J Saul Kane
J Saul Kane | |
---|---|
Birth name | Jonathan Saul Kane |
Also known as | Depth Charge, The Octagon Man |
Born | 1969 |
Origin | London, England |
Died | November 2024 |
Genres | Hip hop, breakbeat hardcore, electronic, trip hop |
Occupation | Musician |
Years active | 1989–2024 |
Labels | Vinyl Solution, DC Recordings, Electron Industries |
Jonathan Saul Kane (1969 - November 2024), usually known as J Saul Kane, was a British DJ and musician who has released recorded material since 1987 as Depth Charge and The Octagon Man, amongst other aliases. He was involved in the founding of record label Vinyl Solution, as well as owner of his own labels DC Recordings and Electron Industries.[1][2][3][4]
He was well known for his pioneering use of samples, particularly from cult films in the martial arts, Spaghetti Western and pornographic genres.[1] He also made tracks celebrating his favourite football team (Brazil on the 1990 single "Goal") and player (on the 1998 single "Romário").[1] Kane was often credited with inventing "trip hop" and "big beat";[5] he used kung-fu film samples before Wu-Tang Clan. His other aliases include Alexander's Dark Band, T.E.T and Grimm Death.[1]
As a confirmed kung-fu movie fan, Kane was involved in setting up the company Made in Hong Kong, which licensed Chinese movies, particularly those made by the Shaw Brothers. Many of these movies are examples of the heroic bloodshed genre (The Killer, A Moment of Romance). Made in Hong Kong was the first company to release Stephen Chow films on VHS in the UK.[6]
Kane died in November 2024 at the age of 55.[7]
Discography
[edit]as Depth Charge
[edit]Albums
[edit]- 9 Deadly Venoms (Vinyl Solution, 1994)
- Lust / Lust 2 (DC Recordings, 1999)
- Spill - Rare & Unreleased Tracks 1993-1998 (DC Recordings, 2002)
Notable singles
[edit]- "Depth Charge / Bounty Killers" (Vinyl Solution, 1989) (Bounty Killers reached UK No. 84)
- "Goal / Dead By Dawn" (Vinyl Solution, 1990)
- "Depth Charge vs. Silver Fox" (Vinyl Solution, 1991)
- "Bounty Killer II" (Vinyl Solution, 1992)
- "Hubba Hubba Hubba" (Vinyl Solution, 1994)
- "Legend of the Golden Snake EP / Shaolin Buddha Finger" (DC Recordings, 1995) (UK No. 75)
- "Sex, Sluts and Heaven" (R&S Records, 1996)
- "Disko Vixen / Alien / Airlines" (DC Recordings, 1997)
- "Romario / Blue Lipps" (DC Recordings, 1998)
- "Bounty Killer 3" (DC Recordings, 1999)
- "The Goblin" (DC Recordings, 2000)
- "I Dream (Depth Charge Vs. The Octagon Man)" (DC Recordings, 2003)
- "Mecha Squirrel" (DC Recordings, 2009)
as The Octagon Man
[edit]Albums
[edit]- The Exciting World of the Octagon Man (Electron Industries, 1995)
- Ito Calculus (DC Recordings, 2000)
- Magneton (DC Recordings, 2003)
Notable singles
[edit]- "Free-er Than Free" (Vinyl Solution, 1989)
- "The Demented Spirit" (Vinyl Solution, 1990)
- "Biting the Dragon's Tail" (Electron Industries, 1995)
- "The Rimm / Phonic Maze" (Electron Industries, 1996)
- "10ft Flowers" (Electron Industries, 1997)
- "Vidd / Zedd" (Electron Industries, 1998)
- "Toy Boxx (The Octagon Man vs. Depth Charge)" (DC Recordings, 2000)
Notable remixes
[edit]- Eon - "Spice" (Vinyl Solution, 1990)
- S'Express - "Nothing To Lose" (Rhythm King, 1990)
- Bomb The Bass - Winter In July" (Rhythm King, 1991)
- Midi Rain - "Shine" (Vinyl Solution, 1992)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Colin Larkin, ed. (2000). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 120. ISBN 0-7535-0427-8.
- ^ "DC Recordings: High Voltage". XLR8. 21 September 2006.
- ^ "DC Recordings". DCrecordings.com. Archived from the original on 9 July 2011.
- ^ "Archive: J Saul Kane interview June 2000". Consultthismusic.wordpress.com. 24 January 2010.
- ^ Piers Martin (13 November 1999). "J Saul Kane - NME, Nov. '99". Phinnweb.org.
- ^ Andy Crysell (14 March 1998). "J Saul Kane - NME, Mar. '98". Phinnweb.org.
- ^ Liberty Dunworth (19 November 2024). "Tributes paid after death of J Saul Kane, AKA Depth Charge: "A true trailblazer"". New Musical Express.