Louie Vega is
the Miles Davis of
dance music. Like the impossible to categorize Davis,
Vega is constantly reinventing himself; and revolutionizing the musical
landscape in the process. During his nearly two-decade long career,
Vega has
crafted some of the most ground-breaking singles in dance music history
(“The
Nervous Track”, “It’s Alright, I Feel It” and “You Can Do It”), kick
started
genres like soulful house (“Beautiful People,” “I Get Lifted”), and
revitalized
the careers of legends like Roy Ayers, George Benson and Tito Puente.
Born in the Bronx
in 1965, Vega grew up in an environment rich with Latin music. His
father,
Louie Vega Sr, is an accomplished jazz and Latin saxophonist and his
uncle was
renowned salsa singer Hector Lavoe (of Fania All Stars fame). Vega’s
musical
influences didn’t end with Latin music though: in the eighties, he was
a
regular at legendary nightclubs like The Paradise Garage and attended
Afrika
Bambaataa’s famous Bronx River Projects block parties.
In the
mid-eighties, Vega began
to make a name for himself as an up-and-coming DJ, playing at Bronx
and Manhattan hotspots
like Devil’s
Nest, Roseland, Studio 54 and the Palladium. He played with a raw
energy and
enthusiasm that reflected his passion for the music, and his sets were
refreshingly diverse, encompassing everything from Latin-Jazz and
hip-hop to
British new wave. Towards the end of the decade though, Vega became
disenchanted with the club scene’s increasing musical segregation. He
felt that
“People’s minds were starting to think in terms of categories.”
However, just
as clubland’s
creative lights appeared to be dimming, Vega’s soon-to-be production
partner
Kenny “Dope” Gonzalez began throwing wildly eclectic mobile parties in
his
native Brooklyn, whilst piecing together
productions
under the “Masters At Work” moniker. By 1987, the Masters At Work name
had attracted
so much attention that Todd Terry borrowed it for his New
York house classic “Alright, Alright.”
Terry, in turn,
introduced
Gonzalez to Vega and the two found an immediate kinship. Masters At
Work
productions soon took off, and innovative house remixes for the likes
of Tito
Puente, Saint Etienne and even Debbie Gibson sent the duo straight to
the top
of the dance music pile. Meanwhile, Vega’s seminal “Underground
Network” party,
at New York’s Sound
Factory Bar, created
the template for many a soulful house party to come, yielding house
music
anthems like Barbara Tucker’s “Beautiful People” and River
Ocean featuring India’s
“Love & Happiness”.
With the
Masters At Work sound
firmly in place, the mid-nineties saw Vega and Gonzalez pursue new
musical
paths, under a different guise: Nuyorican Soul. They introduced this
alter-ego
on “The Nervous Track”; a fiercely percussive groove that was not only
dance
floor-friendly, but musically sophisticated and engaging as well. A
subsequent
track, the club hit “You Can Do It (Baby)!” featuring George Benson,
helped the
project gain critical mass with fans, and after being signed by
influential
music maestro Gilles Peterson, Vega and Gonzalez recorded the Nuyorican
Soul
album. Released in 1997, the self-titled album brought together an
all-star
cast of musicians - including Roy Ayers, Jocelyn Brown, Eddie Palmieri,
India
and DJ Jazzy Jeff – to create an innovative, genre-defying piece of
music that
has proved to be both timeless and unflinchingly influential on the
dance music
of today.
Far from
resting on his laurels,
Vega has continued to push his creative impulses, seeking out an array
of fresh
and exciting projects to work on. 2002 saw the release of the Masters
At Work
album “Our Time Is Coming”; a collection of songs co-written, produced,
arranged and mixed by Vega and Gonzalez, who recruited a number of
friends and
influences to add to the sessions. Roy Ayers, Patti Austin, Blaze and
James
Ingram were among those who featured on the album, which again found
MAW at
their finest; whether it be on the Latin-Jazz of “Pienso En Ti”, or the
inescapable Soca beats of cross-over phenomenon “Work”. “Our Time Is
Coming” also
gave Vega and Gonzalez the opportunity to collaborate once again with
the
supreme Latin songstress India.
The result was the club mega-hit “Backfired”; a heart-felt,
introspective song,
penned by Vega and India,
and produced by Masters At Work.
Vega recently
embarked on his
most ambitious musical venture yet; his long awaited solo album
“Elements Of
Life”. Already available in Japan,
with a worldwide release forthcoming, the project takes the themes laid
down in
the Nuyorican Soul album and develops them further. Vega continues on
his
mission to break down musical boundaries; exploring, dissecting and
fusing
genres like Bossanova, Samba, Jazz, Salsa and Afro-groove. Born out of
his
intense desire to create a culturally unifying album that reflects upon
love,
family, spiritualism and social awareness, “Elements Of Life” is a
unique
musical collage. Vega hand-picked a nine-piece band for the project,
and songs
feature seasoned singer/songwriter/guitarist Raul Midon and rising
superstar
singer/songwriter Anane; as well as Blaze, Dimitri From Paris, Ursula
Rucker
and salsa sensation Domingo Quinones. Having already completed a
sell-out tour
of Japan’s
Blue
Note venues, and with a headlining performance at New
York City’s Summerstage behind them, Vega and
the Elements
Of Life Band are preparing to take their multi-cultural, multi-layered
musical
experience to venues throughout the United
States and Europe.
Vega is famous for the emphasis he places on live performance and
musicianship;
not only in the world of production, but in the world of deejaying as
well,
where he is known for bringing musicians to play live over his sets.
In addition to
his own album,
Vega has found time to produce the latest full-length offering
(“Venezuelan
Zinga Son”) from the Grammy-nominated Venezuelan dance band Los Amigos
Invisibles. After the success of first single “Bruja”, and their much
lauded
cover of Touchdown’s disco classic “Ease Your Mind”, further
collaboration
between Vega and Los Amigos, signed to David Byrne’s Luaka Bop label,
seems almost
certain.
Still
displaying an insatiable
appetite to grow and flourish musically, Vega recently co-wrote and
produced
“Release”, a cut from the unparalleled spoken-word artist and poet
Ursula
Rucker’s forthcoming album on Studio K7. He also had the honour of
recreating
and producing the classic “Libertango”, to be featured on a tribute
album for
the late Argentinean Tango maestro Astor Piazolla.
Aside from his
production work,
Vega dedicates two-thirds of every year to a rigorous DJ schedule,
which finds
him playing to thousands of people around the globe; in clubs from Mykonos
to Johannesburg. He still
plays
with an unrivalled energy and exuberance, and his innate desire to make
people
dance dominates every one of his sets, inspiring him to thrill and
excite every
crowd that comes to hear him play. Vega is currently preparing to
translate the
extraordinary experience of his live sets onto CD, in the form of his
latest
mix compilation “Soul Heaven”; which follows in the footsteps of his
much
celebrated “House Nation” and “Ministry Of Sound” CDs.
An ongoing
project for Vega is
MAW Records, the label that he, along with partner Gonzalez, founded in
1995.
Having released countless dance anthems from the likes of Masters At
Work, Roy
Ayers, Jody Watley and India, the label is progressing from strength to
strength; and continues to promote cutting edge music from experienced,
accomplished producers and young, fresh talent alike.
|