
Long before he started getting into hardware synths, as a kid in northwest Detroit, Shake was a drummer, although he told Resident Advisor in 2010 that he never had a hi-hat for his kit, and didn’t learn the instrument “correctly”. He was later taught how to DJ by friends Howard Fanning, Arnold Nevels, and Neicy and Altorio Upshaw, and won a mix competition on the Mixer Dome segment of The Electrifying Mojo’s radio show while he was still in high school.
The foundation of Shake’s own music was in sampling; using the E-mu SP12 digital drum machine and sampler, he drew from hip-hop techniques to develop his unique sound. “I seen Shake do some shit on the SP12,” Eddie Fowlkes says. “You only have so many seconds [of sampling time] to do it, but Shake had a rhythm with it. I was like, ‘man, you’re pretty good’.”
“Chuck D famously called hip-hop a ‘sampling sport’, and I was just trying to apply that to techno,” Shake told DMY magazine in 2012. “Derrick, Juan and Kevin all had their unique sound, so I knew I had to find my own unique sound, because I just had to be a part of it.”
Unsurprisingly then, alongside his skills as a producer for the dancefloor, Shake proved adept at making hip-hop. ‘Mr. Shakir’s Beat Store’ — one of the artist’s only albums, released in 2000 via German label Klang Elektronik — is a downtempo classic fuelled by crisp, low-slung beats and choice, deeply-dug samples. The track ‘On That Tip’, with its heavy drum programming and eerie keys, was a key selection on Craig Richards’ ‘Fabric 15’ mix. “If he’d pursued a more hip-hop style he probably would have been bigger, but he loved dance music,” Eddie Fowlkes says.
This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.