Octo Octa

Maya Bouldry-Morrison, better known by her stage name Octo Octa, is an American house producer and DJ based in Brooklyn, New York.

Maya Bouldry-Morrison
Occupation(s)
  • DJ
  • record producer
Labels
  • T4T LUV NRG
  • 100% Silk
  • Argot
  • Deepblak Recordings
  • Frendzone
  • Love Notes
  • low income $quad
  • Running Back
  • Skylax Records
Associated actsEris Drew
Websiteoctoocta.bandcamp.com

In 2016, Bouldry-Morrison came out as transgender, after having already gained prominence as an artist.[1][2][3]

Career

Octo Octa describes her influences as including classic Warp records, IDM, drum 'n' bass, Los Angeles record label Tigerbeat6, and has been inspired by trans artist DJ Sprinkles (a.k.a. Terre Thaemlitz).[4]

While studying at the University of New Hampshire, she formed the dance band Horny Vampyre with her friend Jeremy, while also using the Octo Octa moniker for her solo experimental music.[4] Her initial solo productions worked within IDM and breakcore genres; it was only at the end of her college career that she began to produce the style of house music for which she is more widely known.

Her first EP release, Let Me See You (2011), came out through 100% Silk, the house sub-label of noise music label Not Not Fun Records. She has since had several releases, including the 12" EP Where Did You Go / Through the Haze (2014) on Argot, More Times EP (2015) on German label Running Back and Further Trips (2015) through Deepblak. Her first three albums have been released through 100% Silk, with the most recent being Resonant Body in 2019.

Personal life

Bouldry-Morrison came out as transgender in 2016. She recounts that this process began in 2012, when she read a Rolling Stone article about Against Me frontwoman Laura Jane Grace.[5]

Discography

Albums

  • Resonant Body T4T LUV NRG, 2019, T4T002[6]
  • Where Are We Going? HNYTRX, 2017, HNY-015
  • Between Two Selves 100% Silk, 2013, SILK046
  • LA Vampires 100% Silk, 2012, SILK031
  • Rough, Rugged, And Raw 100% Silk, 2011, SILK025

12"s and EPs

  • For Lovers Technicolour, 2019, TCLR030 [7]
  • Devotion EP Naive (3), 2018, NAIVE004 [7]
  • Adrift Honey Soundsystem Records, 2017, HNY-016 [7]
  • Aimless Skylax, 2017, LAX144 [7]
  • New Paths Argot, 2017, ARGOT019 [7]
  • Frndzne 01 Frendzone!, 2017, frndzne 01 [7]
  • My Feelings Toward You Love Notes, 2017, LVNO-09
  • Where Are We Going? HNYTRX, 2017, HNY-015
  • Further Trips Deepblak, 2015, DBR-V026
  • Requiem For The Body Stays Underground It Pays, 2015, SUIT 8
  • More Times Running Back, 2015, RB052
  • Where Did You Go/ Through the Haze Argot, 2014, ARGOT 009
  • Cause I Love You 100% Silk, 2014, SILK061
  • Oh Love 100% Silk, 2012, SILK023
  • Let Me See You 100% Silk, 2011, SILK011

Remixes Appear on

  • Don't Fear It EP Don't Fear It (Remix), Shewey Trax, 2017, shew-19
gollark: This is another maybe technically accurate (at an even greater stretch) but ridiculous interpretation. If people don't exist, it is not in fact possible to remove them.
gollark: This sort of thing makes natural languages quite annoying, but you can help by, well, not picking the most emotionally charged word which "technically matches".
gollark: If I say "that person is a criminal" you might very well have a worsened opinion of them, even if I know that all they actually did was jaywalking or something. It's technically not *false* to call them that but misleads.
gollark: Using a word which is technically right by a dictionary definition can be misleading because it has connotations which possible alternate choices of word don't.
gollark: They are important. Words aren't clear cut definitions like, say, mathematical objects, and the dictionary just points to some common uses.

References

  1. Coldwell, Will (2017-03-28). "DJ Octo Octa on coming out as transgender: 'Everyone was confused, then it was OK'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  2. Williams, Rachael (2016). "Octo Octa: "I'm so much happier out the closet"". Red Bull. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  3. Opperman, Derek (2017-03-22). "Risk Spaces: Octo Octa In Conversation With Terre Thaemlitz". Electronic Beats. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  4. Greco, Alicia (2017-02-18). "Sequencer Spotlights Octo Octa". Sequencer. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  5. Reynaldo, Shawn (2016). "Octo Octa: Between two selves". Resident Advisor. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  6. Minsker, Evan; Strauss, Matthew (July 24, 2019). "Octo Octa Announces New Album Resonant Body, Shares New Song: Listen". Pitchfork. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  7. Octo Octa - Discography - Discogs, Discogs, retrieved February 22, 2020
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