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audio fly
cassino & laben
chus and ceballos
pole folder
fretwell
lorenzo giannecchini
g pal
stefano greppi
madoka
m.a.s.collective
nico note
luca ricci
united tribal warriors |
New York-based
Mark Venneri has had a distinct vision of the future since he
was first introduced to the underground at a warehouse party
in Philadelphia in early 1991. It was just a matter of time
before he strengthened his love for the powerful music he
heard every weekend and decided to try his hand as a DJ, and
eventually, as a producer. Whether he was commanding a club’s
booth, molding intense soundscapes during a live PA or
broadcasting his college-radio show entitled Grooveshop, Mark
has always been a true innovator. While he remained relatively
quiet in these roles for almost a decade in the United States,
he felt it was finally time to take his unique sound to the
international masses in 2000. With his newly formed artist
moniker Madoka, he began his journey and hoped to achieve such
a goal.
Mark spent nearly a year refining the quality of his music and
crafting the direction of his original sound. He materialized
his ideas by the spring of 2001, and the creative
restructuring resulted in his initial body of work entitled
MyCity EP. With a solid production effort now under his belt,
he introduced his own uniquely deep, moody and throbbing
style--molding house and trance into a new, twisted formula.
As a result of shopping around MyCity to top labels and DJs,
he started to receive valuable feedback, including a call from
Plastic Fantastic Records in the UK. They seized the
opportunity and signed Madoka's first track entitled "Dive".
The tune would eventually be paired with a Mo Shic and Zidan
remix, and Mark used the accomplishment as creative fuel.His
next batch of songs was quickly picked up as well. "Cabaret"
was licensed to Vapourized Volume 3 and was signed to Dutch
label Deep Records along with the single "If We Begin". "Slightly
Forward" followed, and was handed over to SAW Recordings under
the exclusive Akodama name. The single was released to
critical acclaim in spring 2002, and the Trendroid remix was
licensed to Kinetic for their sixth installment of the
Transport series.
During this time, Mark was also thrilled to accept what he
considered to be the opportunity of a lifetime for his own
Private Reality imprint. In early 2002, he announced an
agreement with Andy Jarrod, Director of 3 Beat Label
Management, encompassing the manufacturing, distribution and
promotional details of future releases and becoming part of
the group’s impressive stable of leading labels. Although Mark
officially announced the creation of Private Reality back in
1998, and already managed to independently distribute 500
units of his debut EP entitled "Confessions of a DJ," he was
excited to write a new chapter in his label’s ongoing saga.
After the success of his first two Private Reality records
"Coppola," with its flip-side "Temperamental" licensed to
Slinky Planet: Tokyo, and critically-acclaimed "Mass," Mark is
building his label’s profile even more with a few fresh gems.
His own “Distant Memories” will see the light of day soon and
has been reworked by Matthew Dekay while young Dutch producer
Bart van Wissen, the label’s first outside addition to the
artist roster, will unleash his monster called “Unforeseen”.
Madoka is once again hitting the charts with new originals
signed to outlets such as Shine Music, while his upcoming “Plataforma,”
on Release Elements, was licensed to Kazell’s Driven CD. His "Altered"
and "Afterburner" tracks also appear on Max Graham’s recent
Shine compilation.
Building on the excitement of reworking Automagic’s “I’ll Be
Here” for Definity Records and Matthew Dekay’s monster “If I
Could Fly” in 2003, he will continue to establish remixing
credibility with his forthcoming interpretations of Bart van
Wissen’s “Unforeseen” and Pole Folder’s “Protected”. He is
also introducing his break-beat talent this year with mixes of
Blue Room Project’s “5B” and Powerplant’s "Turn It Into Gold".
Madoka continues to maintain solid support in 2004 from a
diverse group of upfront veterans across the globe such as:
Max Graham, Hernan Catteneo, Sasha, John Digweed, Sander
Kleinenberg, Mo Shic, Matthew Dekay, Steven Caicedo, Greg Benz,
Brad Copeland, Kazell, Sandra Collins, Steve Gerrard, Spesh
and Jonathan Lisle.
Additionally, Mark has received proper media attention as both
Madoka and Akodama with past reviews appearing in all the
biggest scene magazines and with interviews conducted on
several portal websites. He is also experimenting with new
musical flavors, hoping to introduce original material
produced under new pseudonyms such as Leroy Carroll, Clerk 33
and HHT. |