowned DJs from all over the world, he began a successful relationship with Above & Beyond’s Anjunabeats. In this exclsuive interview conducted in Miami, Zo opens up about his interesting past, his ongoing work with Arty and hints at new projects we can expect from him. Spoiler alert: he’s working on an artist album!

I understand your mother is a professional violinist and raised you with more than just a sense of an appreciation for music. What are some of your fondest memories of that upbringing and her influence that you carry with you today?
Mat Zo:  I remember the first time she taught me how to play piano. I remember getting completely excited about making music, and I think it all stemmed from there really.

How old were you?
I was two.

Some kids fight it a bit. Well, maybe not at that age but when they get older and when they want to go outside and just play with their friends.
I kind of did fight it when I was a little older but deep down I couldn’t escape from being a musical person.

You spent a significant amount of your childhood in Cleveland, OH, and, as they say, “Cleveland Rocks.” Your father presented you with a guitar when you were eight. Who were your influences back then and what were you playing?
I was big into grunge and Alice In Chains, Soundgarden and Nirvana. At the same time I’d just discovered Daft Punk, The Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim so my musical tastes back then were even more varied than they are now.

“My mom’s very supportive. She listens to all my music and follows me on Twitter and all that.”

So you were interested in grunge and rock and then you found electronic dance music. How did that transition happen? When and how did you find out about all that?
There’s this Canadian TV channel called MuchMusic. Back in 1998 when I was a little kid in my basement listening to that station they had this club show every Saturday I think it was. They would bring on DJs and that was my introduction to dance music.

It was a little more underground back then and it was a little harder to find.
I’ve got to thank illegal, free cable.

How do your parents feel about your successful music endeavors and paths you’ve taken so far?
First they were a bit unsure about it before I made something out of it. Now that I’m touring the world and doing something with music I think they’re proud of me, understandably I guess.

Is your father doing something in music as well; I know he bought you your guitar.
He loves music but he’s a painter by profession.

You’re from an artistic family all around. Do they understand the music you listen to? Do you play it for them? Do they understand what it’s all about?
My mom understands it a lot more than my dad. My mom’s very supportive. She listens to all my music and follows me on Twitter and all that.

It’s almost obvious because of the availability of electronic dance music in London, but do you recall some of the first moments that you heard and fell in love with EDM while living there?
I definitely liked drum ‘n’ bass and garage. I was introduced to that when I moved over there. It’s massive in London.

Which drum ‘n’ bass artist or artists?
High Contrast, Logistics, Noisia.

Who were you emulating and what means did you use to explore your craft?
At first I wasn’t even using production software. I was making MIDI’s which are just computer generated but a little hard to explain. Basically I got into it just making melodies without really producing. Back then I was just trying to be Daft Punk which isn’t too far off from what I’m doing now.

Were you already writing some of your own material?
I think I started making my own music when I was about eight. I’ve been pretty much doing it my whole life.

That’s impressive. They’re starting you guys out younger and younger like Arty and Erik Arbores and you.
They’re only going to get younger and younger until most of the DJs won’t be allowed in the clubs.

Do you recall your first gig and your track selection?
My first professional gig was in Utrecht in Holland for Trance Energy in 2008. It was a very small pre-party. The company was called Luminosity. Since then they’ve grown a lot. My first ever gig was at my friend’s birthday party and I was in the booth with about five other friends and they were playing with the pitch faders. I was playing stuff like Steve Angello and a lot of house music.

When and how did your relationship with Above & Beyond happen?
They asked me to do a remix for them in 2008. They liked it and then afterwards they asked me if I had any original stuff and if I wouldn’t mind signing with them. I immediately took a shine to the label.

How did they find out about you?
It was a remix I did of Tiesto.

What was song that Above & Beyond asked you to remix?
It was a song called “Fallen Tides” by Mark Pledger and Matt Hardwick.

What can you tell about your relationship with Arty?
We work really well together. Every time we make a track together it turns out really well. I guess our two styles go really well.

How did you two meet?
It was through Anjunabeats. I was playing a lot of his stuff and he said at the time I was one of his biggest inspirations and vice versa and it just happened.

What’s the thought process involved, the production involved, and how to you come to the conclusion that it’s complete when you produce an amazing track like “Rebound” or “Mozart?
If I knew where the inspiration came from I’d be making a lot more music. Sometimes you just have one of those days when you wake up and an idea comes.

