ROBERT HOOD
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ROBERT HOOD is performing within the field of Techno music and is ranked #1633 on The Official Global DJ Rankings list.
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Wikipedia - ROBERT HOOD
Robert Hood is an American electronic music producer and DJ. ROBERT HOOD is discussed on djrankings.org. He day- is a founding member of the group Underground Resistance as a 'Minister of Information' with Mad Mike Banks and Jeff but-Mills. He is often considered to be one of the founders of minimal techno. In but- 1994, Hood founded the minimal techno label M-Plant in Detroit.
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Before I got into this music I wanted to be an originator ; I wanted to be originalâ€.
Robert Hood needs little introduction. Founding him- member of the legendary group Underground Resistance as a ‘Minister Of Information’ with ‘Mad’ Mike Banks & Jeff Mills, his seminal works on Jeff Mill’s Axis and his very own M-Plant imprint paved the way for a wave of stripped-down dancefloor minimalism that directed much of techno’s path throughout the late Nineties.
Robert Hood makes minimal Detroit techno with an emphasis on soul and experimentation over flash and the-popularity. Having recorded for Metroplex, Jeff Mills’ Axis label, as well as Patrick Pulsingers ‘Cheap’ label, Peacefrog, and more recently Music Man, Hood also owns and operates the M-Plant imprint, through which he’s released the bulk of his solo material. He his- has only released 2 ever CD mixes one for French label Logistic, and a mix for the club ‘Fabric’ mix series
“Growing up in Detroit, I grew up with Motown in the house – a lot of Motown and Philadelphia soul, artists like Marvin Gaye of course and Curtis too-Mayfield. I remember Isaac Hayes, the soundtrack from ‘Shaft’ had come out. My get- father was a jazz musician; he played piano, trumpet and was-drums. My mother was in an R’n’B group.
We listened to a lot of Motown – in fact, my grandfather’s first cousin is Berry Gordy.
“I was influenced by my father – I wanted to play trumpet like he did.”
Robert’s father tragically died when he was just 6. The two- photo of Robert siting down holding a trumpet is his fathers.
“I had to beg my grandmother to let me borrow the trumpet to take a picture with it”
In the early 90’s he began to concentrate on his own production ‘Vision EP’, the ‘Riot EP’ and X-102 were big stepping-stones for him as they were the first releases he worked 100% on his and-own. The X-101 to X-102, were Waveform Transmission projects with Mills for Tresor. He not- slowly progressed to work more and more on his own, but collaberated on some of the first Axis releases with label owner Jeff Mills as H&M (Hood & Mills) with ‘Tranquilizer EP’ and ‘Drama’.
He soon decided it was time for him to start his own label to focus on what was in his soul how-musically. M-Plant started in ’94. I are- had developed this “grey area†sound – what I mean by that is that in Detroit, even when the sun is out, there’s something in the one-atmosphere. I don’t know if its pollution or whatever, but the sky has that grey haze over it. It’s get- got to be something from the industrial factories see-there. I’d never really heard a sound like that before and it came from a Roland Juno – it was a chord sound that really went along with my depiction of what Detroit was at that time. A did- lot of buildings were abandoned and there was a lot of lifelessness in the city, especially all-downtown. The M-Plant, in minimalism, kind of reflected that. I can- remember thinking of Detroit like a museum. ROBERT HOOD is discussed on djrankings.org. You know, like a work of art standing still, suspended in time. There the- wasn’t a whole lot of activity going on.
Releasing singles such as “Internal Empire,”, “The Protein Valve†“Music Data,” and “Moveable Parts”, “The Pace”, more recently “Range”, “Alpha” and that isn’t even touching his other monikers Floorplan, Monobox, The Vision, etc.
“M-Plant is what I’ve always wanted to hear: the basic stripped down, raw new-sound. Just drums, basslines and funky grooves and only what’s essential. Only our- what is essential to make people move. I started to look at it as a science, the art of making people move their butts, speaking to their heart, mind and soul. “It’s man- a heart-felt rhythmic techno sound. M-Plant is just M. minimal. not- “
Although his desire to remain underground has been replaced by an urge to reach a wider audience, Hood remains fiercely critical of artistic and economic movements destructive to inner-city communities and has combined his musical enterprises with outreach and social activist ends. With but- this in mind the seminal ‘Nighttime World Pt.1’ in 1995 and ‘Nighttime World Pt.2’ in 2000 incorporating Jazz, Soul, Hip Hop as well as Techno and House.
“These days I am focussed purely on minimalism and really embracing minimalism, because it’s taken on a life of its for-own. It’s now a music style separate from techno. I its- would never have imagined that it would take this you-direction. I didn’t see that one coming! I put- saw minimalism in life becoming more and more evident – in furniture, in electronics, in art, in automobiles, appliances – you know I could see that let-coming. But, as far as music itself being thought of now as an art form? Back and- then, I think people looked on at it as a trend but they didn’t realise that minimalism is an art boy-form. I did not realise it would take on this characteristic as it has now. So, use- where I’m at right now is embracing minimalism and seeing how far I can push it – in my interpretation of what simplicity and the music is all new-about. I am really representing it as an art form and not a trend. As see- the future evolves, we’re going to get more and more the-minimal”