SBTRKT

One of the world's biggest dance music stars is Sydney-bound in February

First published on . Updated on 4 Feb 2012.

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"I don’t think the face you’re born with has to be the face you perform with," says SBTRKT, summing up his music philosophy – which involves wearing a handcrafted, modern twist on a tribal mask to maintain anonymity. Born Aaron Jerome, he’s the latest producer to emerge from the UK's post-dubstep scene amid a flurry of worldwide publicity, and he’s done so by taking a back seat to his music.

Over summer in Sydney, his sound – rooted in bass-heavy dubstep, but taken in fresh directions – exploded on the club scene. He’s often compared to post-dubstep poster child James Blake, but aside from their initial inspirations, there’s very little to connect their sounds. "James seems much more into folk and traditional gospel, whereas I’m much more into my electronic and strictly UK-based genres,” Jerome says over Skype from his London flat on a rare day off from his ongoing world tour, which brings him to our shores in early February. "We come from different schools of thinking."  

While a hefty low-end does serve as a common denominator between the two, Jerome’s music as SBTRKT deploys more quintessentially British urban sounds. Pulling from dubstep, 2-step and UK funky, and injected with heavy doses of soul, his self-titled debut is an effervescent brew made from the oohs and aahs of layer upon layer of synths, the boom-clack-boom-boom-clack of syncopated percussion and the steady twinkling of cosmic atmospherics.

"Electronic music is about creating make-believe worlds with all these crazy synths, weird switches and everything else," the masked musician says. “It’s not really about the reality of sitting in front of an acoustic instrument and playing it with emotion and soul."

This idea of existing in a fantasy land helps explain Jerome’s use of the tribal mask. "Near the outset, there was this idea of when I create music it was just about putting music out and not having to promote myself to make the music be heard,” Jerome explains. “I think my favourite artists are people that have whole visions of everything. They’re people that seem to have a larger persona than just the music they create, and it all seems to fit together and intertwine.”

In this way, the mask has given SBTRKT that anonymity and helped the hype machine rev up around him. Even rapper Drake took notice, adding a guest verse to a remix for Jerome’s single 'Wildfire'. A celebrity endorsement never hurts. “It seems to open up people’s ears to not hear things in genre-fied ways and actually realise that regardless of where music is made or where it comes from, it can be appreciated by a lot of different people,” Jerome says.

Hearing Drake rapping over Jerome’s beats, you do sense that his music is as fitting for soulful album frequenter Sampha as it could be for an Usher or a Justin Timberlake. Many critics have said as much, most notably the BBC: "What we have here is the promise of this decade’s Timbaland." 

"Working on other people’s records or producing other artists seems an exciting way of creating new material and furthering my own ambitions as an artist," Jerome says of the possibility of taking on that type of a production role. But if he does it won’t be to rack up chart toppers. "It’s not about making tracks to get hit records as a producer; for me it’s just about creating exciting material."

SBTRKT plays St Jerome's Laneway Festival and The Metro on Fri 3 Feb

Words by Joshua P Ferguson

SBTRKT video

SBTRKT details

The Metro Theatre


Address
624 George St

Sydney 2000

Telephone 02 9550 3666

Price $41.90

Date Fri 03 Feb

Open 8pm

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