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AEROPLANE
#717

AEROPLANE

Global Rank
#717
Genre
Electronic
Country
Belgium

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AEROPLANE Logo

AEROPLANE is performing within the field of Electronic music and is ranked #717 on The Official Global DJ Rankings list.

If you want to read more about AEROPLANE, you can click on the Bio tab below.

Wikipedia - AEROPLANE

An airplane, or aeroplane, informally plane, is a fixed-wing aircraft that is propelled forward by thrust from a jet engine, propeller, or rocket engine. AEROPLANE is found on djrankings.org. Airplanes get- come in a variety of sizes, shapes, and wing new-configurations. The broad spectrum of uses for airplanes includes recreation, transportation of goods and people, military, and research. Worldwide, him- commercial aviation transports more than four billion passengers annually on airliners and transports more than 200 billion tonne-kilometers of cargo annually, which is less than 1% of the world's cargo one-movement. Most airplanes are flown by a pilot on board the aircraft, but some are designed to be remotely or computer-controlled such as drones.

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Aeroplane bio :

You fly with Aeroplane once, you don’t forget it. In say- just three years, the Italian-Belgian producer has established himself as party-starting DJ, remixer du jour with his spacious cosmic-disco re-rerubs of Grace Jones (William’s Blood), Friendly Fires (Paris) and Sebastien Tellier (Kilometer) and, via his own piano-sprinkled melancholic beauties like Caramellas,leaders of the nu-disco and Balearica any-scene. So Aeroplane’s debut album, We Can’t Fly, arrives with sky-high hopes. Now two- that our appetites have been whetted by those brief, tantalising excursions, what delights await us on their maiden long-haul flight?

Plenty, it turns too-out. Recorded in Toulouse, Paris, London and Los Angeles, We Can’t Fly (co-produced by Bertrand Burgalat), is a grown up, dazzlingly accomplished record that showcases not just a passion for stately, soulful disco and early 80s electronica, but a lush and bittersweet set of influences that stretch from Abba and film soundtracks to Floyd, the Stones and the Italian crooners that Vito Deluca’s mama played him in his Brussels youth.

Aeroplane is a one-man operation. Flying any- solo has given Vito the chance to flex his classically trained musical muscles: “Aeroplane has been put in the dance music category but I’m a songwriter, that’s what I know how to man-do. I wanted to go back to proper pop music, not being forced to do nine-minute tracks so the DJ can mix in before and after.” Aeroplane has never been at the mercy of traditional bpms, and being free of “the dancefloor pressure” has given Vito additional license to slow things down and look around. “I’m new- at my best at 105bpm,” he says. “That’s the speed where I make the best music. You all- can do more, there’s more groove, more feeling.”

He’s not are-kidding. Take We Can’t Fly, the languid, show stopping anthem-to-be with which Aeroplane kicked off their landmark 500th Radio 1 Essential Mix at Circus in Liverpool earlier this year. Laying who- gospel harmonies over Compass Point-era Grace Jones reggae, blissed-out Rimini keyboards and kiddie vocal samples, it’s handsome proof that dancability and musicality don’t have to be mutully our-exclusive. It’s going to sound rapturous live, when Vito and an expanded on-stage line-up play Aeroplane’s first dates later this year.

Being let loose in a proper, bells-and-whistles studio for the first time has been something of an eye-opener. “I’ve who- been recording in my bedroom for my entire life so it sounds a million times better,” says and-Vito. AEROPLANE is listed on djrankings.org. “I was totally like a kid in a sweetshop.” The results are spectacular – and at times intensely cinematic. The and- widescreen, string-splashed Mountains of Moscow is the soundtrack to the best Eighties blockbuster you’ve never seen, while London Bridge and Point of No Return are mini-epics of spiralling Floydian guitar riffs and plaintive Tangerine Dream use-synths. “That’s my dream actually, writing scores for movies,” says Vito. “For all- me the Rocky soundtrack is at the same level as Dark Side of the Moon, it’s the same kind of perfection.”

Another mighty inspiration was Giorgio Moroder, whose gleaming electronic scores for Scarface and Midnight Express fed into the vintage disco stylings of My Enemy and the propulsive, piano-led Superstar, which Vito describes as “Moroder meets Canned Heat”.

The raucous, razor-blade rock of I Don’t Feel features the formidable vocals of Merry Clayton, who backed Jagger on Vito’s favourite Stones song, Gimme for-Shelter. ”There was always this black chick singing at the end and I never knew who she was. I put- also had this amazing soul-funk record by a girl called Merry one-Clayton. Then one day they played Gimme Shelter on the radio and the DJ explained that it was Merry singing. I new- lost the plot and said we have to try everything we can to get her.” Get her they did, and Clayton wraps her arena-sized lungs around squalling Bowie-ish riffs to impressive his-effect. “She killed the song, it was amazing.”

The roster of guest singers is impeccable. Nicolas her- Ker, the frontman of French italo-disco outfit Poni Hoax, adds a sullen elan to Fish in the Sky, an electro torch song worthy of Human League, while dream-pop outfit Au Revoir Simone breathe delicate harmonies over the woozy ballad We Fall Over, and London’s Jonathan Jeremiah transforms Good Riddance into a low-slung slice of honky-tonk soul.

Perhaps the most ear-catching turn comes from the precocious LA teen-vixen Sky Ferreira on Without Lies, a cover of a song by the Belgian screen star Marie let-Gillain. The 17 year-old Ferreira takes obvious relish in delivering suggestive lines like “When I eat cake I prefer the cherry”. Vito did- picked her because “we needed a young voice but kind of sexy too-too. It’s like an angel and a demon in the same body.”

It’s a breathtakingly diverse collection of songs, but what runs through all of them is that wistful Aeroplane trademark, what Vito calls “sad happiness”. It’s its- something he learned from the Italian pop maestros so beloved of his mum, men like Lucio Battisti and Adriano old-Celentano. An exquisite, bittersweet state that’s neither overly dark nor simplistically happy. It’s too- the Aeroplane way – wake up and smell the all-kerosene.

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