Photography by Cicely Grace, Styling by Chrissi Smith and Shot at One Hundred Shoreditch.
Palebluโs voice is recognisable as the host of the longest-running jungle and drum and bass show on Reprezent radio. But this tenured presenter is also a producer and vocalist, who creates drum & bass fused with the unlikely pairing of indie. With this unique exploration of music Paleblu underscores the importance of inclusivity within the bass music scene, challenging industry biases and advocating for underrepresented voices.
Palebluโs commitment to authenticity and inclusivity is echoed throughout his lyrism- his latest project, โDaisies,โ delves into raw emotions and introspective narratives, showcasing a journey that resonates with sincerity. With a fusion of cultural influences and a relentless pursuit of creative expression, Paleblu embodies the transformative power of art, inspiring audiences to embrace diversity and embrace the beauty of individuality.
Letโs chatโฆ
How are you?
Iโm feeling pretty good. Iโve just put a lot of work into this three-track EP thatโs recently been released. I also pulled a show together and played the songs live with the band at The Hackney Social-ย it was a really good turnout, one of the best turnouts for one of my solo shows ever. Itโs a lot of work putting everything on yourself,ย writing the lyrics, producing the music, and collating all the assets and the artwork. I do as much hands-on as possible, Iโve very much got that DIY independent mindset. It can be quite testing at times but itโs rewarding to see things come to fruition from start to finish.
What have you been up to recently? Clearly, youโve been busyโฆย
I never know how to answer this question. This is a question I used to be quite insecure about when people would ask me. A lot of the time when I was in D&B settings, Iโd say โ Iโm an MC, but Iโm a tastemaker on a Reprezent show that Iโve been doing for eight years now.ย Iโve moved away from the D&B tastemaking and Iโm focusing on this smaller project.ย
So when people ask me โWhat do you do?โ I donโt really know how to answer, because I think yes, I started out as a D&B MC but Iโm also a producer which a lot of people donโt seem to know about. Presenting and DJing is something that I love doing too. Itโs quite a weird one.
Over the years Iโve seen how vital it is to have loads of strings to your bows. I like to think of myself as being an all-round, Iโm an artist, but Iโm able to put the music business hat on, Iโm also able to put the project manager hat on and work in different settings within the music industry which has given me a 360 view about how things work. Thatโs not to say that I understand everything, I havenโt cracked it yet.ย
Have you been producing throughout your whole career?
Itโs funny because Iโve actually been producing longer than Iโve been an MC. People donโt often know, they see me as an MC or a radio presenter. But with my new stuff, people a lot of people are saying โHe spits bars too.โ Itโs kind of flipped.
Iโve been producing since I was about 14. I went to a regular state school, but they had specialist funding from the borough for performing arts and the arts. They had a sweet full of Mac computers and I remember we started learning Logic, Iโm one of those people who didnโt really have a certain crew that I hung with or a certain thing I was into at school.ย But when I found out about logic and production. I was hooked, I remember being in that sweet most lunch times- any chance I would just be trying to learn about music software. About one or two years after that I started MCing. My brother was an MC and he, Joe Goss (Soulvent Records), Jack Higgins (Pola) and a guy called Sean set up a record label.ย I saw them doing the whole dance music and record label thing and they were great role models for me and I feel like I was given a window into the dance music world.
I was born and raised in East London not from the roughest part, but itโs not the greatest part either and there were so many other things going on around me where if I didnโt have these role models or music to throw myself into I think things would have ended up a very differently for me.
