08.03.2010 Lindstrom & Prins Thomas remix Roxy Music

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Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas just got asked to remix 'Avalon', one of the biggest tracks from Roxy Music, the legendary band founded by Bryan Ferry. Quite an honour, yes indeed! You can hear the result on iTunes. 

By the way, fingers crossed, because this Saturday we'll know if Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas have won a Norwegian Grammy award for their album 'II' that they released on Eskimo in 2009. 
The album is still available on CD, on 4LP (that one includes the CD too) and digitally.

 


03.02.2010 New Prins Thomas Album on April 4th, 2010

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ARTIST: PRINS THOMAS

TITLE: PRINS THOMAS

FORMAT: CD / DIGITAL DOWNLOAD / VINYL

LABEL: FULL PUPP

CAT NO: FPCD004

RELEASE DATE: 04 APRIL 2010

 

Prins Thomas is now intrinsically linked to the eclectic and often termed ʻcosmic-discoʼ sounds

emanating from his homeland, Norway. Alongside Hans-Peter Lindstrøm their eponymous debut

album and follow up II have opened up their tripped out sounds to a whole new audience of music

lovers. Having already garnered international acclaim for his own DJing skills the world over and

with a staggeringly impressive remix CV it comes as some surprise that after all that music and after

all these years, what you now hold in your hands is Prins Thomas's debut solo album!

To him, it doesn't seem like such a long time to wait for his first full-length. “I haven't really thought

about doing a proper solo album before, as just finding the time for my solo 12”s in-between has

been hard enough,” he confesses. “And I can probably count 50 remixes for each new 12” I do!” In

fact, rather than think about how long it took him to get to his debut, he instead perceives just the

opposite. ”The album came together quite quickly,” he informs. “The week after HP and I finished

mixing down II, I had a couple of ideas floating around and --having just had a good run in the

studio-- I was feeling really inspired.”

In some ways, it's as if he was training for this album his whole life. “My stepfather used to play all

kinds of music: the Cramps and the Clash but also Ry Cooder, John Martyn, jazz, classical music,”

he recalls with fondness. “There were always music magazines and books lying around, which

inspired me to learn English so I could read about more artists. I started saving my weekly

allowance for records. I can't remember buying a toy or any candy, but loads of records.” With his

young head filled with crucial albums by Bowie, Kiss, Abba, and The Beatles (the red one, the blue

one still a few years on for young Thomas), he would spend many a long car ride through the

Norwegian countryside to visit his father, “drumming on the dashboard or using the seat belt as a

bass,” he recalls with a laugh.

Soon after, Thomas took to real instruments and the music he heard on breakdance records

emanating from New York: “I started to DJ in my bedroom at ten years of age and then at the local

youth club. At the same time, I was playing the flute and then the clarinet in a marching band.”

Thankfully for us, the marching band didn't quite jibe with Hermansen's sensibilities. Instead,

traveling to visit his father in the small town of Moss, Norway via train led to the next step in his

musical pathway. “Changing trains from my home in Hamar to Moss, I used to stop off in Oslo and

spend the one hour between trains at the nearest record store. On these trips I discovered

crossover house stuff like Farley Jackmaster Funk and Todd Terry as well as Phuture and early

Masters At Work.”

Despite a burgeoning appreciation for disco, house, and acid music, Thomas was soon playing

drums, bass, singing in rock bands, skateboarding, and partying throughout most of his high school

years. An encounter with Pål Nyhus (DJ Strangefruit from Mungolian Jetset) at the local Club Zenith

got Thomas back into DJing music. After that club closed down, “there was really no place to do our

thing. So together with a few friends we threw house parties, often starting on Friday evening and

ending sometime on Saturday morning.” Through increased DJing, Thomas met Oslo's first wave of

nu-disco purveyors like Bjorn Torske and Erol, as well as international guests like the UK's Idjut

Boys and Maurice Fulton. From digging for records, he met up with fellow college students and

disco-heads Hans-Peter Lindstrøm and “Todd” Terje Olsen.

Lindstrøm, already an accomplished musician, asked Hermansen to remix a track he had recently

finished with female singer Christabelle called “Music (In My Mind).” Thomas's multi-part epic remix

caught the ear of Harvey and the Idjuts and as he recalls, “gave me a flying start and from there, I've

knocked out too many to mention.” Between Prins and his new friends Lindstrøm and Terje, they

began to focus on their trade in earnest, be it disco edits, remixes, or banging out original music.

“Instead of going out all the time we spent that time making music instead. There was no buzz for a

 

For more information please contact Jonas Stone

EPM PO Box 47264 London W7 1WX

T: +44 (0) 20 8566 0200

Jonas@epm-music.com

 

long time, just a bunch of friends helping each other out trying to build something naturally.”

Soon, whiffs of what Prins Thomas and Lindstrøm were cooking up made it out beyond the borders

of Norway and around the globe. “It had just been a project we did for fun, a possibility to collaborate

and get new ideas,” Thomas says in retrospect. “We didn't really expect it to get the kind of broad

reception that it got. What was supposed to be a little side project took over and after a couple of

years with intense travelling and a ton of remixes we both felt the urge to step down a little bit. It got

tiring focusing too much on one thing and we both felt the need to realise separate projects.”

