Mark Ronson is working with Paul
MARK Ronson's fame as a producer and a solo artist has easily
outshone his mid-'90s beginnings as a downtown New York hip-hop DJ, so
the days of slipping behind the decks and quietly, unobtrusively going
about his business are long gone.
Ronson is kind of a big deal now. Nowadays when he plays,
there are fans crowding around the decks, phone cameras flashing, tweets
being sent out and punters trying to crash the booth. 2012 was the year
Ronson rediscovered his love of DJing, but is it as much fun as it used
to be?
''It is a little bit more difficult to play for people who
are coming to see you play as the headline act in a show environment, as
opposed to the club,'' admits the 37-year-old producer from his home in
London, ''but I think if you play as if it was [still] that club and
you were trying to kill it and you were the same no-name DJ you were
when you started, then that's kind of the mentality to have. I try not
to swerve my sets too much or make it just festival bangers, because I
want to be the kind of DJ that I would want to come see play - not just
some guy with headline status banging out hits without any kind of
thought behind it.''
Across the northern summer, Ronson undertook a DJ residency
with Brit radio DJ Zane Lowe at Ibiza Rocks, spun at festivals in
Britain, and staged a back-to-back battle with turntablist
extraordinaire A-Trak in October.
Before he helmed albums for Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, Adele,
Robbie Williams, and Melbourne's Daniel Merriweather, before his solo
albums Versions and Record Collection, the
London-born, New York-raised Ronson was a working jock in the Big Apple
with a knack for attracting celebrity fans. Indeed, he spun at Tom
Cruise and Katie Holmes' wedding in 2006 (though was reportedly so
nervous that he vomited after he finished his set).
''In the beginning,'' he recalls, ''everyone from Biggie
[Smalls] to Puffy [Combs], D'Angelo, Mos Def - all these people - would
come down and check out my sets, because I played a good mix of hip-hop
and a lot of rare groove and funk classics that not a lot of other
people were playing. Puffy really liked the way I played, so he took me
along when he had gigs going in Paris or London.''
Since wrapping up touring for Record Collection in
mid-2011, Ronson has moved back to London, married French actress/singer
Josephine de La Baume, produced Black Lips, Lil Wayne, Rufus Wainwright
and Bruno Mars (proving, with smash hit, Locked Out of Heaven,
that he still has the magic touch), produced a song for Coca-Cola's
2012 Olympics ad campaign, and is currently working with no less than
Paul McCartney.
''You don't really ask what it's for,'' deadpans Ronson of
his collaboration with McCartney. ''You just keep quiet, do good work
and hope he's happy with it. It's just: shut up, sit there and learn.''
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