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Adrian Sherwood

Adrian Maxwell Sherwood (born 1958, London, England) is an English record producer specializing in the genres of dub music and EDM. Sherwood has created a distinctive production style based around applying dub effects and dub mixing techniques to EDM tracks as well as mainstream songs.

Sherwood has worked extensively with a variety of reggae artists as well as the musicians Keith LeBlanc, Doug Wimbish and Skip McDonald. Sherwood has remixed tracks by Coldcut, Depeche Mode, Woodentops, Primal Scream, Pop Will Eat Itself, Sinéad O'Connor, and Skinny Puppy.

Within his role as a record producer, he has worked with a variety of record labels, however his most well-known label is On-U Sound Records, which he founded in 1979. Sherwood has been a member of the band Tackhead. (Read more at Wikipedia.)

Links To Peel

“I have long been wary of the reputations of producers – since I saw a photograph of Phil Spector’s haircut (incorporating, naturally, Phil himself) – but am happy to admit devotion to Sherwood.”
(John Peel, Observer, 1988-11-20)[1]

Peel was a long-time fan of Adrian Sherwood and played his earliest production work for reggae artists Prince Far I and Creation Rebel in the late 1970s,[2] as well as tracks from the first album released on Sherwood’s On-U Sound label. This appeared in early 1981 under the name New Age Steppers, a dub-flavoured post-punk studio collective that featured vocalists such as Ari Up of the Slits and Mark Stewart of the Pop Group; Sherwood also produced their only Peel session.

Onu-logo

The DJ gave airtime to a wide range of Sherwood-helmed On-U Sound releases – many with overlapping lineups of musicians – including those of label mainstays such as Dub Syndicate and African Head Charge, as well as Tackhead, who counted Sherwood as a member (credited as “mixologist”). Peel was also hugely enthusiastic about the producer’s football-centered Barmy Army project, describing the ‘Sharp As A Needle’ single as “the only football record of merit yet released”.

In the reggae field, Singers & Players were another loose On-U Sound umbrella grouping for top talent, with vocalists including Prince Far I, Bim Sherman, Congo Ashanti Roy and Mikey Dread. Peel also featured tracks from the 1987 Sherwood-produced Lee Perry / Dub Syndicate LP 'Time Boom X De Devil Dead'.

In 1988, the DJ wrote:

“Sherwood and his collaborators have produced work of unrivalled excellence. … Working with some of the most forceful musicians in Jamaica, New York and Britain, Adrian Sherwood creates atmospheres that vary from the liberating – the reggae has a matchless sense of space – to claustrophobic.”[3]

Away from the dub-heavy world of On-U Sound, Sherwood’s outside production and remix work extended as far as studio duties for Peel’s favourite band, the Fall.[4] In a later interview, Sherwood described MES and co. as “completely into anti-production: no effects, all dry.”[5]

Early in 2003, Peel played tracks from Sherwood’s first album under his own name.

Festive Fifty Entries

Sessions

  • None under own name. Credited as producer and engineer of the New Age Steppers only session, recorded 1983-06-12, first broadcast 18 August 1983.

Other Shows Played

Solo release
  • 15 January 2003: X-Planation (LP - Never Trust A Hippy) Real World Records
  • 25 March 2003: X-Planation (Album: Never Trust A Hippy) Real World Records


On-U Sound compilations (also see linked artist pages)


Other
  • 09 November 1989: (Peel plays a Tackhead track after an earlier plug for an uninspiring Knebworth 90 lineup: "Our engineer was suggesting that it might be a good idea to get Adrian Sherwood to mix down the tapes of the forthcoming Knebworth entertainment. I think I might listen to it then.")
  • Best Of Peel Vol 12 (1990): (JP: "I wish you could see me tonight. I think I look, well, at my loveliest, actually, in a white T-shirt that says 'King Tubby' on it and was given to me by Adrian Sherwood. I only mention this so that you'll know I am actually a friend of the stars.")

External Links

References

  1. John Peel: ‘Hubble, bubble dub on the double’ Observer, 1988-11-20, accessed via Guardian and Observer Digital Archive.
  2. The Pressure Sounds site credits production of the 'Cry Tuff Dub Encounter Chapter I' LP to Prince Far I "aided and abetted by Adrian Sherwood."[1] Peel featured the track 'Long Life' from the album on his show of 20 December 1978, as well others from subsequent LPs in the same series.
    In the Observer article quoted above, Peel suggests he also played tracks from 'Dub From Creation', the Sherwood-produced [2] first album by Creation Rebel (aka, the Arabs, Prince Far I's backing band), which was also released in 1978, although there is no record of this in currently available show tracklistings. It is known, however, that he did play 'Hunger And Strife' from the band's third album, 'Rebel Vibration,' on 05 June 1979. Production was credited to 'Hitrun Dub Syndicate' (at the time, Sherwood ran the Hitrun label, which released both Prince Far I and Creation Rebel material).[3]
  3. See Observer article.
  4. Material for the 'Slates' EP in 1981 and the 'Extricate' album in 1990.[4]
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