Which brings us back around to the album at hand. Holed up in his Oslo studio, “with HP next door

and Terje across the hall,” this album showcases Thomas's myriad musical gifts over seven

sprawling, ever-evolving, head-nodding, navel-gazing, body-moving, mind-mushing tracks perfectly

assembled for an hour-long trip, almost all of it played by the man himself. But much like Ringo

sang, Thomas gets by with a little help from his friends: Lindstrøm lends keyboards to “Wendy Not

Walter” and in conjunction with Terje (on trumpet!) a funky bit of clavinet on “Sauerkraut.”

From the shimmering Neu!-like guitar lines of opener “Ørkenvandring,” we know we're in for a

kosmiche treat. Handclaps and a battery of percussion propel “Uggebugg” right into the groovy

synth-slithers of “Slangemusikk,” which fittingly translates as “snake music.” More double-digit

delights lie just beyond the opening tracks (including a shout-out to the mighty Wendy Carlos), but

why ruin the funky and sumptuous space party that awaits your head with so many of these words?

Okay, so just a few more: was Thomas nervous to finally finish his album and put it out there? “I had

a brief nerve-wrecking moment as I did the final mix, but I've always ended up going with my gut

feeling. The scary thing now is how inspiring it is to finally put out a bunch of my own stuff. Now I've

got tons of new stuff in the pipeline plus a couple of more dance singles lined up, too!” So, in the

words of the Winners, get ready for the future.

 

1. “Ørkenvandring”

2. “Uggebugg”

3. “Slangemusikk”

4. “Sauerkraut”

5. “Wendy Not Walter”

6. “Nattønsket”

7. “Attiatte”

 

Prins Thomas album launch party weekend:

12 March Full Pupp presents Ekstravaganza! @ Corsica Studios, London, UK

13 March Prins Thomas album launch party @ Bla, Oslo, Norway

 

For full Prins Thomas DJ dates please check:

 

www.myspace.com/prinsthomas

www.myspace.com/fullpupp


01.10.2009 october news

Upcoming Releases:
Prins Thomas Solo Album on Full Pupp is in Production Phase.
Remixes that are planned to be out sooner or later: Scott Matthews, Phenomenal Handclap Band, Cerrone, LCD Soundsystem, japanese rock trio Nissenenmondai and norwegian prog hero Alf Emil Eik

Prins Thomas is available for New Years Eve

 


31.07.2009 New Live At Robert Johnson mixed by Prins Thomas

Prins Thomas Live At Robert Johnson

Prins Thomas Our man in Oslo or a prince who became king. In the bland dance music age
since the end of the glorious 90s, only few such original characters as Prins
Thomas have remained. Full Pupp is the name of his label and together with
Hans-Peter Lindstrom he puts the renaissance around a disco that knows about
kraut rock and prog rock scientists, as well as around Motor City and the
convincing arguments of a Roland 909, in a nutshell. In the studios, he sprinkles
anything from the Junior Boys or Studio through to Justus Köhncke and Techno
classics on R&S Records with his lively drum-bass-organ magic.
Furthermore: a real DJ from head to toe, with snus under his upper lip, lollipop
headphones, stabilizing record weights, music from every decade and dive, and
the unrelenting wish to save your life and last night. In Ramona's sacred halls,
Offenbach's Robert Johnson, he already did that in such an impressive way the
first time he performed that the lady gave him a season ticket. Every time he
drops by, he will now have the feeling as if he were visiting old friends. And
they're more important than the money anyway, as we found out through Michael
Brody and his Paradise Garage.
Another much-coined phrase is saying a DJ set is a journey: through highs and
lows, sticks and stones, from loud to quiet, one genre to the next and through all
the various shades of grey that determine the fragile process of the night being a
success or a failure. If you ask Prins Thomas whether that is the definition of his
work, you get "the record case from front to back" as an answer, while he opens a
bottle of Rothaus Tannenzäpfle beer with his teeth and recommends you visit a
travel agent. Nevertheless, the versatile disco Viking (yet another cliché) leaves people
standing there with their mouths gaping. The second episode of "Live at Robert
Johnson" clearly proves this. Probably the only CD in the whole world on which
Ricardo Villalobos dances the "Afro Punk Reggae Dub" by Steel An' Skin with his
house band Cos/Mes, where a Playhouse classic from Roman Flügel performs an
acid test in the "Gallery Oslo" by Kåre & The Cavemen, synthie rock by Trans Am
glows like a fixed star, Bjørn Torske makes it clear twice who was the first to
polish the Norwegian disco ball, the Idjut Boys claim this title for England, Closer
Musik ease wistfulness and Sebastien Tellier argues about beard lengths with DJ
Harvey. 27 breathtaking gems, some of them affectionately edited by Prins, but
always with two hands, a Urei mixing desk, two CD players and turntables, the
mischievous Korg Kaospad as well as an in/out insulator, and mixed with that
unwavering DJ killer instinct of his. And of course everything is done live in one go
so as to evoke the feeling of a Viking longboat on a stormy sea. Because, never
forget: A club is not an intensive care unit. Or is it?


