DJ Entropy
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One day, when Ian
Scott was 8 years old, his father Vinnie, a guitarist since age 16, handed him
a 12-string acoustic guitar, and said, "Play, son".




And he did.


When he was 11, his father bought him his
own guitar, and by age 12, he decided he wanted to play bass. He played bass
in many bands throughout junior high and high school, playing gigs in various
punk, alternative, metal, and hardcore rock bands for up to 3000 people at the
early ages of 14 and 15, and recording in professional recording studios many
times from ages 14 to 17.



But he was never satisfied with just plucking strings.


At age 14, he got a Tascam 4-Track Portastudio
(a small, personal, home recording studio). He spent hours upon hours experimenting
with sound manipulation and the art of music recording. He released a project
of his music a year later at age 15. It was created with the 4-Track, one working
guitar, one guitar held together with duct tape, a bass guitar, some effects
pedals of his father's, a skimpy used drum machine, a keyboard, a small bass
amp, a microphone, and lots of unorthodox ways of recording. He would run his
guitar through the amp, and then run the sound through a paper funnel and a
PVC tube into a filled bathtub and mic another tube and stick that in the water
and run it back to the Tascam. He would half-tape down buttons on the Tascam
to get variable tape speeds while recording. He would hook up as many effects
as possible and turn them all up as far as they went, while overdriving the
Tascam to complete redline. He would hum into the pickups, or bang on them with
objects to produce desired percussion sounds. And so on. His tape was only sold
in small local shops on consignment, but did manage to sell about 200 copies
in the Seacoast, NH area. He was also asked to solely open for a large local
band performing his self-made material. This was, of course, not possible, but
it did give him a desire to perform solo at some point in his life. He always
wanted complete control over the music........


And
he would eventually find it.


Way back in the fall of 1989, Ian grabbed
a Seventeen magazine out of the trash in his 6th grade classroom. "Something
to read on the way home, I guess", he thought. When he opened it up though,
there was an article he could not put down. It was a lengthy article on the
"Summer Of Love" in the UK that past year, which was the culmunation of the
early Acid House scene. He saw pictures of 20,000 person events, with people
wearing crazy outfits, dancing all night to DJ's spinning "Techno", and taking
some crazy new drugs. "Wow", he thought, "I want to go to the UK and be a part
of this sometime!" Little did he know at the time, that that was just the BEGINNING
of the Rave Scene, not the end.


A year later, in 1990, he left WUNH-Durham
on in his bedroom; the college station for the University of New Hampshire.
There was a DJ on that station that would play early Hardcore, Japanese Noise,
and Ambient. He was transfixed by this new music, which encapsulated the essence
of sound manipulation and configuration. He listened whenever he could, and
would record the music whenever possible. He gathered as much of this electronic
music as he could, and the straw that broke the camel's back came in early 1992.
A friend of a friend had started going to Raves in 1991, and had accumulated
some various mixtapes. Two of these tapes were by DJ Overload, a DJ from nearby
Biddeford, Maine. They were both Hardcore, with one opening up with "Narra Mine"
by Genacide II, and the other containing such tracks as "Head Strong" by Awesome
3, "Positive Feedback" by The Clepto Maniacs, and "DJ's Unite Vol 3" by Seduction
and Phantasy. Ian fell in love with these tapes. He finally saw Rave Music spun
by an "actual Rave DJ", and not just played on a college station. This music
would cause him to see music in a new way, and as a result, would cause many
disagreements in the bands he was in at the time.


A group of his close friends began going
to Raves around that time as well, and would always ask him to go. He knew that
once he would go, he would never stop going, and so he waited. He helped hand
out some flyers around town for events in 1993 and 1994, yet he had never actually
gone. But the day would come, and it finally did.


January 14th, 1995: Ian attends his first
Rave, just three weeks after turning 17. It was called "Funrise", and was in
Portland, Maine, thrown by the now-legendary Kris Clark (KC & the Sunrise Gang).
As most people are, Ian was truly astounded by what he saw: new and crazy music,
people gathered in a place without predjudice, revolutionary ideas, disregard
for written laws, and basically a truly Tribal experience. He was also lucky
enough to see DJ Overload perform at this event, and was fixated on the tables
the entire time. This was the era of Hardstep Jungle, and the energy was intense.
Ian left that Rave with an even bigger appreciation of what new music and a
subculture can accomplish.