And then there is your single effort “Yoyo Ma” which is a lovely track. What was your inspiration for this one?
I played around with the synthesizer trying to make a dirty bassline but ended up with a cello instead.

Are you currently collaborating with anyone that you’d care to share?
I’m doing another collab with Arty. Other than that pretty much just working on my album and trying to get that finished first.

Is there someone you’re interested in working with?
There are loads of people. Madeon from France. He sounds really promising. One of my all-time favorite bands, Radiohead. If I would ever get to work with them I think my life would be complete.

What is a current hot track for you? What might we hear from you at the Group Therapy show?
Every gig now I’ve been playing this track by Dada Life called “Kick Out The Epic Mother Fucker,” and I’ve mashed that up with Avicii’s “Levels” and it’s been going off really well but more or less on the commercial side I’ve been loving tracks by Alex Kenji and Phunk Investigation and Da Fresh. I really like the more techy, groovy sound of them.

Once Miami Week is over and done what do you have planned?
My girlfriend’s coming over from LA for a week and we’re going to spend some time together. I’ll have a gig in India and Helsinki, and I’ll still be working on all of my album tracks. So yeah, it’s going to be a busy summer.

Final Thoughts On Ultra Music Festival 2012

The last confetti blasts have blown and the pyrotechnics have now cooled but for roughly two glorious weeks in March the worldwide electronic dance music (EDM) community was tuned in to the festivities strewn across the pristine beaches of South Florida for the Winter Music Conference and the Ultra Music Festival. Artists, DJs, producers, agents, and fans networked, danced, and celebrated all in the name of EDM.

In conjunction with the Conference the 27th International Dance Music Awards announced their big winners in 57 categories including Hardwell nabbing Best Breakthrough DJ, Tiesto garnering Best Full Length DJ Mix for Club Life: Vol.1 Las Vegas, and Pacha, New York earning the Best US Club award.

A recorded 165,000 people attended the three-day, sold-out event that was the Ultra Music Festival at Bayfront Park, Miami. For those not part of the Ultra thousands, Miami Beach and South Beach have become an expanding, alternative mecca to indulge just the same. Mansion hosted the Dirty South and Friends party. Nikki Beach featured Gabriel & Dresden. While at The National there was the Wolfgang Gartner & Friends event with Tommy Trash and Bart B More vs. Harvard Bass.

Quality competition could be found right at the back door of the famed Ultra event at Grand Central Park, Miami with the highly anticipated return of the Swedish House Mafia Masquerade Motel featured this year as a two-day event and also relocated from last year’s location in South Beach.

In a different variety of healthy competition there was Team Sweden and Team The Netherlands in a battle on the soccer field at the Fountainbleau Miami Beach, and under the Florida heat, all in the name of charity. Tiesto managed the Dutch team including team members Sunnery James, Ryan Marciano, and Afrojack. The Swedish opposition was led by Sebastian Ingrosso and included Dada Life, Alesso, and Otto Knows. The Netherlands won the game 13-11 with the proceeds going to the charitable cause (RED,) the Global Fund to fight AIDS.

There were daytime pool parties, all-day festivals, evening rooftop events, and for the insomniacs who could do it all, there were the famed after parties.

Some attended the premiere of the Ultra movie Can U Feel It: The UMF Experience.

Recent year’s oversized, tank top catchphrase, “I’m In Miami Bitch” gave way to “I’m Sexy And I Know It.”

At the risk of sounding like a broken record (and a pun,) tracks like “Internet Friends,” “Levels,” “Kick Out The Epic Mother Fucker,” “Maximal Crazy,” and “Paradise” were favored by so many artists as was evident by the extreme heavy rotation. But the environment of the EDM festivities is the perfect forum for artists to debut and promote some of their latest, fresh material like Sander Van Doorn with “Inside” featuring Mayeni which very well could be next year’s “Maximal Crazy.”

Whether you love it, don’t care for it, or somewhere in between, there is no denying that dubstep has infiltrated all genres including trance and drum ‘n’ bass, but as always, there was something for everyone.

Now that most of us revelers have sadly sipped our last mojito on South Beach and flew home with some sand in our shorts, snapshots on our phones, video snippets to post to YouTube, and memories of the epicness but with the upcoming, day-to-day, 9-5, looming ahead, remember the motto of the famed Miami Beach establishment La Sandwicherie: “Enjoy Life Every Day.”

