...whose creative capacity stretches to a full
artist album, so Paul Maddox deserves the fullest
praise for his engaging and inspirational double
album debut on Tidy.
However, his remarkable feat shouldn’t be
too much of a surprise to anyone who graces a full-on
dancefloor frequently. Paul has been at the forefront
of hard dance consistently since he was dubbed ‘one
of clubland’s hottest properties’ earlier
in the decade when he was the tender age of 16.
The wizard employs a variety of successful guises,
such as Abandon, Azure, O.G.R, Barely Legal (with
Guyver) and Olive Grooves, and has collaborated
on dozens of all-conquering anthems with the biggest
and best in hard music.
This illustrious list of DJs bedazzled by the Maddox
magic includes Lisa Lashes, Anne Savage, Andy Farley,
The Tidy Boys, Rob Tissera, Lee Haslam, Steve Hill,
Tara Reynolds, Ingo and Jon Rundell.
What is perhaps most exciting about this sonic
sensation is his ability to turn his hand to other
genres with assurance, style and ease.
Maddox enjoyed massive mainstream success and BBC
1FM airplay with his Azure creations, resulting
in remix requests from the chart-topping Data and
Positiva labels.
The latter released a memorable rework of Ferry
Corsten’s ‘Rock Your Body, Rock’
anthem which opened the on-fire youngster up to
a whole new audience.
As a result, demand for Paul’s presence in
the globe’s most hallowed DJ booths has rocketed.
He supported the Tidy Boys on two national tours
and has played all 12 of the Tidy Weekenders along
with a string of sold-out events for Polysexual,
Frantic, Dance Academy, Creamfields, Extreme and
I Love VC. And that’s just in Britain!
Paul’s passport has in recent years been
stamped from DJ jaunts to Norway, Canada, Ireland,
Moscow, Japan, America and New Zealand. Each of
these treks resulted in repeat bookings, the best
measure of any DJ’s success.
Two new tricks up the musical magician’s sleeve
are his acclaimed fresh and funky warm-up DJ sets
– in the vein of his Olive Grooves work –
and his highly-charged live shows, each of which
is a guaranteed exclusive set never to be repeated
elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the prolific producer’s frantic
work-rate shows no sign of letting up.
Already pencilled in for release before the end
of 2007 are two fresh collaborations with both Ben
Stevens and Paul Glazby for Vicious, a tantalising
team-up with Nik Denton, and solo singles for Tidy
and Vicious.