Tuesday, September 28, 2010

With the increase and decrease of the trans

Mark Ronson made his name first as a DJ and producer for artists such as Amy Winehouse, and solo albums were a unique combination of those parties and functions of recording studio. For the latter, "Record Group" Group Mr. Ronson shop in Brooklyn studio last summer with friends from local bands and the Dap-Kings, Antibalas and brought in more than a dozen collaborators, including D'Angelo, Q-Tip, Boy George, Simon Le Bon and Rhodes Nick from Duran Duran .
                                                                         

                                                                             
                                                               
What could have resulted in the album is a focused and unified through the work of Mr. Ronson produce a narrow and a mix of the rhythms of 1960s soul founded with Ms. Winehouse and synthesis of the new wave era. It is a kind of dance electric sound that made the 35-year-old) a big star in England and his homeland, although it is less popular in America despite the fact that he spent his childhood in New York and living here and now. "I'm not crying myself to sleep I do not play in the garden," and said that the gap in popularity. "We must remember that this is not my job today, and this is something amazing side I get to do." And Mr. Ronson, who was born in London and attended high school in a school group on the Upper West Side, with the magazine about his new album, which side of the Atlantic see the house.
The Wall Street Journal: You are famous for the voice of the Spirit '60s, but your new album that uses more of the synthesis of a flock of gulls.Mark Ronson: I come off work on the album Duran Duran, this will come later this year. Spending all that time with Nick Rhodes, and seeing him work magic with the synths, I fell in love with the textures. Everyone with synths automatically think of this soft-spoken. It must be some line of elegant melody. These sounds are very rich.
                                                                                   

                                                                            
 Wall Street Journal: The title track contains the lyric "I drive all over the city in a cart / can I get preferential treatment at the Marriott Hotel." Do you send up your celebrity? Mr. Ronson: It's kind of Eminem in this fashion is a terrible thing to say about yourself that you could say maybe before anyone else does. The Nick Hodgson of Kaiser heads in New York for a few days. It seemed as if depicting the culture of jetset DJ. I said: Do you make fun of me? "He said:" No, no. "I said:" Well, let's go all the way with it. "


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