London, UK (Fabric) -- Genre spammers and breaks pioneers, Stanton Warriors (aka Dominic B. and Mark Yardley) met while working at the seminal garage label 51st Recordings. Natives of the Southwest UK and increasingly sick of contributing great work to other artists, they knocked heads, pooled resources and fashioned a pair of renegade tunes fusing the random playful hustle of nu-breaks with the sweeping good looks of early garage. It was to be the birth of breakbeat intelligence. They emerged the darlings of the remix set, serving fixings for acts like Basement Jaxx, Missy Elliiot, Artful Dodger, Busta Rhymes, Fatboy Slim, Chicken Lips, Azzido Da Bass, Mylo, Freeform Five & Apollo 440. XL pricked their ears up in 2001, signing the duo for the release of their full-length debut mix �The Stanton Session� later that year. It wasn�t long before their own brand of massive beats rolled clubs the world over harder than any sound heard before. �The Stanton Session� knocked off competition from
Fatboy Slim &
Deep Dish to win best album at the Dancestar Awards, and incredibly again at the Muzik Magazine Awards, where they beat the likes of Dave Clarke &
Danny Tenaglia. It also still remains as the biggest selling breakbeat mix of all time.
"When we first did press interviews we never ever said what our sound was; inevitably, the ultimate question would be: �What kind of sound is it, is it breakbeat, is it electro house?� The most we would ever say is that it was underground dance music, or fresh music or something along those lines. And by doing that, inadvertently we got to play on so many different kinds of platforms - we would rinse the festival circuit out because we would be seen as quirky, or a bit different. And we would play in big super house clubs more than in breakbeat clubs, because our sound would work with house. We did prog house clubs, and electro house clubs and urban clubs, and some bad boy 2step clubs…so from doing all these different gigs, from doing the Glastonbury dance tent to doing small intimate venues, we got to see all the different places that you can play. It�s nice to get that kind of universal feeling, that everyone can get down to your sound.” – Dom, Stanton Warriors
A battle in the most rock-star of sense ensued, leading the pair to their new home V2, where their long-awaited debut album �Lost Files� was finally released to huge critical acclaim. The included collaborations with The Beatnuts and Sway brought a new spin to the breakbeat genre, with music journalists once again caught short for how to categorise this up-front musical chameleon.
�FABRICLIVE 30� delivers what the Stanton Warriors do best: some of the best seamless boompity boomp boomp booty-shaking grooves ever cut to plastic. Slide Spank Rock up against Booka Shade, throw Old Skool Junx next to Deekline & Edd Solo, shimmy Freeform Five alongside King Unique, and create a genre-bending club ready mix of exclusive up-front breaks mashing special re-edits against a hiphopcumMiamibootyelectropunk landscape. It�s a line up of unusual suspects, yet still manages to echo pure Stanton Warriors, with the duo producing exclusive cuts, blends and re-imaginings, all with that special breakbeat work down.
“All the tracks on the Fabric mix are edited by etching stuff from loads of different scenes, putting our beats and other elements underneath them. Most of the tracks are ours though. The sound is sexy in a subtle way, it bounces like booty breaks does. I think a kind of late night minimal booty would be the word for it.” – Dom, Stanton Warriors
�FABRICLIVE 30� - US release date: November 14, 2006
�FABRICLIVE 30� Tracklisting
01 - Kerri Chandler - Planet Sonic - Large
** - Spank Rock - BUMP [Acapella] - Big Dada
02 - Peace Division - Club Therapy [Stanton Warriors Refix] - NRK
03 - Booka Shade - Mandarine Girl - Get Physical
** - Metric and Sick Rick - Bonus Beats
04 - Wahoo - Make �Em Shake It [Stanton Warriors Remix] - Defected
05 - Stanton Warriors - Bollywood Beatdown - Punks
06 - Claude VonStroke - Who�s Afraid of Detroit? [Stanton Warriors Refix] - Dirtybird
07 - Old Skool Junx - Flamed Up - Beats
08 - Stanton Warriors - Pop Ya Virus - Punks
09 - DJ Deekline and Edd Solo - Touch It Beats - Hot Cakes
** - Stanton Warriors feat. The Beatnuts - Shake It Up [Acapella] - Punks
10 - Chase and Status - Tricky - Bingo Beats
11 - Baobinga and ID - The Machine - Fat!
** - Stanton Warriors feat. Eska - Still Here [Acapella] - Punks
12 - Stanton Warriors - Night Mover - Punks
13 - Stanton Warriors feat. Rodney P - Dip and Get Low [Deekline and Wizard Remix] - Punks
14 - Freeform Five - No More Conversations [Mylo Remix] - Fine
** - Bass Kleph - Bonus Beats
15 - King Unique - To The Left [Stanton Warriors Remix] - Curfew
16 - Splack Pack - Shake That Ass Bitch - PanDisc
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