Artist's albums
I Feel Space (andrew Weatherall's Unreleased Dub)
2019 · single
Qualia
2017 · album
Evidence The Enemy
2017 · single
Consolamentum
2016 · album
Convenanza
2016 · album
The Phoenix Suburb (And Other Stories)
2016 · album
Guilty of Love (Andrew Weatherall Remixes)
2015 · single
Falling (Two Lone Swordsmen Remix)
2014 · single
2013
2013 · single
The Bullet Catcher's Apprentice
2006 · album
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Biography
Andrew Weatherall carved out a well-respected career in British techno. As a producer moving from the sounds of Madchester to downbeat to experimental techno through the '90s, Weatherall could've easily ridden the big beat (Chemical Brothers) or high-profile DJ (Oakenfold) waves at the end of the decade, choosing instead to pursue -- and in many ways define -- a more cutting-edge, IDM approach. He participated in two big-name collaborations appeared on Warp Records, beginning early on in the label's now highly respected run, and remains one of the world's most dedicated and top DJs. Weatherall founded a fanzine called Boys Own in the late '80s and soon established himself as a leading DJ in London's acid house scene. That association led to Weatherall remixing New Order's "Worlds in Motion" and, along with Paul Oakenfold, the Happy Mondays' "Hallelujah." Primal Scream, which at the time was a middling band on Creation's roster, sought out Weatherall for what would become the Top 20 single "Loaded" and production on the groundbreaking Screamadelica. The overwhelming success of Screamadelica led to Weatherall's place as one of the U.K.'s top remixers and producers. After a stint DJ'ing on London's influential KISS-FM, he ran two clubs in London, and in 1993 worked fairly extensively with techno-pop act One Dove. That same year, Weatherall formed the Sabres of Paradise with Jagz Kooner and Gary Burns, which released a series of pioneering ambient experimental techno singles and EPs on Weatherall's Sabrettes label (also collected on two Warp Records compilations). He went on to produce and remix several tracks by Beth Orton and, in 1996, form Two Lone Swordsmen with Keith Tenniswood and the Emissions Audio Output label. After working again with Primal Scream to produce the track "Trainspotting" for the movie of the same name, in 1999 Weatherall mixed the third volume of the Heavenly Presents: Live at the Social series. The disc showcased, as had become the norm, his finger-on-the-pulse awareness of electronic music both old and new, proving that a decade of work in the semi-spotlight had in no way dulled his senses. The years 2000-2001 saw two more mix records from Weatherall, as he and Tenniswood began the decade focused on DJ'ing across the globe. After issuing several more mix albums, his debut solo EP, The Bullet Catcher's Apprentice, which spanned from his techno roots to the rockabilly flirtations of later Two Lone Swordsmen material, arrived on his own Rotters Golf Club label in 2006. His first full-length, 2009's A Pox on the Pioneers, was just as genre-bending. In 2013, Weatherall teamed up with Battant's Timothy J. Fairplay as the Asphodells for the album Ruled by Passion, Destroyed by Lust. That year, Weatherall also began curating the annual Convenanza Festival, which was held in a castle in Carcassonne, France. His 2016 album, also named Convenanza, was co-written with longtime collaborator Nina Walsh. The remix album Consolamentum, which featured reworkings by Fairplay, Solar Bears, Red Axes, and Black Devil Disco Club, arrived later that year. ~ Aaron Warshaw, Rovi