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Saturday, March 17: Diplo, Bonde do Role, Club of the Suns
One thing of which Diplo (aka Diplodocus, Wes Diplo, and Wes Gully)
cannot be accused is being afraid to experiment with new music. With
his mash-up mixtapes, he found and created a sound where his musical
tastes -- '80s pop, electronica, Dirty South hip-hop, and his major
influence, Miami bass music -- intersect. His attention-grabbing
projects Hollertronix, with partner DJ Low Budget, and the Piracy Funds Terrorism, Vol. 1 mixtape, with elusive British-Sri Lankan MC M.I.A.,
made a heavy impact on the alternative electro-pop scene, amassing him
rave reviews from music critics and indie kids alike, including Spin
magazine, which named him DJ of the Year in 2005.
Diplo was born Thomas Wesley Pentz in Tupelo, MS. Although he lived in
a few different cities in the South, he mainly grew up in south
Florida. He spent his youth in his father's bait shop, fixated on
manatees, alligators, and dinosaurs with hopes of becoming a
paleontologist. However, he wound up pursuing an education in film
studies, starting at a couple Florida colleges but then finishing up
his undergraduate degree in Philadelphia at Temple University in 2003.
Before his move to Philadelphia, Pentz had moved temporarily to Japan
to escape daily life in America. From Japan, he sent a demo tape of his
beat concoctions to Will Ashon, founder of U.K. independent hip-hop label Big Dada Records, and once signed to the label, he relocated to Philadelphia.
To support himself, during and after graduating from Temple, Pentz took
on a few different jobs in Philadelphia: social worker, after-school
mentor, movie theater employee, and gig-by-gig DJ. He was barely able
to pay the rent, and the frustration was stunting his musical
development (although he does credit one of his musical epiphanies to
the after-school students who exposed him to crunk and Baltimore club
music). Thus, Diplo and like-minded DJ Low Budget pooled their resources to start up their own club nights in Philadelphia, which they branded Hollertronix.
It simply began as a fun night of genre-warping dance music, but it
blossomed into an underground subculture drawing out crowds from all
over the East Coast. Under the Hollertronix moniker, Diplo and Budget released the highly praised Never Scared mixtape; it was listed as one of the New York Times' top albums of 2003.
The following year, Big Dada released Diplo's solo debut album, Florida,
a more downtempo piece focusing on melody and instrumentals that was a
departure from the melee of mashed-up vocals and beats. His unrelenting
work ethic produced a considerable number of acclaimed mix CDs and 12"
records; however, none of them accumulated more interest and Internet
chatter than the 2004 Piracy Funds Terrorism, Vol. 1 mixtape that introduced M.I.A.
outside of U.K. borders. Developing a yearning to produce more worldly
music, he also began to throw his energy behind the Brazilian youth-
and street-based music known as funk carioca (also referred to as baile
funk), a derivation of Miami bass music. So, it was no surprise that
when he established his own label, Mad Decent Records, around 2005, his
first signee was the funk carioca group Bonde do Role.
Becoming an internationally recognized artist, Diplo developed a knack
for championing new world music that seems natural given his dynamism
and boundless musical outlook.
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