31.03.2009 Lindstrom & Prins Thomas II

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Scandinavian disco kings Hans-Peter Lindstrøm and Prins Thomas are set to release the follow up to their widely acclaimed eponymous debut this year.

The duo have had quite a journey since the release of their debut three years ago, with Thomas completing countless remixes and seeing his Full Pupp stable go from strength to strength, whilst Lindstrøm went on to release his solo cosmic disco opus, Where I Go You Go Too. Both of them have been busy in the studio together during their time back in Oslo, and the fruits of their labour are now finally ready for release.

Whilst Lindstrøm has always been one for using live instrumentation in the studio, Thomas' gradual shift into using more and more live elements in his solo work has meant that their second collaborative album, entitled II, has a much looser, organic feel than the first record. The original intent stands, however, as they merge their italo, Krautrock and disco influences into a lush singular whole, imbuing them with their characteristically warm production sheen. Released just in time for summer, it looks as if the Nordic duo are looking to compete for part of your personal sunshine soundtrack this year.

Some three years ago Eskimo Recordings unveiled their debut artist album release, Lindstrøm and Prins Thomas’s eponymous debut LP which captured the hearts and minds of the global music community, received superlative reviews across the world, catapulted the pair into the limelight and subsequently helped to put the words cosmic and disco back into the dance music lexicon. Now after various solo artist projects, Oslo’s finest return with the highly anticipated ‘II’ and a worthy successor to their ground-breaking first album.

It would be no small understatement to say that right now Hans-Peter Lindstrøm and fellow Norwegian, Thomas M. Hermansen (aka Prins Thomas) are two of the hottest leftfield dance artists around. Whilst Thomas’s roots come from a more dance/DJ background, multi-instrumentalist Lindstrøm provides the backbone to the pairs beautiful and melodic approach that takes their music from the dancefloor and into a looser groove that could fit happily in any home listening environment.

The pair joined forces in 2003, after mutual admiration and inspiration of each others productions. Lindstrøm as muso-wizard and Prins Thomas as the nu-skool remix-champ but they also share the same passion for collecting records and run their own labels Feedelity (Lindstrøm), Full Pupp and Internasjonal (Prins Thomas) from their Scandanavian liars. 2008 saw the release of Lindstrøm’s debut solo album ‘Where You Go I Go Too’ (Feedelity) which cemented his standing as a unique master craftsman (“a triumph of sound design, as impeccably crafted as a Starck chair” 4/5 The Guardian) / ”a modern electronic masterpiece” 5/5 Album Of The Month, IDJ Magazine) whilst Prins Thomas has also been busy running both of his labels, DJing all over the world, remixing the likes of Simian Mobile Disco and LCD Soundsystem, releasing the ‘space-disco’ defining ‘Cosmo Galactic Prism’ (“a gem” 4/5 Mixmag, “cosmic disco don” 4/5 DJ) double mix CD and compiling his own label’s ‘Greatest Tits Vol.1’ on Full Pupp.

Solo projects aside, they now join forces again for yet another venture into their own musical playground. While retaining a lot of the musical ideals and ideas of the first album it’s distinctively more organic, psychedelic, live and loose, which makes ‘II’ such a welcome return of a release. Featuring elements of italo, krautrock and disco-influenced productions alongside the production spark genius that defined those halcyon releases of the post disco/punk era Lindstrøm and Prins Thomas provide us with yet more lush basslines, sublime melodies and rolling rhythms bursting with pure emotion. Throughout you can find the experimental energy of the continental space-disco of the eighties which the pair still adore: melodic, synth-heavy and cinematic, with arpeggiated basslines set to organic, flowing grooves.

Lindstrøm and Prins Thomas’s sublime norse code continues to astound, invigorate and inspire as every twist and nuance is embellished with a warmth and glow few seem capable of capturing. The space-disco kings are back.


13.03.2009 New Album and 12" Single release

So finally we can announce the release of Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas new Album. The record is coming out on the 18th of may and it's available on CD, Vinyl and as a Digital Download. The Single release is on the 13th of april 2009 and will be available on Vinyl and as a Digital Download.


21.08.2008 New Album is coming soon

Prins Thomas and his partner in crime Lindstrom just finished their new Album. It will be released on Eskimo Records and  it's coming out  this fall.

So, keep your eyes & ears open.


05.07.2008 Prins Thomas: Adult oriented disco

Deep cuts, deep digging, deep passion: Norwegian DJ/producer Prins Thomas is very much a self-made man. RA caught up with him on the eve of his label's first compilation release to talk hip-hop, Wham and adult oriented disco...

Read the whole Interview on Resident Advisor

click here!


01.07.2008 Full Pupp Presents The Greatest Tits Vol. 1

2 CD compilation (one mixed, one unmixed) compiled by Prins Thomas. Coming out through WAS(except P-Vine in Japan) on the 7th of July.