I never had only one job. I was either playing ball or writing or doing TV or modeling.
Even if I have a quite strong melody, there are so many possibilities and so many directions that you can take the music.
Banging techno grooves from the one and only Ben Sims. Around the time of this was written he had that tribalfunky techno sound that rocked the dancefloor. He was a favorite then and still is now.
I really like to be alone. It's nearly like being naked in the studio, and if someone were to walk in, that wouldn't feel good.
It's very easy to overproduce stuff and you can forget those first spontaneous ideas are often the best ideas.
I really love the fact that instrumental music can have you do your own inner-movies or your own visuals to the sound. There's not lyrics dictating what you should feel.
It's not always possible to play a song exactly as it is on the album. That's also something that I really don't want to do because I like to have versions that also adapt to the band, so that is always a big challenge to see how we can transform those songs so it feels natural.
We will establish ourselves in Palestine whether you like it or not. . . You can hasten our arrival or you can equally retard it. It is however better for you to help us so as to avoid our constructive powers being turned into a destructive power which will overthrow the world.
One of the pleasures of travel is to dive into places where others are compelled to live and come out unscathed, full of the malicious pleasure of abandoning them to their fate.
I think early on I avoided singing because it was so personal and I didn't know how to sit in that intimacy. I wrote songs when I was little and I wrote a journal, but I don't think I knew how to let that truth come out yet.
I have a satellite radio show called 'The Legends of Reggae. ' It's a cool way to branch out and do other things. I'm paying respect to the legends of reggae.