DJ Sharkey

DJ Sharkey (born Jonathan Kneath[1]) is a British record producer, disc jockey and rapper. As of September 2011 he is semi-retired from music production and performance. Sharkey has performed in the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Canada,[2] and Japan. Sharkey was born on 25 July 1974 in Plymouth, United Kingdom.

DJ Sharkey
DJ Sharkey performing at Vibealite 9th birthday on 4 October 2002 at The Emporium, Leicester.
Background information
Birth nameJonathan Kneath
Born (1974-07-25) 25 July 1974
OriginPlymouth, England
GenresUK hard house, hardcore techno, gabber
InstrumentsTurntables
Years active1992–2011

Career

Sharkey initially became known as an MC at "hardcore rave" events in Britain in 1993. In 1995, he moved into music production, teaming up with DJ Hixxy to release the track "Toytown", which proved one of the most significant signature tunes of the UK's happy hardcore style in the 1990s. This led both Sharkey and Hixxy to being signed by the UK's leading dance music label, React Music, and the pair released Bonkers, the first in a series of albums which has become the best-selling hardcore compilation series of all time. "Revolutions", a release on React, reached 53 in the UK charts, and Sharkey consequently released the album Hard Life in 1998.

Sharkey also produced mixes for Bonkers 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17. Volumes 4 and 5 achieved silver sales status in the UK with Bonkers 3 reaching gold status.[3] In 2001, Sharkey made his first appearance on the Eurodance compilation Dancemania series, at Speed 6, along with Hixxy.[1] He was also invited to mix on BBC Radio 1 in 2003, performing John Peel's Essential Mix.

Retirement

In January 2011, Sharkey announced his retirement from Hardcore and Freeform. He completed a final tour, playing in various countries around the world,[2] and then officially retired in September 2011. While Sharkey has previously stated that he has completely retired, his current status is under speculation. There was at least one instance of DJ Sharkey performing in 2015.[4]

gollark: Anyway, on the subject of voxel games, I've seen interesting researchy implementations based on sparse octrees, which seem pretty good for compressing worlds, if not processing them more efficiently.
gollark: (more than 4 cores on the mainstream desktop socket)
gollark: Higher core counts weren't really even around until 2017 when AMD actually started competing and made Intel do things.
gollark: Moore's Law is about transistors per chip, and I think is mostly dead now.
gollark: Although what was "high-end server" specs eight years ago is now "mid-low-end desktop".

References

  1. Unknown. "Sharkey". Discogs. Discogs. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  2. amwise (28 March 2011). "Dj Sharkey (uk) & Lenny Dee (usa) @ Heroes Vs. Villains !! - July 22nd" (Forum thread). Ravesound. Rave.ca. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  3. Staff (1999–2012). "Bonkers 3 goes gold (100,000 copies)". HappyHardcore.com. HappyHardcore.com. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  4. "TONIGHT: So Stoked in the Dark feat. S3RL, Sharkey, Dummy". www.facebook.com.
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