BSTV: DJ Muggs [Video]

DJ Muggs

Legendary L.A. beatmaster DJ Muggs of Cypress Hill fame recently visited New York City and we connected with the production icon to find out how he discovered bass music and how it culminated into his Bass in Your Face featuring cameos by Chuck D, Dizzee Rascal, Danny Brown and more. “The thought came in about ’09,” Muggs tells us in this exclusive BSTV video. “I sat down, I grabbed the MPC and I go, This ain’t gonna work. So then it became a learning process for me — learning the production techniques of electronic music which is way different from how I produce hip-hop. I took about six months to learn and study.”

“I’m addicted to bass,” he confessed, adding that the beats are done for his next two albums. “I’m gonna keep making my hip-hop albums. I’ve got an experimental album coming out called Cross My Heart, and I’m gonna keep making my bass records and experimenting and push sound and push dimensions with this. Music is free, man. It’s in the air. There should be no boundaries and no limits on it.”

Watch the full interview with DJ Muggs below.

Kerri Chandler’s 5-Minute Pre-DJ Set Rant at Rex Club Paris: Cool or Not Cool? [Video]

Kerri Chandler

Veteran deep house DJ/producer Kerri Chandler had a few things he wanted to convey before starting his set at the Legends party at Rex Club Paris on Sunday. In a five-minute rant caught on video, the esteemed jock pledged his allegiance to house music and offered to pay anyone in the club who wasn’t aligned with the music he was about to play. “If you want commercial shit, Kerri Chandler will pay you right now to get the fuck out,” he bellowed in a passionate diatribe filled with expletives. Was Chandler simply speaking from his heart? Was there something else informing his words? Watch the video below and be the judge.

BSTV: Zomboy

Zomboy

British bass explorer Zomboy (a.k.a Joshua Mellody) has been releasing tracks for only a brief period of time, but thanks to issuing down-and-dirty productions like “Organ Donor” he’s quickly connected with a growing legion of followers around the world. His sound, which encompasses a smorgasbord of dubstep, electro, drumstep and a lil’ bit of moombahton, has been particularly accepted in the U.S., which translated last year into a Stateside debut at Electric Daisy Carnival (of all places!) and a steady stream of club dates in North America.

“Americans in particular have way more energy than anywhere else I’ve played in the world,” Zomboy told us in this exclusive video interview before his show last week at Gramercy Theater in New York City.

Currently on the road supporting The Dead Symphonic EP, Zomboy also discussed how traveling inspires his creative process, his upcoming track with Lady Chann due out in March and why Never Say Die label boss SKisM remains the DJ who changed his life.