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Kurtis Mantronik |
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| Kurtis Mantronik | ||
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![]() Kurtis
Mantronik (circa 1988) from Mantronix's 2002
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| Background information | ||
| Birth name | Kurtis el Khaleel | |
| Born | September 4, 1965 | |
| Origin | Jamaica |
|
| Genre(s) | Old
school hip hop Electro funk House Breakbeat |
|
| Instrument(s) | Turntable Synthesizer Keyboard Drum machine |
|
| Years active | 1984–1991 1998-Present |
|
| Label(s) | Sleeping
Bag (Mantronix) Capitol (Mantronix) Oxygen Music Works Southern Fried Records Eye Industries |
|
| Associated acts |
Mantronix | |
Kurtis el Khaleel (Arabic:
خليل)
(born September
4, 1965),
known by the stage name Kurtis Mantronik,
is an American
hip-hop,
electro
funk, and
Contents
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Mantronik was born in Jamaica to a Syrian father and a Jamaican mother. He emigrated to Canada with his family at age 7, before eventually settling in New York City in 1980 at age 15.
While working as the in-store DJ for
Downtown Records in Manhattan, Mantronik met Haitian-born, Brooklyn-based
rapper MC Tee (
Mantronix's debut single, "Fresh Is The Word," was a club hit
in 1985,
reaching #16 on Billboard Magazine's
Mantronik's efforts on Mantronix: The Album and his impact on early hip hop and electronic music is perhaps best summed up by music critic Omar Willey's observation in 2000:
| “ | Featuring "Fresh Is the Word" and the new tracks "Bassline" and "Electro Mega-Mix," Mantronix defined the new sound of electro-funk. Mantronik used a polyrhythmic style, similar to West African log drumming, but instead of acoustic drums, the rhythm would be carried by the combination of electronic drums, synthesizer, vocoder and/or synthesized voice over a bass line completely played on the synth. No samples of James Brown here. This was truly electronic music: spare, funky and immensely danceable, an homage and simultaneous extension of old-school hip hop's electronic template that had started with "Planet Rock" in 1982. The feeling of Afrika Bambaataa, Grandmaster Flash, Kraftwerk and Neu all combined in Mantronik's music. It was a neat tie between old-school and new jack, and Mantronix had the field to themselves. | ” |
Mantronix's second album, Music
Madness, was released in 1986.
While MC
Tee's rhyming
style on the album continued in the traditional b-boy fashion of the
times, Mantronik's club-oriented production and mixing in Music
Madness tended to attract more
During the period Mantronix was signed to Sleeping
Bag Records (1985-1987), Mantronik was employed by the label in their
Mantronix signed with Capitol Records in 1987,
and released In Full Effect
in 1988.
In Full Effect continued in and expanded on the
hip-hop/electro funk/dance music vein of its predecessor, eventually
reaching #18 on the
Following the departure of MC Tee, rapper Bryce "Luvah" Wilson, and Mantronik's cousin, D.J. D, joined Mantronix for 1990's This Should Move Ya. Mantronik met Wilson, a fellow Sleeping Bag Records label mate, while doing production for Wilson's aborted solo project.
The album spawned two top-10 hits on the British
singles chart, "Got To Have Your Love" at #4, and "Take Your Time
(featuring vocalist
Wondress)" at #10. In the United
States, the album reached #61 on the
In a 1991 interview, Mantronik commented on the commercial success of "Got To Have Your Love":
| “ | When I did "Got To Have Your Love", I did it for a reason. I did it because I wanted to get a song on the radio. | ” |
Mantronix's final release, with vocalist Jade
Trini replacing D.J. D, was
Shortly after a European tour and promotion related to the release of The Incredible Sound Machine, the group disbanded, and Mantronik left the music industry altogether for seven years.
Mantronik dropped out of the music industry after the breakup of Mantronix in 1991. According to a July, 2002 interview with Hip Hop Connection magazine:
| “ | I dropped out of the scene from 1991 to about '98. I stopped making music because I was burnt out. I had to deal with some legal issues and it all took its toll on me. I started doing all this stuff when I was 17—I was working for the label (Sleeping Bag Records) day-in-day-out and I had no time for myself. Sometimes I'd stay in the studio for two or three days and sleep on the studio floor because I didn't want to loose the settings on the console...By the time we'd come out of that place we were green! I began to resent it and eventually started backing off from a lot of stuff. Then new jack started coming in and house started to take over. | ” |
Mantronik moved from New York and resurfaced in Britain in the
late 1990s, producing his first solo
album, the well-received
All Music Guide critic John Bush noted:
| “ | I Sing the Body Electro is that rare exception to the rule that influential artists should never attempt a ten-years-later comeback trying the same style their current inheritors have made commercial. Mantronik's production methods are completely up to date (and then some), resulting in an album that perfectly balances old-school sampladelic hip-hop with the breakbeat-energized dance music of the late '90s. | ” |
after 1998, Mantronik has produced and remixed tracks for pop, house and techno music artists and groups, such as Kylie Minogue, Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers, Victoria Beckham, Liberty X (who, in 2002, covered Mantronix's "Got to Have Your Love" from Mantronix's 1990 This Should Move Ya album), and Mim (the featured vocalist on Mantronik's 2003 EP release, How Did You Know).
In addition to record production, Mantronik has produced music
for the
Mantronik is currently signed to the London-based
record label and artist management company Eye
Industries and remains an active force in pop-oriented
| Album cover | Album information |
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| Album cover | Album information |
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TrickStyle
EP
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How
Did You Know
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Music
Madness
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In
Full Effect
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This
Should Move Ya
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| Mantronix |
| Founding Members |
|---|
| Kurtis Mantronik | MC Tee |
| Former Members |
| Kurtis Mantronik (1984-1991) | MC Tee (1984-1988) | Bryce Luvah (1990-1991) | D.J. D (1990) | Jade Trini (1991) |
| Albums |
| Mantronix related artists |
| Angie Stone | Wondress |
| videos lyrics discography biography article music mp3 gallery pictures |