DJ Shadow spent his teenage years in Davis, California and was a DJ at the community radio station KDVS. During his time as a radio disc jockey, DJ Shadow was significant in developing the experimental instrumental hip-hop style associated with the California-based Solesides record label. His early singles for the label, including In/Flux and Lost and Found (S.F.L.), were genre-bending works of art merging elements of funk, rock, hip-hop, ambient, jazz, soul, and used-bin found records. DJ Shadow is often cited as a leading creator of trip-hop, though this is a label he strongly contests.
Although he previously released a couple of original works (during 1991-1992 for Hollywood Records) by the time Mo' Wax's James Lavelle contacted him about releasing In/Flux on the fledgling imprint, it wasn't until his distribution association with Mo' Wax that his sound began to mature and cohere.
Shadow's first full-length work, Endtroducing....., was released in late 1996 to immense critical acclaim. Following the success of this album, he acted as a shadow producer for Rage Against The Machine for their album, Evil Empire. It is said he influenced the solo on their song "Bulls On Parade". Endtroducing... made the Guinness World Records book for "First Completely Sampled Album" in 2001. Preemptive Strike, a compilation of early singles, followed in early 1998. Later that year, Shadow produced tracks for Psyence Fiction, the debut album by U.N.K.L.E., a long-time Mo' Wax production team that gained superstar guests including Thom Yorke (of Radiohead), Richard Ashcroft (of The Verve), Mike D (of the Beastie Boys) and others. His next project came in 1999, with the transformation of Solesides into a new label, Quannum Projects. Nearly six years after his debut production album, his second album, The Private Press, was released in June 2002. In the same year, the movie "Scratch" (2001, Doug Pray) was released to DVD with DJ Shadow appearing several times throughout the movie.
The documentary films "Dark Days" and "Wisconsin Death Trip" feature music of DJ Shadow while "Scratch" features an interview and more music.
DJ Shadow has also collaborated with fellow artist Cut Chemist. Together they have made two CDs entitled Brainfreeze and Product Placement. These albums fuse jazz, funk, and soul in the framework of a cohesive concept. The second of these (Product Placement) followed a very similar pattern to the first, but using remixes/other versions of the songs in roughly the same order.
In the year 2004, Shadow released his feature length DVD, In Tune and On Time. The DVD features a live performance in London, emphasizing intricate visuals.
In 2005, Shadow released a Deluxe Edition of his first album, Endtroducing.... and a new album, titled "The Outsider" in 2006.
While Shadow's earlier works, especially 'Endtroducing.....', are known for their innovation in genres such as hip-hop, ambient, and trip-hop, his fourth full length album, The Outsider, had several tracks dedicated to Hyphy. This decision has been controversial, leaving many fans feeling alienated. DJ Shadow addressed this point in an August, 2006 interview, in which stated, "Repeat Endtroducing over and over again? That was never, ever in the game plan. Fuck that. So I think it's time for certain fans to decide if they are fans of the album, or the artist."
Also in 2005, Brian Udelhofen began work on the Shadow Percussion Project, an attempt to adapt some of the tracks from Endtroducing... for a live performance group. The result was largely successful and well-received by DJ Shadow himself.
In 2007 DJ Shadow was contacted by the Hollywood Bowl to do a show featuring Freeze with Cut Chemist. However, not wanting to repeat old material DJ Shadow and Cut Chemist came up with a whole new routine entitled The Hard Sell. In 2007 and 2008 they went on The Hard Sell tour and were accompanied on stage by two large video screens with visuals created for the tour.
Discography
Solo Albums
* 1996 - Endtroducing.....
* 1998 - Preemptive Strike
* 2000 - Dark Days
* 2002 - The Private Press
* 2003 - The Private Repress (Japanese Remix Album)
* 2004 - In Tune and On Time
* 2005 - Endtroducing... (2xCD Deluxe Edition)
* 2006 - The Outsider
* 2007 - The 4-Track Era Vol.1 Best of the KMEL Mixes
* 2007 - The 4-Track Era Vol.2 Best of the Remixes and Megamixes (1990-1992)
* 2011 - The Less You Know, the Better
with Q Bert
* 1997 - Camel Bobsled Race (Q-Bert Mega Mix) CD-EP
with UNKLE
* 1998 - Psyence Fiction
with Cut Chemist
* 1999 - Brainfreeze
* 2001 - Product Placement
* 2004 - Product Placement on Tour
* 2005 - Freeze
* 2008 - The Hard Sell
with Dan The Automator
* 1998 - Bombay the Hard Way: Guns, Cars and Sitars
The world
DJ Shadow Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
The clock on the wall is a quarter past midnight
I don't love you
Heading to garden of love, ah
Life come seeking of love, of love
Midnight, midnight, midnight, midnight
Now, now, now, now, now, now
Ah ooh
12 o'clock
Ah ooh
Rock rock rock rock the midnight rush
Ah ooh
Ah ooh
Now, now, now, now, now, now
Midnight, midnight, midnight, midnight
I don't love you
The midnight rush
Heading to garden of love, ah
Life come seeking of love , of love
Oh oh oh oh oh oh
Now now now now now approach now approaching now approach now approaching
Now now now now now now now now approaching midni-
Now now now now now now approaching mid
Now now now now approaching midni-
Now now approaching now now now now approaching midnight
The lyrics to DJ Shadow's "Midnight in a Perfect World" are repetitive and enigmatic, but they create an atmosphere of introspection and mystery. The opening line of "Insight, foresight, more sight" suggests that the singer possesses an exceptional vision or grasp of things that others do not. This is reinforced by the next line, "The clock on the wall is a quarter past midnight," which evokes a sense of timelessness and the discovery of hidden truths that only become apparent during the late night hours.
