DSIbiza: Part 1: Tiesto

This article is about Tiesto, In Search Of Sunrise, "OPENING PARTY" @ Privilege in Ibiza (Spain), Mon 07 Jul 2008

Tiesto. They don’t come much bigger than this. I’ve been interviewing DJs now for some two months now and already I’ve hit the heights of interviewing the world’s biggest. To say I’m under pressure would be completely false however. I’m simply ignoring it.

We arrive at Privilege under and pay the taxi driver. The Sun is beating down harder than a dominatrix at a Max Mosley party. I can’t take it; my skin is blue, but I need to go white before I can go red. I’m designed for the whiskey slums of Glasgow; not the sleep infused Balearic afternoons of Ibiza. The terracotta of the foyer of the entrance of the club seems to be a great place for us to wait for that elusive ‘someone sent to meet us‘. Rapidly losing my will to stand up, I move to sit under a tree whilst the rest of the motley crew of journalists and photographers turn up.

Whilst we wait I decide to have a look around and check the Privilege shop. It’s shut. I stare through the misted glass at the products on offer to clubbers. They’ve got some very nice thongs available. Makes you wonder, who’d want to buy a thong at a nightclub? Well, with Privilege having a capacity of some ten thousand, I guess it’s pretty easy to lose your pants and need another pair.

We wait around with Matt HarderFaster and Dan from Ibiza spotlight. We’re not alone however. There is an olive skinned presenter, with television eyes and a demeanour like chocolate ice cream floating around with her dread-locked cameraman. She is wearing a green blouse and a white skirt, a skirt so short it merely looks like ice cream on top of the crispy wafer cornets of her legs. No one really communicates with her so she finds a chair by herself and sits down, directly opposite me. I can’t help but look. I can see straight up her skirt. She is wearing horizontally striped ones. Surely she has clocked me checking out her smalls? I raise my eyes towards hers and she looks at me and smiles. Either she is the most cunning of flirts or she simply doesn’t realise. I decide that further investigation is necessary and ask her if she trained as an actress to get her TV gig. She laughs and tells me she just lucked into it; a story that was to become common to me on this island.

We stand together and the topic of water comes up. Ice cold water in glasses with some more ice, and as we’re shooting for the moon here, perhaps the glasses could be made out of ice too? It’s almost torture as one of the club workers brings up a whole load of bottles and sticks them on a table whilst we all just stare. Eventually I get the balls up the second or third time she walks past to ask her for some. She smiles and says “Of course, we’ve bought them up here for you anyway.” Perhaps the pressure of the moment is getting to everyone, or then again, maybe it’s just me.

The question I’d like to start with is this; you’ve obviously done so much with your DJ career and you’re regularly voted the world’s top DJ. Where do you go from here, what is there really next for you?

I always find new goals. I’ve found myself playing a residency at Privilege which is a real challenge, Amnesia had grown too small for me. Playing the O2 arena is a really big challenge too. I think that music-wise is where the difference will be in the next coming years. I’m going to develop my style a little more in the studio, get my productions a little tighter and really try to improve everything.

It’s interesting you should say that because it brings me nicely into my next question. I like to ask DJs and producers I interview where they see the Dance scene going next. I’d like to phrase it differently with you, as your such a big name, and ask where would you like to take the Dance scene?

Oh yeah! I have a whole plan. I can’t tell you everything about it. You’ll have to wait and see but it’s definitely going to be a different direction. Obviously my DJ sets will pretty much stay the same; there’s always been the Trance side to Tiesto that’s always been there and always will. I’m going to be working with different singer/songwriters on new music.

You have to be prepared to take things a new direction, I guess…

With DJing you have to always be prepared to improvise. Some nights I’m with a crowd and I can tell they want to hear the old stuff. As a producer you can make the difference. You can create new tracks and bring them out in your DJ set.

So when you play a DJ set, do you plan what you’re going to play beforehand, or do you prefer to get a feel for the audience, see how they react and read the crowd?

Yeah absolutely. I’m always improvising. The great thing about Ibiza is you can improvise, the crowd don’t want to go anywhere and you can play what you want.

Almost like you have a captive audience?

And they’re from all over the world. You have Germans, Irish, English, Dutch and Americans, when they come here their minds are open for this stuff. They’re not only there to hear the mainstream hits; of course, I have to play those as well but in between I can experiment and do what I want.

OK. I just wanted to take the interview off on a funny angle and ask you one personal question. So what’s your favourite pair of shoes at the moment?

These ones (Tiesto points towards the shoes he’s wearing) My silver Gucci’s!

You’re wearing no socks, don’t you find that makes your shoes smell?

Tiesto laughs

OK. These days as a DJ you’ve got a wide variety of formats to play on, like CDs, Ableton and Vinyl. What’s your favourite to play on?

Of course I prefer vinyl, but nowadays with the new techniques I can’t play vinyl anymore because it can take up to two months to get tracks. CDs don’t skip, you can make a track yesterday and play it on CD today; that’s the trouble with vinyl, you’re always behind. You can buy and download tracks off the internet and play them straight away.

