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Saturday, October 20, 2007 

Current mood:  working
www.thedemixlives.com
Monday, September 03, 2007 

Current mood:  accomplished
http://www.onmilwaukee.com/music/articles/thedemix.html

Enter the dark DJ world of The Demix

By Julie Lawrence

For the last five years, Milwaukeean Paul Fuhr has been known as The Demix, "Milwaukee's dark knight of electronic experimentalism."

As a musician, his craft might be best described as a series of sonic seizures spilling unpredictable intensity across a sea of samples. As a character in his own beautiful nightmare, he's the kind of villain you root for as he works pieces former Halloween costumes into creepy soundscapes.

Basically, when he's performing, you're listening.

"Vendetta Kind of Mood" was released on 06-06-06 and you can expect his latest -- "The Demix Lives" to surface, appropriately, on All Hallow's Eve.

He's pinned down the pre- and post-show DJ slots for Aesop Rock at the Pabst Theater on Sept. 15 (as well as for Of Montreal and Grand Buffet on Oct. 4). In the meantime, catch him at Redroom's Rocksteady -- a night of dub, indie, hip hop and soul -- on Friday, Sept. 7.

Curious about this multi-faceted uncategorizable mixmaster? We thought so; that's why we let him do the talking:

OMC: What are some of the most interesting items you've used to make music?

TD: My usual set up is a laptop, turntables, CD players, a sampler or two and effects all run through a DJ mixer. I have this thing I call Speakerbox -- it's this system made with old junky speakers, amps and a sampler. Basically you run it through itself to create never-ending feedback, which can be manipulated in different ways. It's pretty random but patterns will generate themselves and you figure out how to work within them. I have a mini gong, I sampled my cat, just got a little circuit bent Cascio that has been fun, I use a microphone from a cheap Halloween costume and some pretty bizarre records.

OMC: What catches your attention, as in, what qualifies something as a perfect Demix sample?

TD: It's open season. I like when I hear something I've never heard before. I'll take things I don't like and try to flip them into something I do like. Sometimes the perfect sample is pure accident. I like sounds that are dense and moody and get some sort of reaction out of me or scare me. I watch a lot of movies. I sample from DVDs a lot, because I like how movie scores set the mood and are made to enhance a visual experience. For example, one of my tracks "Electrodes and Blackbelts" (which is on my Myspace right now) was made with many, many samples from the cartoon "Samurai Jack." There's music but also flying arrow sounds and running and robots blowing up playing on and off each other.

OMC: Do you know Aesop Rock at all? Will he be present during your DJ sets at his Pabst show?

TD: I don't know him personally, but I do know his music and Aesop Rock is the greatest rapper alive. And I know while I play in the bar my music can also be played in the lobby, in the theater and backstage -- so for me DJ sets and live sets are two different things. This is an opportunity to play a bit outside my Demix box and play stuff I wouldn't normally play for a lot of people and, potentially, for artists I really dig and, with any luck, add to everyone's experience.

OMC: Do you ever collaborate with anyone locally?

TD: Yes. I've done a lot of shows and played a lot of music with producer/engineer/musician Paul Kneevers. We connect on a pretty noisy level. In a way we make very similar music but with different instruments. We have hours and hours of music we've recorded together to sift through and do something with someday.

OMC: Tell me about your vision for "The Demix Lives"

TD: "The Demix Lives "is going to be a project that lives in the online world. It's, in a way, where The Demix actually lives. I'll still play live and do DJ sets, but I've always seen The Demix as a character. There will be new music, old music, live sets and in the end having everything I've ever done available for download. In a minimal comic book sort of way each track or grouping of tracks will have their own page on the site with unique artwork or maybe a little flash video that will help tell the stories in the music.

I don't have a record deal or distribution. I'll send out demos if I need to, but online is the best way to reach people and I want it to be interesting. The new site will be up soon and around Halloween as well as a new collection of tracks and then we'll see what happens.

In my head all of my tracks or CDs tell a story and I don't know if people really get it or not because it's not all done with words or samples of dialogue; this is another way to communicate what's in the music.

OMC: I read your Death of the CD blog. That said, are you still going to release actual CDs this Halloween, or will it all be via the Internet?

If someone wants to help put my CD out, I am all about it. But right now, my plan is to be all online. I'll give you a business card with my Web address where you can get everything you possibly need, or I'll burn you a CD that you will probably just drop in your iPod or loose in your car. Things have been moving in the digital direction for some time now and you just got to roll with it.