The chorus is almost mystical, with the repetition of the word "midnight" and the eerie background music that accompanies it. The sparse lyrics that follow, "I don't love you, heading to garden of love," create a sense of yearning and longing, but also of detachment and disconnect. The line "life come seeking of love, of love" could be interpreted in different ways, as if it refers to the eternal search for love, the elusiveness of happiness, the cycle of life and death, or simply the wandering and searching for meaning in a vast and complex world.
The second half of the song incorporates more vocalizations that create a sense of urgency and excitement, with the repeated "now now now" and the crescendo of "rock rock rock rock the midnight rush." The song ends with a sense of anticipation and excitement, with the singer approaching the elusive "midnight" that holds the promise of revelation and transcendence.
Line by Line Meaning
Insight, foresight, more sight
Deep understanding, perception of the future, and heightened awareness
The clock on the wall is a quarter past midnight
Time is passing, and it's late at night
I don't love you
A lack of affection or connection
Heading to garden of love, ah
Looking or searching for love
Life come seeking of love, of love
Life is always searching for love
Midnight, midnight, midnight, midnight
Reinforcing the late-night setting
Now, now, now, now, now, now
Emphasizing the immediacy of the present moment
Ah ooh
An expression of emotion or feeling
12 o'clock
The time is late at night
Rock rock rock rock the midnight rush
Creating excitement through music and energy
Now, now, now, now, now, now
Emphasizing the immediacy of the present moment
Midnight, midnight, midnight, midnight
Reinforcing the late-night setting
Oh oh oh oh oh oh
An expression of emotion or feeling
Now now now now now approach now approaching now approach now approaching
Building tension and anticipation
Now now now now now now now now approaching midni-
Getting closer to midnight
Now now now now now now approaching mid
Almost reaching the stroke of midnight
Now now now now approaching midni-
Still getting closer to midnight
Now now approaching now now now now approaching midnight
Finally reaching the late-night hour
Lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: JOSH DAVIS, PEKKA POHJOLA
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@koenmetekohy1296
All samples:
David Axelrod - The Human Abstract (1969) (the piano at 1:17)
Pekka Pohjola - The Madness Subsides (1975) (the synths at 0:08)
Baraka - Sower of Seeds (1976) (the vocals at 0:40)
Meredith Monk - Biography (1981) (that bass noise in the background at 1:10)
Akinyele - Outta State (1993) (the guitar at 3:40)
Organized Konfusion - Releasing Hypnotical Gas (1991) (the rapping that you hear at 0:00)
Meredith Monk - Dolmen Music (1981) (sampled three times in this song, the vocals at 0:13, 1:17, and 2:11)
Rotary Connection - Life Could (1968) (the drums at 0:26)
Sorry if I missed a few samples, as there are probably a lot of other samples in this song that I missed. This is only according to WhoSampled.
@colostomyJones
Stan 59 I like it!
Keep up the free associative interpretations, (them’s my favorites) cuz they’re bold attempts to paint with words— that which falls short of honesty when we build prisons out of rational, expository logic...
Even when we earnestly seek to translate our experience of listening to music into some sort of widely accessible coherence, the power of poetic imagery, surrealism, irrational incoherence, etc. can paradoxically have the effect of producing a more honest, coherent, grounded picture of that otherwise deeply personal, and impossible to truly fully transmit, experience!
Whew! What a mouthful, heh...
(Ever sonde I recently began responding to people’s comments on music on YouTube, I end up waxing grandiose and sprawling with prosaic, possibly pedantic, always obnoxiously alliterative assertions about my own feelings which I share with those to whom I respond.
Your comments validate my own listening experiences 👍🏽
Hope you feel subsequently validated; connected to your fellow human audiophiles 😉
Stay human!
@AlexTraitor
I agree!! Another great songs for me are:
Pretty soon i don't know what but something is going to happen - norma jean
slow gold becoming - thomas gilles
immersion highway - thomas gilles
twist - tones on tail
biscuit - portishead
pedestal - portishead
clams casino - culture shock (the version without rap "im god" is awesome too)
Maxine ashley - six underdround (original by sneaker pimps)
@CanadianPrepper
timeless classic
@lindafield6577
Just fucking WOW
@oriondurdaller3349
Yeah this is incredible
@carljames4862
zero 7 and portishead?
@ja.8077
Wasn't expecting to see you here😯
@awandanu
Go back to prepping
@MadMaxBible
This song made me realize and fully understand the power of sampling. A lot of people look down on sampling like it's 'stealing'. Nah, it's using building blocks to create something unique. It's always been. And this track is a perfect example. Giving the opportunity to people to make music that they would've never made otherwise.
@felins2294
i'd never understand the distaste for amazing sampling in music. it's a wonderful form of art in hip hop. albums like donuts by j dilla or endtroducing like this example are some of the most critically acclaimed hip hop albums of all time.
@rottingsloth6562
Word Up!❤
@MadMaxBible
@@felins2294 This distaste comes from people who listened to producers that were lazy. You know the ones that took a 16 bar chunk of a song and laid a beat on that and called it 'their own new song'. I get the frustration. Because sampling is not about that. The goal of sampling - to me - is taking already existing bits and pieces and going as far away as possible from their original context. Combine them, play with them, make them almost unrecognizable to make something completely new. There's nothing wrong with that. And to the listener - it's also a challenge to find where all those bits and pieces came from.