How important do you think creative education is for young people?ย
Creativity in education is one of the things I am most passionate about, if I had more time I would be more directly involved with it. Unfortunately, I have to pay my bills. I went to a state school that specialised in performing arts, and Iโve seen people around me who are from less well-off backgrounds than me who have completely turned their lives around due to creativity and education. Having access to these services is essential.ย There is a lack of funding and itโs been cut back so much the past few years under the current government. Iโd like to think of myself as punk and anti-establishment, but Iโm not gonna shit over the government the whole of this interview because I think that can be quite draining but the cuts to public services have been drastic.ย
These things really help people a key example of this is that I work with a charity called Yuaf, a couple of months ago I was working with this kid and we did some one-to-one production. He may not have had access to a session with someone whoโs a producer- itโs only because of foundations and charities like this that he gets access to it.ย
I found that the experience of working with someone who was really keen and eager to learn and progress and ask all the right questions was inspiring for me. So I think itโs important. Education as a whole is important. My dad came to this country when he was three years old from Pakistan. He didnโt go to university. My mum grew up in the East End, in pure poverty really and she just didnโt have access to education and creativity. Itโs really important and something Iโm quite passionate about.ย
On the tip of Education, I want to mention Chords because he is my best mate but heโs also been a mentor to me and heโs also provided me with opportunities that I wouldnโt normally have had access to. Heโs an amazing producer and DJ too. I was also part of the first cohort to attend ELAM (East London Arts & Music) a college that was set up by Will Kennard of Chase & Status. If it wasnโt for ELAM, I wouldnโt know the things I know today, so I have to shout them out. When I was at ELAM, I also met my current manager Patrick (MC Rage / Rebel Clash).
Itโs good to hear people are still passionate about creativity and education.
Letโs talk about your latest releaseโฆ
โDaisiesโ is a really cool project. Itโs a 3-tracker I started working on towards the end of last year. As Iโve been producing for such a long time Iโve finally found my way of working now I write the song on guitar, put it into logic, do a majority of the production and then I will work with my good friend and long-term collaborator chords on my additional production.ย and then weโll mix it together. And so that I think the tune I started writing at the end of last year.ย
โBelongโ was the first single from the EP and itโs about identity. I remember writing the tune and it was how I felt at that moment, it is quite an honest song. A lot of the tunes that Iโm writing now are very honest. What Iโm doing musically is very different to a lot of D&B thatโs coming out at the minute.ย I had to almost take a little step back from D&B for the past couple of years because I donโt think it sat with who I am as an artist. Thatโs not to say that I hate or dislike D&B. I love it. Jungle and D&B were my entry point to music, but I wanted to try something very different. I think Iโve done that with this record.ย
There are three tracks- โDaisiesโ which is the lead track, โBelongโ and then โHelp Yourselfโ. A lot of people have said that โHelp Yourselfโ is their favourite track, it is very much a self-help song, itโs about mental health and making sure that you look after yourself.ย
Iโve got a remix from Crate Classics on the way. Iโve got a remix from Lakeway on the way. And I have also got another remix from Chords, but this is as his new alias- Shoal. Iโm speaking to Iyre as well about getting a remix done. My productions are very D&Bย and jungle influenced, but theyโre almost indie pop-driven on the vocal and a lot of the instrumentation. So I like to add some remixes to the releases
How do you blend indie with D&B? Not to styles youโd usually find togetherโฆ
Growing up as a person of mixed Heritage, my dadโs Bengali and Pakistani my mumโs English and Irish, then also growing up in London, this melting pot of sounds and different music. I became this sponge where Iโm just constantly absorbing things around me and thatโs not necessarily just music. That might be peopleโs styles or just locations. Iโve always been passionate about British music not just jungle and D&B that goes back to the 80s new romantic wave like Depeche Mode and The Human League and then also 90โs Brit pot and then in to that wave of indie in the 2000s. People like Jamie T, The Kooks. Iโve always been really into other music I just never really saw how to put the two together. This comes back to our conversation about being honest and being authentic. The more that you go into a scene the more youโre like, โOK, how do I crack this sceneโ and you end up listening to all this music but it all gets diluted into the same kind of similar sound. So you can either go into this scene and do what everyone else is doing or you can just carve your own thing.
You just let yourself be yourself and do what you were doing. And it just happened naturallyโฆ
I dabbled in the electronic stuff a little bit and I was like โThis is cool!โ But really and truly I wasnโt fully satisfied. I knew I was enjoying it. But I wanted to try something out of the box, which is where the whole concept of โDaisiesโ and all this new music has come from. A lot of it is not โclub bangersโ that can be played in the rave,ย Iโve written it to be performed with a five-piece band. Iโve got to shout out my band as well. Weโre all from very different walks of life, but we all gel together and there hasnโt, as of yet (touchwood), been any kind of these band politics that you hear of.
Weโve spoken about your production process, whatโs your lyrical writing process?
