Tim Exile

Tim Exile (or Exile) is the recording alias of Tim Shaw, a producer and performer of electronic music spanning drum and bass, IDM, breakcore and gabber.

Tim Exile
Exile performing live at Campus Party Mexico, 2011.
Background information
OriginUnited Kingdom
GenresElectronic
Occupation(s)Music producer, DJ
Years active1999–present
LabelsPlanet Mu, Beta Recordings, Warp

History

A classically trained violinist, he began experimenting with electronic music aged 12, and gained his first drum and bass release in 1999.[1] In the following years he released mostly for the legendary Moving Shadow imprint, and John B's Beta Recordings, having met John B at Durham University.[2] After the completion of his philosophy degree, he went on to study an MA in electroacoustic composition at Durham. Perhaps unsurprisingly, his drum and bass grew increasingly experimental, and his debut LP (Pro Agonist, 2005) was released by Mike Paradinas' Planet Mu label, more commonly associated with the IDM scene.

Unsatisfied with the possibilities of conventional DJing, Exile programmed his own performance tools (at first using Pure Data and running into difficulties, he then switched to Reaktor) to allow improvisational live sets, which led to official work for Native Instruments.[3]

In 2009 he contributed a cover of a Jamie Lidell song to the Warp20 (Recreated) compilation. He also toured the US in late 2009 supporting and collaborating live with Imogen Heap.[4]

In 2012, at Sonar Festival in Barcelona, he teamed up with Jamie Lidell, DJ Shiftee, Mr. Jimmy and Jeremy Ellis to form Mostly Robot, a new collaborative project.[5]

Discography

  • Hanzo Steel Cuts EP (Mosquito, 2004)
  • Pro Agonist (Planet Mu, 2005) (as Exile)
  • Tim Exile's Nuisance Gabbaret Lounge (Planet Mu, 2006)
  • Listening Tree (Warp, 2009)[6]
  • Harmuni EP (Leisure System, 2013)
gollark: I don't actually care that much what low-level stuff the CPU is doing as long as it produces the right outputs in reasonable time.
gollark: Strings are mutable, you have to explicitly-ish manage memory, that sort of thing.
gollark: It's fairly low level versus, say, a garbage collected functional language.
gollark: In general I'd prefer to work in a less low level language, but <:bees:724389994663247974> it.
gollark: Rust is the closest I can get to a ML-ish language which actually has libraries and working sane build tools.

References

  1. "Exile vinyl, CD & digital download track discography at RollDaBeats". www.rolldabeats.com.
  2. "Marmite Pop: Tim Exile interview by Peter Hollo". 2 September 2009.
  3. "[rock the dub Interview]: Tim Exile". www.rockthedub.com.
  4. "WARP - News - Touring North America with Imogen Heap". WARP - News - Touring North America with Imogen Heap.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 21 July 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. Ranta, Alan (19 March 2009). "Tim Exile: Listening Tree review". PopMatters. Retrieved on 14 June 2010.


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