Read our recap of day one here day two here and day three here.

Images by Kathy Vitkus

Ultra Music Festival 2012: Day Three [Recap]

The third and final of the Ultra Music Festival featured an eclectic group of artists all across the Bayfront Park grounds. For trance lovers, it was the grand finale and the ultimate UMF experience.

As in recent tradition, four-time number one DJ in the world, Armin van Buuren, presented A State Of Trance (ASOT) as an Ultra mega tent extravaganza hosting some of the hottest trance acts in the world.

Relative newcomers, Austin-based duo Tritonal joined the ranks this year still celebrating the fruits of their labor on last year’s highly successful artist release, Piercing The Quiet. They fully indulged in their esteemed ASOT spot and won the crowd with hits like “Slave.”

A State Of Trance repeats and Cosmic Gate entertained with some classics “Fire Wire” and “Exploration Of Space,” as familiar sing alongs to dedicated tranceheads.

Dutch great Sander van Doorn veered toward house with “Sweet Disposition,” as the screen backdrop announced, “This is A State Of Trance and this is Sander van Doorn.” Then on the backdrop came, “Make some noise,” followed by, “I can’t hear you.” Van Doorn exercised perfect timing dropping his heavy rotation track from last year’s festival, the still popular “Koko.” There was no longer the need for, “I can’t hear you,” at this point. As the crowd was enthralled in moments of trance ecstasy Sander played what seems to be a favorite of his own and his fans alike, Ivan Gough & Feenixpawl “In My Mind” featuring Georgi Kay (Axwell Mix.)

This year Dash Berlin also held a cherished spot on ASOT entering with Above & Beyond’s “Thing Called Love.” He continued to favor a love song theme with “Till The Sky Falls Down” and “I’m Coming Home.”

Far from ASOT either voyaging over the grassy hills of the bumper-to-bumper lounging fans or navigating through the herding cattle of crowds on Biscayne Boulevard it was worth the effort to catch even just a glimpse of the magic that is the duo of Rob Swire and Gareth McGrillen also now known as the Pendulum side project Knife Party. They set the main stage on fire, some might say literally. (It was rumored that the main stage caught fire, a legitimate concern although that was not the case.) In reality it was the visual effect flames on the screens framing the stage in addition to rooftop pipes blasting spurts of real flames from the stage top. Fans could feel the heat of the pipe flames all the way to the back of the crowd by Biscayne Boulevard. Everyone who’s everyone in the scene has been captivated by the crowd response from Knife Party’s “Internet Friends,” and Knife Party was no exception giving this gem the airplay it deserves during their set. They brought their remixes of both Nero “Crush On You” and Porter Robinson “Unison.” In fact, everything this Australian team spewed out was a party, and thousands of their best friends were invited. Knife Party is definitely one to watch, as if fans and producers haven’t already taken notice for quite some time.

Dash Berlin was wrapping up back at ASOT with Coldplay’s “Clocks,” and ending with another Above & Beyond dynamo “Sun and Moon,” but not before singer Emma Hewitt joined him on stage for some reciprocal, complimenting bows to each other and some synched hand swaying in the air to inspire the crowd.

The camaraderie continued when Armin van Buuren prematurely appeared at the decks only long enough to give an embracing send off to ASOT mainstay buddy, Ferry Corsten, and intentionally or unintentionally tease the crowd with his presence. In a friendly gesture van Buuren lifted Corsten up off the ground to present him to the adoring fans below before vanishing backstage until it was his turn at the decks. Corsten dropped numerous crowd pleasers including “Check It Out” and the archived treasure “Adagio For Strings.”

Host Armin van Buuren manned the decks at 8:00pm and the magic and magnificence of this moment stretched throughout the packed tent and beyond. He was on a series of high moments like when he dropped “Burned With Desire” featuring Justine Suissa and the magic didn’t stop there. He was double billed also closing out the main stage at 10:00pm.

Gareth Emery and Kaskade helped round out the ASOT bill with Emery dropping Heatbeat “Rocker Monster” and Coldplay “Paradise,” and Kaskade driving the crowd crazy with Tiesto “Maximal Crazy.”

