|
|
|
bars & clubs movie clock restaurants specials best of chicago film and video food and drink music and clubs stage style words sports features |
|
|
![]() Click for music events Mr. Bright Side Tommie Sunshine returns home in rock-star style
"People think I'm out doing forty-foot lines of cocaine, and
participating in Roman orgies every weekend--I mean that's not what it
is! I know that's what some people would like it to be..."
Is it any wonder that the reigning champion of DJs with rock-star
aesthetic has to deal with misconceptions about his life outside the
club? Inside the club, Tommie Sunshine's image is unmistakable. Looking
like Jesus Christ in a Cory Hart moment, Tommie literally rocks behind
the decks, with his off-kilter shuffle and waving hair creating the
world's most twisted metronome. And it works. Shuffling up nasty pop
remixes, German techno, squelching acid and rock from jock jams to the
Shout Out Louds, Tommie somehow connects the auditory dots to draw his
very own picture of a dance floor. Insulated from the public behind a
booth, headphones, long hair, beard and ever-present shades, one can
only wonder what's going on inside Tommie's head when all hell is
breaking loose on the dance floor.
"I'm not there to teach a class, I'm there to entertain," he
explains. "I've never premeditated a set that I've ever played. That
sort of spontaneity is what made me like electronic music when I'd go
out at the end of the eighties and early nineties. I try to reproduce
that same sort of environment when I play."
Before Tommie Sunshine, there was just Naperville native Thomas
Lorello, who crossed the divide from typical air-guitaring suburban teen
to jet-set-ready DJ by way of immersion into early Midwest rave culture
and the legendary Medusa's all-ages club. Eventually making a name for
himself in Atlanta for six years, Tommie returned to Chicago in 2000,
and as luck would have it, his collaborations with Felix da Housecat
would soon thrust him into the limelight. Yet Tommie's own image,
direction and taste-making reputation would germinate the popularity of
current popular club nights like Dark Wave Disco, which has regularly
featured DJs like Tommie Sunshine, Steve Aoki and Junior Sanchez.
"I think a lot of what I did in Chicago was really ahead of its
time. When I lived [in Chicago] for those four years from 2000-2003,
when Dust Traxx was doing a house night called Sweat up at Red Dog [Ohm
Nightclub's previous incarnation], I had the upstairs and was doing a
night called Electro Sweat. In the midst of the electro-clash era, me
and Jordan Zawideh were playing Italo disco, and early new wave, and a
lot of Adult. and Miss Kittin and Felix da Housecat and all that
music... and we were doing that at Red Dog! That was pretty ballsy and
ahead of its time. And I did another night called Degeneration at Smart
Bar and we brought in Greg from Kill Hannah and Princess Superstar and
DJ Unknown from Fischerspooner, and we mixed it up. It was Dark Wave
Disco before it was Dark Wave Disco...before it became more than
trendy."
Although Tommie speaks with satisfaction about his role in current
Chicago club trends, no trendsetter ever sits still, and perhaps
popularity is a difficult concept to grasp for a successful DJ who wears
his D.I.Y. aesthetic on his sleeve.
"The most punk-rock thing you can do is...I'm pretty much back to
playing house music, again, and I think that's subversive at this state
of the game because everyone is trying so hard to be eclectic."
Still an avid fan of hearing DJs spin, Tommie briefly mentions other
DJs and producers he sees playing a big future in electronic music.
"Switch is the king of electronic music right now," he enthuses after
citing Diplo for his worldly scope, and MSTRKRFT for "doing it well."
So what does the future hold for Tommie?
"My new fascination is with horns," he declares quite
matter-of-factly. "I've been talking [to production partner Mark
Verbos] about hiring a horn section." But before you worry about Tommie
going funk, he throws out a disclaimer. "My music taste changes
daily." This becomes apparent as Tommie literally gushes about finding
obscure Korean sixties prog-rock records while shopping with his
girlfriend. But for the nearer future, Tommie's geeked to return to
playing a big room in Chicago.
"I am very excited to come back to play Chicago and that [Crobar]
is giving me a platform to come back on a Saturday night and do it
properly. This is the first real proper DJ gig that I've had in a major
club in Chicago since I left. And Dark Wave is great, I'm not belittling
Dark Wave, but Dark Wave is not Crobar. Dark Wave is a specific crowd.
And I'm talking about getting to play for a Saturday night party crowd
and crush the place!" Flippin' the Bird with Tommie Sunshine at Crobar,1543 North
Kingsbury, (312)266-1900, on November 25 at 10pm. $20 presales available
at crobar.com
Also by Duke Shin Electronic Dreaming
Couples Club
Spin Control
Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
The Cex Machine
Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
Spin Control
Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
|
|
about Newcitychicago | about Newcity magazine | advertising | privacy policy | FAQ | employment |