He went to a few more parties that winter
and over the spring and summer, and collected as much of the music as possible.
As he started senior year of high school in fall of 1995, he began going to
a LOT of events. His friend that took him to Funrise bought him cheap record
players from yard sales and wanted to make Ian a DJ, as he had extreme faith
in his musical ability in whatever he did. Ian gathered these record players,
and started buying records in the fall of 1995. His friends would buy him records
whenever they went to Boston to go skating, and he would travel down sometimes
and buy them himself as well. He finally had saved enough money to buy one Technics
1200 by the winter of 1995, and kept saving and saving and finally sold his
bass guitar and amp to buy another one in March of 1996. His days in bands was
over, as his personal ambitions for music was set on a much different goal than
anyone he could find.


He
had decided he wanted to spin Jungle, and would buy the craziest and most erratic
records he could find. He decided on the name "DJ Entropy", as Entropy was a
concept he had always liked, whether in the Chemistry, Philosophy, or Sociological
interpretations. The idea of matching up different parts of the music came suprisingly
easy to Ian, as he had experience in doing just that from an early age. Regardless,
he practiced and practiced and practiced and practiced, every day, for up to
7 hours at a time, and strived to inject his own musical ability into DJing.


He played his first house party that summer,
in his hometown of Portsmouth, NH, for a small group of people. Finally, Ian
had accomplished what he had always dreamed of doing: performing by himself,
without the constraints of other people. And he then released his first mixtape
called "I ate the Jungle" in August.


But
that was just the very very very beginning.


He moved to Boston to attend college that
fall, and the world of Rave was MUCH easier to get to. He lived a mere 5 blocks
from the Boston record stores, and was very close to all the weeklies in the
city. He continued to practice, and made a couple more mixtapes. He gave them
out as much as he could, and played many house parties and loft parties in Boston
and the area. Finally, he snagged his first non- house party gig, at "Energy",
on August 19th, 1997; the home of local DJ's Venom and Myth and run by Volume
Productions. Venom saw Ian as a promising up-and-comer DJ in the area, and gave
him a chance behind the tables. Ian went up and performed for his first paying
DJ gig, getting $10 and a decent-sized crowd. He was playing a mixture of Hardstep
and Jump-Up, mixed with cheesy 80's records; a style he had dubbed "Cheesestep".


"Cheesestep"
was a creation by Ian, as two things were happening at the time: One was that
Ian was needing more of a challenge in DJing, and non-quantized records are
much harder to mix than quantized ones......and also Jungle/DNB was getting
very minimal and moody and Ian perceived it as moving away from the happier,
hands in the air, crazy-type vibe he had fallen in love with it for. To solve
these two problems, Ian started really focusing on ideas that he had been playing
around with since he started spinning: mixing in non-Rave music to make Rave
Music more erratic and just plain wierder. This was, of course, done in the
early days of Hardcore to some degree, with sampling and the like, but the "fun"
and "no rules" aspect of the music had started to be lost as Jungle/DNB approached
1997. So Ian spent a lot of time trying to keep the happier side of Jungle alive,
at least in his area, and managed to be successful while doing just that, despite
much criticism from the Jungle/DNB scene.


He played a few more events in 1997, and
then quite a bit more in 1998, even landing a residency at a small club/bar
in downtown Boston in the summer of 1998, as well as playing all around New
England and even into upstate New York. His DJing "career" was picking up, and
it was only a matter of time before he made himself into a staple of the New
England Rave Scene, playing events around the area almost every weekend by the
summer of 1999, and even started to get slightly noticed outside of the area,
getting his first "flying gig" in October to Washington, DC.


But
something else was calling him. Something that had always been there, lingering.......


In June 1999, he finally got his own computer,
and loaded it up with over 5 CDs of music production software. He had dabbled
in his friends' studios here and there making Jungle, but he could finally produce
at home again. It had been quite a while since he had laid down a tune by himself,
ever since that Tascam met the fate of getting lost in the move to Boston. He
started spending many many hours with Acid, Soundforge, WaveSurgeon, various
software synths, and tons of assorted production software. He started producing
jump-up style Jungle tunes, and he would burn them to CD and play them off his
roommate's CD walkman plugged into the mixer at gigs. He did this for a while,
but Jump-Up was on it's way out.


Jungle/DNB had totally lost all of it's
Rave energy by 1998, and Ian needed something else. At the end of 1998, he heard
a sound that reminded him of his early days of listening to his friend's mixtapes.
That sound was Happy Hardcore. He started buying whatever Happy Hardcore he
could find and mixing it into the end of his Jungle/DNB sets. This went on,
and Ian would play more and more and more Happy Hardcore in his sets, into 1999.


By the end of 1999, Ian had completely progressed
into playing JUST Happy Hardcore, and had left Jungle's minimal, stuck-up, boring
style behind. By this point Ian was starting to get looked at heavily from outside
New England, and he was also one of the very few Happy Hardcore DJ's on the
East Coast.


