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The Sound of Mercury Rising Vol. II

11.3M streams

11,315,045

The Sound of Mercury Rising Vol. III

391.2K streams

391,244

The Album

132K streams

132,045

Anparh Desi

81.2K streams

81,230

Tu Meri Ki Lagdi

69K streams

68,983

Tere Naal

25.8K streams

25,832

Enhi Sohni (Miss Attitude)

16.9K streams

16,915

Ajaa Ve Mahi

10.3K streams

10,343

Departure Lounge

Bindrakhia Boliyan 2011

Biography

The music career of DJ Harvey (Harvey William Bassett) began inconspicuously, as a teenaged drummer in Ersatz, a post-punk band based in his native Cambridge, England. His earliest work can be heard on "Smile in Shadow," a 7" single released by the band in 1980, on his Leisure Sounds label. A trip to New York a few years later fostered his interest in DJ'ing. By the end of the decade, his effortless charisma and eclectic selections, translated through marathon sets as part of the TONKA Hi-Fi sound system, earned envy and admiration from aspiring club DJs. Word spread internationally, which enabled him to play in Japan and on Ibiza, while he also established Moist, an early-'90s venue in London's Covent Garden district that hosted the likes of Larry Levan, François Kevorkian, and Kenny Carpenter, among others. On a more commercial level, he took up a residency at London's Ministry of Sound, mixed the 1996 set Late Night Sessions for the nightclub's label offshoot, and remixed tracks by the Police, the Brand New Heavies, Super_Collider, and Ian Brown. During the early 2000s, Harvey settled in the U.S., specifically California, in part due to a visa issue. He remained in the States for several years, yet his image swelled through continued DJ work, sought-after re-edits and noncommercial DJ mixes, additional remixes for Electronic, the Avalanches, and LCD Soundsystem, and a profile-raising association with Sarcastic Clothing. Among many other outlets during the 2000s was Map of Africa, a partnership with Thomas Bullock (A.R.E. Weapons, Rub N Tug) that allowed him to indulge in his throwback rock frontman fantasies. Early the following decade, he drove the left-field house act Locussolus, as well as the neo-psychedelic band Wildest Dreams (featuring three members of Orgone), each of which issued an album. All the while, he continued to operate as a revered maverick DJ who projected the unique image of a biker/surfer type with a stylistically broad and free-spirited approach to his trade. Although he eventually abstained from alcohol and other drugs, his oft-circulated quote -- "You can't understand the blues 'til you've had your heart broken, you can't understand my music 'til you've had group sex on ecstasy" -- continued to accurately encapsulate his philosophy. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi