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ARTIST INFO

MSTRKRFT

 

There’s a punk disco party going in, and MSTRKRFT are ready to man the decks. JFK and ALP are here

to up the ante as rock’s merger with electro continues to incite, excite, and rumble its way into dance

charts the world over. They’ve got mad skills, fresh sounds, and they’ve developed a legion of loyal fans

in less than a year. Just who is the mystery duo?

 

MSTRKRFT (pronounced ‘Master craft’) is the project of Toronto musician Jesse F. Keeler and studio

wizard Al-P, two music-loving dudes who’ve been itching to make people dance as hard as they’ve made

them rock. The pair has been collaborating, on and off, since 1998, when Al recorded Jesse’s punk rock

band Black Cat #13. Though they went separate routes – Jesse taking a brief break from music, and Al

moving to New York where he worked at studios like Sound on Sound and Chung King recording artists

as diverse as Jay-Z, Wyclef Jean, and David Clayton Thomas – the friends remained in contact, trading

tapes of their individual, unreleased forays into dance music.

 

Al returned to T.O. in December 2001, going on to work at studios including Chemical and his own

Kimagure Sound, and becoming one of the city’s hottest go-to men for hip-hop, house, and rock artists

alike. His short-lived, self-described “weirdo” project Girls Are Short preceded the current, popular merger

of indie rock and electronics, influencing bands including Broken Social Scene who count themselves as

fans.

 

Jesse returned to music with the solo punk rock explosion Femme Fatale, enlisting Al-P to record the

many singles that ensued. This studio success naturally led to Al’s being at the helm early in 2002 when

Jesse was looking for fresh production ideas to compliment his new band, Death From Above 1979, also

featuring drummer/vocalist Sebastien Grainger. Jesse and Al worked 15 hours a day in the studio

together to complete DFA 79’s You’re a Woman, I’m a Machine, a red-hot masterpiece that fuses the

energy of rock and roll with the oomph of disco. Not only did 2004’s You’re A Woman... go on to receive

rave reviews from the likes of Pitchfork, MTV, Spin, Chart, Eye, and Playboy.com and spawn hit singles

like “Romantic Rights,” and “Black History Month,” it also gave rise to Jesse and Al’s resolve to start their

own project.

 

Enter MSTRKRFT, a shit-hot addition to the global community of sonic warriors currently smashing down

boundaries between punk, house, hip-hop, grime, electro, and all kinds of electronic experimentation.

 

“What we’re making now, we don’t know what the hell it is, but I know it’s danceable,” says JFK. “We

were hanging out in New York with Armand Van Helden the other day, talking about making tracks, and

he was like ‘As long as that thump is there, it’s fine and it will appeal to that audience.”

 

“So simple. So true,” laughs ALP.

 

MSTRKRFT is already proving this to be so. In October of 2004, the duo recorded their first remix for

release – a balls-to-the-wall rendition of NYC band The Panthers’ “Thank Me With Your Hands.” An

immediate underground success even before official release (the song was first included on a promo-only

Vice magazine CD), the remix was played in dance clubs, rock clubs, and made its way onto

compilations, including Plant Music’s prestigious The Sound of Young New York + Toronto.

 

From that buzz, MSTRKRFT developed both an immediate following, and a lengthy list of artists looking

for their remix interpretation. Reading like a who’s-who of today’s most prominent musical trendsetters,

this includes peeps like Annie, The Kills, Buck 65, Juliette Lewis and the Licks, Nine Inch Nails, and Last

Gang label mates Metric. The list doesn’t stop there, and the calls keep pouring in, largely because

MSTRKRFT have the Midas touch, turning originals such as Bloc Party’s “2 More Years” into chart and

dancefloor gold.

 

“We like to make the songs we remix our own,” JFK explains. “I think we approach it differently because

we’re not coming from a strictly dance background, and we always ask the question ‘How am I going to

make this something I would have made?’ We work on everything until we’re content, and feel like we’ve

inserted enough of ourselves to warrant having our name attached to it.”

 

Now, with the release of their diverse debut artist album The Looks, and its funkin’ fantastic, vocoder-

heavy lead party jam “Easy Love,” MSTRKRFT prove that they can make and mix rock and dance music

with equal abandon and precision.

 

“It all comes down to feel,” states ALP. “We’re interested in making people feel like they want to dance, at

least a little bit, so it’s all about whatever it takes to get people there.”

 

After months and months of stealing time away from other projects, and building their own MSTRKRFT

studio - already in-demand thanks to the boys’ skills and the studio’s tricks and treats, including its über-

warm 1970 Neve console – JFK and ALP are indeed ready to take people there.

 

The duo is raring to share their music – and more – this spring as they travel and tour as a DJ team.

MSTRKRFT will soon bring their sound to a city near you

 

“I love DJing so much,” enthuses JFK. “It’s so emotionally rewarding to see a room full of people dancing.

That’s better than any experience I’ve ever had.”

 

With two feet firmly planted in punk rock’s influential past, and two in dance music’s future, MSTRKRFT

are the now, wow.