I would love to release vinyl. In my perfect world I would release music on vinyl and when you buy a record you would get a code to download the mp3s and more art online for free. For now I say, take my music please and drop bombs with it all over the Internet!
Currently listening:
The Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place
By Explosions in the Sky
Release date: 04 November, 2003
Friday, May 18, 2007 

Current mood:  devious
Often classified as a DJ, The Demix is more accurately described as a Mixologist and Sample Artist. Using a rotating set up of laptop, turntables, cd players, samplers, drum machines and effects The Demix manipulates music and sound. His style has been described as "Relentless Electronic Mash-Core" [Alive - Colombus, OH] and "A dip in the melting pot of manipulated sounds. Rarely heeding to conventional boundaries, The Demix smears musical genres all over to create an environment all his own." [onmilwaukee.com]

The Demix is Paul Fuhr, a musician, DJ, artist, producer and promoter out of Milwaukee, WI. He has performed in venues throughout the Midwest and Southwest including The Pabst Theater, Cactus Club, Stonefly Brewery, The Knitting Factory LA and The Middle of Nowhere Mojave Desert w/ acts such as The Faint, Of Montreal, DNTEL, Jenny Lewis, Mouths, Evil Kneevers, Terminal 11, edIT, Daedelus, Eight Frozen Modules, Baseck, and Books on Tape.

Paul began operating under the guise of The Demix in the Fall of 2002, following a performance he titled "Acid Rock Deconstruction" which mixed and sampled artists like Sonic Youth, Pink Floyd, Fantomas, The Doors and The Beatles. The Demix self released "Storm" in late winter of 2002. Storm is pure unapologetic sound terror, a journey through a cinematic sonic nightmare of distorted rhythm, twisted samples and ambient soundscapes.
The Onion AV Club calls Storm "Inventively creepy electronic soundscapes marked by the sheer aggression of his pulsating wall of sound, which is the aural equivalent of being hit in the head with a large hammer."

The Demix continued to play around Milwaukee before packing up shop heading to Los Angeles in late 2003. Shortly after moving LA he scored a weekly DJ gig at Star Shoes in Hollywood. In March 2004 he released the online only album "Altered Dins", which was made up almost entirely of samples from the film Altered States. In April 2004 The Demix performed at The Knitting Factory in the Los Angeles Laptop Battle, taking second place among LA's top laptop artists. At the battle he was introduced to members of LA's Infinite Complexity collective which led to performances by The Demix in the middle of The Mojave Desert, on a rooftop art festival in downtown LA, The 3rd Eye Gathering and at several Hangar 1018 events along side some the country's most outstanding electronic artists (including Terminal 11, edIT, DNTEL, Daedelus, Eight Frozen Modules, Baseck and Books on Tape).
In February 2005 The Demix and Books on Tape joined forces for the Noise is Love tour with stops in Minneapolis, Madison, Milwaukee, Chicago, Detroit and several other Midwestern cities. The Demix moved back to Milwaukee in 2005 to continue to spread the noise and love in his hometown.

On June 6, 2006 [666] The Demix put out his second self release "VENDETTA KIND OF MOOD". Again reviewed by The Onion's AV Club they describe it as "music for the angry and disenfranchised". The title track, features Christopher Walken in Quinten Tarantino's "True Romance" stating to Dennis Hopper before he kills him, "I'm the Anti-Christ. You get me in a vendetta kind of mood tell the angels in heaven you've never seen evil so personified as you did in the face of the man that killed you…" VKOM features obvious samples [Green Day, M.I.A.] and not so obvious samples [Samurai Jack, Gumboots] combined with The Demix's own compositions in a tight 12 minute EP centered around themes of murder and revenge.

Present Day:
What you see on this site is what is going on in the present day. Shows, Music, Releases, etc. all here.
The Demix is currently working on his next record. No date is set or details available except that things are coming together.
The Demix is available for shows anywhere anytime if the conditions are right.
The Demix is an independent artist seeking shows, remix/production opportunities, label representation and/or distribution.


"Relentless Electronic Mash-Core"
- Alive / Columbus, OH

"The Demix whips up inventively creepy electronic soundscapes on his recent debut, Storm, especially the 12-minute opener "Trapper.Keeper.Stalker.Dead.Silent.", which interlaces a sampled Meddle-era Pink Floyd jam into a Skinny Puppy-like nightmare. The rest of Storm is marked by the sheer aggression of his pulsating wall of sound, which is the aural equivalent of being hit with a large hammer."
- The Onion, America's Finest News Source.

"Brainy Mixologist"
- Isthmus / Madison, WI

"Exploratory, ambient and punk rock, The Demix unveils the latest explorations in psychedelic ambience and electro outburst."
- Shepherd Express / Milwaukee, WI

"Rarely heeding to conventional boundaries, The Demix smears musical genres all over to create an environment all his own. His debut release, "Storm," is an eerie experiment in obscurity, one minute lulling the room with ambience and the next harassing it with aggressive distortion."
- onmilwaukee.com

"Twisted Dreams" - John Zorn

"Superb Stuff" - John Kaada

"It's everything I like about like spacerock, like pink Floyd, and everything I like about Atari Teenage Riot, and Napalm Death. It goes from a nice spacey atmosphere, to just grinding in your face." - Books On Tape

"It's very controlled chaos; this will make you think of every sound you hear in your everyday life and how it fits, and/or clashes with every other sound. It just proves that there is music everywhere, all the time." - gimpradio.com

"A diabolical nightmare created through distorted rhythm, twisted samples and ambient soundscapes."
- xtrememusic.org
Sunday, August 20, 2006 
music speaks louder than words
Currently listening:
Endtroducing...
By DJ Shadow
Release date: 07 June, 2005
THE DEMIX



Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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