He had also picked up a residency at Boston's
only all-night event, called Rise; a private club that had only been in operation
for a year. This was also his first opportunity to book DJ's that weren't just
local. In Feburary of 2000, he threw New England's first Happy Hardcore event,
which he called "Happy Hardcore Invasion". It was at Rise, and featured DJ Bezerker
from DC, a seasoned veteran of Hardcore on the East Coast. Ian felt an acceptance
in the Happy Hardcore scene that he had never felt with Jungle. 2000 was the
year of Happy Hardcore for Ian, and for New England as well. Ian started a weekly
outside of Boston called "Carousel", which focused on a different genre each
week, and he brought a prominent U.S. Happy Hardcore DJ there almost every month.
He also helped bring many Hardcore guests to New England for other production
companies as the year went on. To date, he has thrown 7 Happy Hardcore Invasions,
the first event with a Gabber headliner in New England with friend Lisa, and
2 parties called "Los Diablos" with close friend Jeff Gil (DJ Gil-T) of True
Productions, which were New England's first large scale strictly Hardcore, Gabber,
and Jungle/DNB parties.


Of course, Jungle/DNB made it's return to
it's Hardcore roots in the middle of 2000, and Ian started to see things in
Jungle/DNB he liked again. Old Skool Hardcore sounds and ideas, the things that
got him into the music in the first place, 10 years prior. He began buying Jungle/DNB
again, and started to mix the two genres together, which are two sides of the
same coin anyway. This was not to the liking of some in the Happy Hardcore scene,
or the Jungle/DNB scene, but as always, Ian did and spun exactly what he wanted.


He also started producing Happy Hardcore
in 2000, and finally released his first record in January of 2001. "Cheesestep
Recordings 001" it was called, in rememberance of his older Jungle style, and
featured two tracks: "Our Music", a straight up Happy Hardcore stomper that
samples the Smashing Pumpkins, and a darker, breakbeat "happy" Hardcore tune
called "Snowblind Entropy". Both tunes have appeared on mixed CDs and top 10's
of Happy Hardcore DJ's around the nation.


In early 2001 he was commissioned to remix
a tune for the soundtrack to Playstation 2 game "Summoner". Sadly, due to the
dot-com bubble burst, the company that was funding the soundtrack went under,
but it was Ian's first Trancecore production, a style he had dabbled with, but
never spent a lot of time on until then.


But by the end of 2000, Ian had begun to
grow weary of Happy Hardcore, and it's restraints. The unrestrictive nature
of Happy Hardcore that he saw at first turned out to be a lot more bogged down
in rules and stagnation than he thought.


He needed something else.....again.


He dabbled in 2-Step Garage (which he had
a short residency for in NYC at lengendary club Limelight), Trancecore/Freeform,
Techno, Electro, and even at one point, Disco House. He still, of course, keeps
up on Jungle/ DNB and Happy Hardcore, and even 2-Step Garage and Techno/Electro
somewhat, but finally he realized what he was searching for in so much music.
The essence of what brought him into the Rave Scene and what made him fall in
love with Rave Music in the first place: 1990-1993 Hardcore. Now called "Old
Skool Hardcore", Ian has spent his whole time DJing gathering old tunes from
those years gone by, but in late 2000, he really buckled down on spending a
lot of time and money finding old records, and has done so since. He now has
one of the best collections of Old Skool Hardcore in the Northeast, and is one
of the very very few DJs in the U.S. that gets flown to play Old Skool sets.
90% of his current bookings are for Old Skool Hardcore, and that is the sound
he enjoys playing the most. Whether you were rockin' out in jester hats and
shirts that said "Rave" on them in 1991, or attended your first event last week,
any Raver can appreciate the sounds of the original Rave Music that helped define
our Culture, and helped influence almost everyone making Rave music or spinning
Rave music these days.


His
productions have also taken a turn to the sound of "New Old Skool", a style
embraced by lovers of Old Skool Hardcore across the world. New Old Skool is
new Rave music, but made in the style of 1990-1993 Hardcore. Breakbeats, basslines,
stabs, kicks, and all the classic Rave energies, but done with new production
techniques and new ideas. Ian has a tune of this style coming out on a U.S.
Hardcore CD compilation next year, on WE Records, under the "Please Rewind and
Play Again" series. He also has a tune coming out on a New Old Skool CD compilation
called "Old Skool To Da Nu Skool 3", which is a smaller release based out of
London. He also plans to release another record soon, which will be an EP of
all New Old Skool Hardcore.


He has now spun in the following places,
at least once:


All of the New England states

Miami, FL

Tampa, FL

Cleveland, OH

Pittsburgh, PA

Philadelphia, PA

York, PA

NYC, NY

various towns and cities in upstate NY

Lexington, KY

Washington, DC

Baltimore, MD

Atlanta, GA
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