I donโt actually have an answer to that, it just comes out. Not thinking about it too much, writing how I feel at that time and then channelling into that feeling. Iโm reading a book by Rick Rubin at the minute, called The Creative Act. Rick Rubin is obviously an amazing producer and one of the founders of Def Jam and in this book, he talks about that-ย being in that moment and getting into the zone and a flow of things. And then I suppose getting stuff to rhyme I guess, haha.ย
Do you write to music or do you write poetry and then get to fit to music?
If Iโm writing bars, Iโll tend to put on a mix but most of the time now, if Iโm writing lyrics Iโm also writing music and producing at the same time.
Youโve been a radio presenter for a long time, whatโs your favourite part of the job?
There are a few, I think the main favourite part is getting to speak to people and understand their experiences, what theyโve done and how theyโve contributed to the scene, what their journey has been. I like learning about different people and Iโve had the privilege of talking to some of the greats like Bailey,ย Breakage and itโs been super inspiring because Iโm 27. I donโt know everything about the D&B and Jungle scene and speaking to these people has opened my eyes.ย
I donโt want to go on a rant, but I do want to say that I think a lot of people do really need to know where this music has come from. It comes back to the point of education, there should be more education pieces and understanding that drum and bass and jungle came from sound system culture and used to be jungle techno. Understanding this more, and staying true to where the genre has come from is pivotal because over time people just forget about these things, and you canโt forget about things because itโs part of the culture.
The second favorite part is probably the flip side of that which is getting to promote and push up-and-coming people. Giving a voice to people that are just getting started or halfway through their journey. Itโs really important and I do have to give another massive shout-out to Reprezent.
ย I donโt know the ins and outs of it, but theyโre going through a crowd-funding process at the moment. They are one of these places we spoke about earlier that have had their funding cut. They are a community FM station. They are essentially funded by local government, and theyโve been put in a position where theyโve had to do a crowdfunder and itโs not the only organisation Iโve seen that has had to do this. Itโs quite terrifying to see that an organisation like Reprezent, which isnโt just a radio station- they train people from 16 to 25 to get into radio to give them the skills to get into entertainment or music or the creative sector.ย
As a radio presenter, I wanted to talk about the importance of human tastemakers over an industry that has become dominated by algorithms.ย
To start offโฆ Tastemaking is super important. Gatekeeping is a dick head thing.
I have definitely found that when I am listening to a radio show or a podcast, I feel something completely different compared to listening to an algorithm-generated playlist or even one of Spotifyโs curated playlists, to be honest. Because at the end of the day, they may be curated by a human but itโs only certain people that get up there. And that is the type of gatekeeping that weโre talking about.ย
Back to the topic of tastemaking, I think itโs incredibly important. Itโs something that we need to preserve. I think itโs also something that makes music quite a liberal space to be in.ย ย
Put it this way. Youโre gonna get incredible chefs that will get all the finest ingredients and make an incredible dish and itโs gonna taste amazing and you have all these incredible flavours, itโs a meal that youโre really gonna enjoy and itโs gonna satisfy you. Or you can get some chef thatโs grabbed some crappy ingredients. The meal is frozen it looks the same as every other meal itโs gonna be all right but itโs not really nourishing.
Iโm a deeply sensitive person. So having music that is created by someone, who has spent time going through music and listening to music and coming up with their own dish is a lot more nourishing than something thatโs generated by an algorithm, or someone whoโs getting paid loads of money to push and labels. I think also as an independent artist. You must have these people in place.
What have you got coming up?
Iโm launching this new project, which is called Gonebrook.ย Itโs a project that I wanted to be purely about electronic music production. Itโs not just D&B thereโs garage, house and techno, a bit of everything, but no vocals. Iโve also got tons of music written and produced under Paleblu that will be dropping slowly but surely over the next few years.ย
What should we be talking about in the bass music scene that weโre not talking about currently?
This is something that has been spoken about and has been the past few years, but definitely diversity and inclusivity. Itโs still a big problem in dance music. Iโve seen a lot of people not be given the same opportunities that they should have been given based on the fact that theyโre not a straight white man.I think things are improving and you have great organisations like, EQ50 is a great example of that, but itโs something that still needs to be really pushed and I think honestly some people just donโt know where the music comes from and thatโs the place to start. D&B and garage and all these genres came from working-class communities and people of colour, itโs about that education piece. Iโd say the things that people need to talk about more are where the music comes from and how we can get people from all backgrounds into the scene and how we can really nurture these people as well.
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