The main stage went dim close to 9:00pm as a voice boomed over the sound system with, “This is the man who means more to EDM than anyone else in the world. This is David Guetta.” The current number one DJ in the world blasted hit after hit like, Afrojack “Can’t Stop Me Now” featuring Shermanology, an electro version of “Sexy Bitch” that included the added lyric, “David Guetta bitch,” and “When Love Takes Over.” He introduced Afrojack who joined him on stage surrounded by uproarious applause, then out came Steve Aoki, then Benny Benassi to pure crowd pandemonium.

All too soon the party had to end and the world for so many festival fans would have to return to normal whatever “normal” may be.

Read our recap of day one here and day two here.

Images by Kathy Vitkus

Ultra Music Festival 2012: Day Two [Recap]

My fourth day in South Beach began with a refreshing and rejuvenating swim in the ocean while it seemed the rest of the world was still asleep. Stopped for an omelet brunch at the Ocean Drive Cardozo patio, indulged in a little people watching, and fended off the vendors selling everything from Caribbean cigars to hand-crafted, realistic-looking grasshoppers made from palm leaves.

I walked back again to the W Hotel for the final day of the cherished Belve Music Lounge party. pparently it was more cherished today since the epic guest at yesterday’s Belve event was electronic dance music front man Tiesto and the word was out. The line meandered to the parking and in front of the curiosity that was the Deadmau5 Sol Republic Soldier Shuttle.

Once inside the Belve, Sunnery James and Ryan Marciano were delivering Empire of the Sun’s “Walking On A Dream” amid the throngs of doublefisting revelers enjoying their complimentary Belvedere concoctions like the Lemonade Powermix. Sander van Doorn revisited his appearance from last year and played Ivan Gough & Feenixpawl “In My Mind” featuring Georgi Kay (Axwell Mix) which simply epitomized the sentimentality in mood and lyrics of our farewell last day at the Belve Lounge.

Back at day 2 of Ultra Music Festival, Laidback Luke inspired hands held high in double ‘L’ as is tradition or maybe for the fact that he was blasting Avicii “Levels.” DJ Chuckie hopped up onto the decks to further fire up the crowd as Fatboy Slim “Praise You” went into Oasis’ “Wonderwall.”

I hurriedfrom the main stage to the live stage although that’s an inaccurate choice of words considering the incredibly dense crowd but I made it in order to catch the fun-loving and quirky Metronomy. Their robotic jerks of motion and quizzical stare melded so well with the lyrics and peculiar beats of “The Bay,” “Heartbreaker,” and “She Wants.”

Unfortunately technical difficulties with onstage equipment prevented M83 from taking the stage for more than 45 minutes past their 8:00pm start time. At 8:35 the crowd’s chants of “M-8-3” almost seemed to do wonders. The appeasement of M83’s appearance to the packed crowd didn’t last long since they only played two tracks kicking off with their powerhouse hit “Midnight City,” which even endured a three-second glitch of silence mid-song. What a shame since the band’s unique sound via animated use of multiple trigger pads and synthesizers is both visually and aurally stimulating and we definitely would have all loved to have seen so much more. They band scurried off with a similar frustration of the disappointed fans in attendance but promised to return.

Meanwhile at the UMF Brasil tent Andy C proved that drum n bass is alive and more than well and that the packed fans still know to, “Put your fuckin hands up,” on cue.

Approaching the main stage the signature crucifix of Justice could be seen from hundreds of yards away as the echoes of the Schoolhouse Rock styled “D.A.N.C.E.” reverberated.

Today’s featured artist, Avicii, on the main stage unfortunately competed with the very worthy 2manydjs on the live stage but the thrill of witnessing Madonna introduce Avicii and then join him in the booth was quite the impressive, rockstar spectacle. Not be outdone, Skrillex later snuck from behind the performing DJ to fanatically wave as if in a brief moment and in gest to steal Avicii’s thunder although no harm done. Avicii wowed with “Fade Into Darkness” and Justice’s “D.A.N.C.E.” as a possible tribute to his predecessors without missing a beat and almost oblivious to the antics going on behind him.

Day 3 of Ultra, the final Ultra of 2012, is all that’s left and I can’t help sing the lyrics from “Save This Moment” by John O’Callghan, “…save this moment. I don’t wanna stop it now. I don’t want for this to end.”

Images by Kathy Vitkus

Read our recap of UMF 2012 day one here.