With MP3s you’ve got what’s called a lossy compression format; that is to say that in order to make the file size smaller the endcoding actually loses a lot of the sounds, preserving only the sounds pertinent to the human brain at the time. Do you think that this detracts from digital music as opposed to vinyl?

Yeah, for me vinyl sounds so much richer than CDs. I think however that the new generation just don’t care, they listen to music on their phones, or on their laptops with those little speakers. I need a full system to listen to music but a lot of people don’t seem to care.

Do you think that’s because for a lot of people music has become this kind of fashion statement rather than something they love in their hearts… Because people don’t believe in music so much has music become a fashion statement?

I think it’s a bit of both. Everyone has a passion for music in their hearts, not always Dance music, but just music. I think if you don’t love music there’s something wrong with you, there’s so much around.

OK then, we haven’t got much time left so I’d like to thank you for finding the time to see us today, and end by asking which non Dance music acts are really catching your attention at the minute?

There’s two acts really, one is called MA3 and they’re from Montreal. The other is Sigur Ros, a band that I really love, totally different to what I do, but still a terrific atmosphere. I always love to listen to different kinds of music because I find it inspires me more than ordinary Dance music.

And bang! Like that, it’s over. There’s something really surreal about meeting such a big star as Tiesto. The time goes so fast you don’t have a chance to really to take anything in; everything is so important and you’re there to simply do a job.

As we walk towards the bus stop, the high of knowing you’ve done it subsides as you realise that you’ve got no one there to really share the moment with. It’s a strange, melancholy feeling as you walk away knowing that you’ve done the best you could with time given. It’s not like you’re a footballer being cheered on by your team, or you’re the tennis darling of your nation receiving accolade like water poured on a fire. Success can be a lonely place sometimes.

You can catch Tiesto all summer at Privilege. You can find more details on the stunning Hotel Garbi here, and buy tickets for upcoming Tiesto gigs at privilage on Ibiza-spotlight here.

DSIbiza Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4

Photos by Gee - www.geespot.net

Article by jacKofKats, viewed 940 times

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Posted Tue 29 Jul 2008

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Amnesia had grown too small for me

Deary me, that sort of comment highlights why I lost respect for Tiesto

yeh me to mate, comment like this is why i hate him!

will def not waste my time at privlege with tiesto! :P
Reply Quote
Posted Tue 29 Jul 2008
nice one jack great read again fella...
Reply Quote
Posted Tue 29 Jul 2008
davenewt said:
reminded me of Bill Drummond's latest take on music today:

am I being stupid here? I know of a DJ called Phill Drummond and he's the shit but who is Bill?
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
Bill

1970s: Illuminatus, Big in Japan, and Zoo
1980s: A&R man & solo recording artist
1987-1992: The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu, The Timelords and The KLF
1993-1997: K Foundation, burning one million pounds, and other activities with Jimmy Cauty
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
davenewt said:
burning one million pounds

Giving the turner prize winner double the turner prize payout for being the UK's worst artist.
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
Good stuff JoK, Tiesto dose come off as pretty arrogant.

Part 1 When can we expect part 2, dose he completely contradict all that he said in this one and turn out to be a selfless insecure DJ that still believes it's all about the music.
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
When can we expect part 2

Soon. Its the review of Priviledge.
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
Was it big enough for him.
Who laughed: Thai-Wronghorse, MagnumPI-Goatherder and jacKofKats
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Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
Quality interview, well done!
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Posted Wed 30 Jul 2008
I still think he's an overated cunt of mass proportion.
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Posted Thu 31 Jul 2008
davenewt said:
he made a few good points...............

Yeah, for me vinyl sounds so much richer than CDs.

Technically Dave this is absolutely correct the analogue to digital conversion that happens when a CD is pressed results in loss of low end Hz. Hence it not having as much base/richness, but if any audiophile can here a difference in a club after a soundboard has distorted the balance I would be surprised.
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Posted Thu 31 Jul 2008
im gutted hes there the night i arrive (at 4in the morning) and the night i leave (at 11) fucking suxks!!!

any1 gonna be there from next monday onwards??
Reply Quote
Posted Thu 31 Jul 2008
any1 gonna be there from next monday onwards??

osama's henchmen hopefully
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Posted Thu 31 Jul 2008
Technically Dave this is absolutely correct the analogue to digital conversion that happens when a CD is pressed results in loss of low end Hz

Yeah but actually because everything is recorded on digital equipment in the studio in the first place there's no difference. On the record all you've got is an analogue recording of a digital sound, which is, of course, still a digital sound.
Reply Quote
Posted Thu 31 Jul 2008
nice interview mate.

Roll on o2 arena next week, the man is a god
Reply Quote
Posted Sat 02 Aug 2008
wasi said:
the man is a god

lul.
Who laughed: MagnumPI-Goatherder and jacKofKats
Reply Quote
Posted Sat 02 Aug 2008

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