Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations

To print this page, select "Print" from the File menu of your browser

DJ Spooky

Metro Mix

- - - - - - - - - - - -
DJ Spooky

Oct. 05, 2000 | DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid, aka Paul D. Miller, is an artist who expresses himself through nearly every sensory outlet at his disposal. Standing at the crossroads of academic and pop culture, his moniker itself represents the combined inspiration of a sci-fi hero in a William S.Burroughs novel and an old commerical for Count Chocula cereal. In his written work, visual creations, DJ sets and musical pieces, he marries a highbrow wit with an infectious sense of whimsy, fusing cultures and ideas for the digital age.

Born in 1970 in Washington, D.C., Miller's father, a politically active lawyer passed away when Paul was just three-years-old. He left his son his extensive collection of record albums, and it was here that Miller began his musical education, studying the sounds as a way to get to know the person that once collected them.

Growing up in the '80s in D.C., Miller was exposed to a particularly diverse music culture, which he eagerly soaked up. "I grew up with this weird kind of cross-fusion," he says. "I was growing up with The Specials and English Beat on one hand, Trouble Funk and the Junkyard Band on the other, and at the same time listening to Bad Brains or Minor Threat. In my head, those are my core rhythm patterns." By 1988, he had launched his own radio show at Bowdoin College in Maine, where he had begun studies in French literature and philosophy. "Dr. Seuss' Eclectic Jungle" ran for four years and explored the etymology of sound, working backwards from hip-hop records and the like to expose their sample sources and original inspirations.

DJ Spooky's latest album, "Riddim Warfare," is the result of collaging multiple cultures and lands. Many of these sonic ideas have been culled from his own experience; others he learns and passes on with the help of the album's many guest contributors, including such hip-hop and rock luminaries as Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore, members of Organized Konfusion and Kool Keith.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Sound Off
Send us a Letter to the Editor

Salon.com >> Audio
 



Salon  Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations


Arts & Entertainment | Books | Business | Comics | Health | Mothers Who Think | News
People | Politics | Sex | Technology and The Free Software Project
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus | Salon Shop


Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited
Copyright 2005 Salon.com


Salon, 22 4th Street, 16th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94103
Telephone 415 645-9200 | Fax 415 645-9204
E-mail | Salon.com Privacy Policy