Playing via Spotify Playing via YouTube
Skip to YouTube video

Loading player…

Scrobble from Spotify?

Connect your Spotify account to your Last.fm account and scrobble everything you listen to, from any Spotify app on any device or platform.

Connect to Spotify

Dismiss

Biography

  • Born

    6 April 1963

  • Born In

    Windsor, Windsor and Maidenhead, England, United Kingdom

  • Died

    17 February 2020 (aged 56)

DJ, producer and remixer Andrew Weatherall (6 April 1963 - 17 February 2020) was a key figure in UK dance culture. He was there at the beginning of UK club culture in the late 1980s, just as Ecstasy was changing the dance floors into something more open minded and loved-up. He was a founder member of the Boy's Own fanzine, which documented what was then happening in sarcastic, trenchant terms - contrasting harshly with the sometimes "fluffy" or hippie-ish rhetoric spouted by some caught up in the movement. The Boy's Own parties were considered a destination for the smarter set and for musical connoisseurs, unlike the lowest-common-denominator mega-raves which were kicking off at the same time.

Weatherall found initial acclaim with an audience outside the dance crowd when he remixed Primal Scream's "I'm Losing More Than I'll Ever Had" into the monster track "Loaded". He showed a talent for stripping music down to fundamental components and then adding something extra to turn it into something beautiful. His remixes with Primal Scream and production work on "Screamadelica" are breathtaking and so far in advance of the rest of the music industry that he had always been a maverick. His production work with One Dove provided one of the great early post Acid House "" albums in the melancholic "Morning Dove White", and he provided classic remixes for artists from Stereo MCs to James and Happy Mondays.

As the 1990s progressed and his DJ contemporaries moved into the "super clubs", playing formulaic and , Weatherall always chose to evade easy categorisation, playing sets of anything from to pure , spurning the huge paychecks of fellow Acid House veterans, but consolidating his reputation as a true music lovers' favourite. His clubs, including Sabresonic and Bloodsugar, became legendary and he continued to forge links with musicians both underground and mainstream. Later work - with his bands Sabres Of Paradise and Two Lone Swordsmen - took in , , , , and even and on the album "The Double Gone Chapel".

His first release under his own name - The Bullet Catcher's Apprentice was a return almost to classic values that he championed over 17 years ago when DJing at the seminal early house nights in London and around the M25. 2013 he released the first album with the band The Asphodells.

Always innovating, Weatherall was a modern legend, a raconteur, writer and polemicist as well as DJ and musician, who perhaps never really had the proper attention he deserved - but appeared to like it that way. He was a regular DJ on the radio station NTS.live.

On 17 February 2020 Andrew Weatherall died from pulmonary embolism in London at the age of 56.

Edit this wiki

Don't want to see ads? Upgrade Now

Similar Artists

API Calls