Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Mad Professor
View on Wikipedia
Key Information
Neil Joseph Stephen Fraser (born 27 March 1955, Georgetown, Guyana) known by his stage-name Mad Professor, is a British dub music producer, engineer and remixer.[1] He has collaborated with reggae artists Lee "Scratch" Perry, Sly and Robbie, Pato Banton, Jah Shaka and Horace Andy, as well as artists outside the realm of traditional reggae and dub, such as Sade, Massive Attack, the Orb, Gaudi, the Brazilian DJ Marcelinho da Lua, Grace Jones, and Perry Farrell.
Early life
[edit]Fraser became known as Mad Professor as a boy due to his fascination with electronics. He emigrated from Guyana to London at the age of 13 and later began his music career as a service technician.[citation needed] He gradually collected recording and mixing equipment, and in 1979 opened his own four-track recording studio, Ariwa Sounds, in the living room of his home in Thornton Heath.[2]
Career
[edit]Fraser began recording lovers rock bands and vocalists for his own label (including the debut recording by Deborahe Glasgow) and recorded his first album after moving the studio to a new location in Peckham in 1982, equipped with an eight-track setup, later expanding to sixteen.[2] Fraser's Dub Me Crazy series of albums won the support of John Peel, who regularly aired tracks from the albums.[2] Although early releases were not big sellers among reggae buyers, the mid-1980s saw this change with releases from Sandra Cross (Country Life), Johnny Clarke, Peter Culture, Pato Banton, and Macka B (Sign of the Times).[2] Fraser moved again, this time to South Norwood, where he set up what was the largest black-owned studio complex in the UK and recorded lovers rock tracks by Cross, John McLean, and Kofi, and attracted Jamaican artists including Bob Andy and Faybiene Miranda.[2] He teamed up with Lee "Scratch" Perry for the first time in 1983 for the recording of the album Mystic Warrior (1989).[3]
Recordings
[edit]
Mad Professor has created 12 instalments of the Dub Me Crazy series and 5 albums under the Black Liberation Dub banner. The following is a partial discography of his original releases including collaborations with other artists and remixes.
Original recordings
[edit]- 1983 – In A Rub A Dub Style
- 1985 – A Caribbean Taste of Technology
- 1992 – True Born African Dub
- 1994 – The Lost Scrolls of Moses
- 1995 – It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Professor
- 1997 – RAS Portraits
- 2001 – Dubbing You Crazy
- 2001 – Trix in the Mix
- 2005 – Method to the Madness
- 2007 – Dub You Crazy
- 2008 – The Dubs That Time Forgot
- 2009 – Audio Illusions of Dub
- 2012 – The Roots of Dubstep
Dub Me Crazy series
[edit]- 1982 – Dub Me Crazy
- 1982 – Beyond The Realms of Dub (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.2)
- 1983 – The African Connection (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.3)
- 1983 – Escape to the Asylum of Dub (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.4)
- 1985 – Who Knows The Secret of the Master Tape (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.5)
- 1986 – Schizophrenic Dub (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.6)
- 1987 – Adventures of a Dub Sampler (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.7)
- 1988 – Experiments of the Aural Kind (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.8)
- 1989 – Science and the Witchdoctor (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.9)
- 1990 – Psychedelic Dub (Dub Me Crazy, Pt. 10)
- 1992 – Hijacked To Jamaica (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.11)
- 1993 – Dub Maniacs on the Rampage (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.12)
- 2022 – Covid Illusion (Dub Me Crazy, Pt.20-22)
Black Liberation series
[edit]- 1994 – Black Liberation Dub (Chapter 1)
- 1995 – Anti-Racist Dub Broadcast (Black Liberation Chapter 2)
- 1996 – The Evolution of Dub (Black Liberation Chapter 3)
- 1997 – Under The Spell of Dub (Black Liberation Chapter 4)
- 1999 – Afrocentric Dub (Black Liberation Chapter 5)
Dub You Crazy With Love Series
[edit]- 1997 – Dub You Crazy With Love
- 2000 – Dub You Crazy With Love (Part 2)
- 2008 – Bitter Sweet Dub
Collaborations
[edit]With Lee "Scratch" Perry
[edit]- 1990 – Mystic Warrior
- 1995 – Black Ark Experryments
- 1995 – Super Ape Inna Jungle
- 1996 – Experryments at the Grass Roots of Dub
- 1996 – Who Put The Voodoo Pon Reggae
- 1996 – Dub Take the Voodoo Out of Reggae
- 1998 – Live at Maritime Hall
- 1998 – Fire in Dub
- 2000 – Lee Perry Meets Mad Professor
- 2001 – Techno Dub
With other artists
[edit]- 1981 - Kunte Kinte (with Aquizim)
- 1982 – Rhythm Collision Dub (with Ruts DC)
- 1983 – Punky Reggae Party (Positive Style) – Anti Social Workers
- 1984 – Jah Shaka Meets Mad Professor at Ariwa Sounds
- 1985 – Mad Professor Captures Pato Banton
- 1989 – Mad Professor Recaptures Pato Banton
- 1989 – Mad Professor Meets Puls Der Zeit
- 1989 – Mad Professor Feat The Man Ezeke Remix an Dub for Sheila Giles
- 1990 – A Feast of Yellow Dub (with Yellowman)
- 1995 – No Protection (Massive Attack v Mad Professor)
- 1996 – New Decade of Dub (with Jah Shaka)
- 2000 – The Inspirational Sounds of Mad Professor
- 2000 – Marseille London Experience (with Massilia Sound System)
- 2003 – Psychobelly Dance Music (with Baba Zula)
- 2004 – Dub Revolutionaries (with Sly and Robbie)
- 2004 – From The Roots (with Horace Andy)
- 2004 – In A Dubwise Style (with Marcelinho da Lua)
- 2005 – Moroccan Sunrise (with Borrah)
- 2005 – Dancehall Dubs (with Crazy Caribs)
- 2009 – Revolution Feat. Pato Banton And Mr. Professor (With Tugg)
- 2009 – Nairobi Meets Mad Professor – Wu Wei
- 2010 – Izrael Meets Mad Professor and Joe Ariwa
- 2010 – Frente Cumbiero Meets Mad Professor
- 2010 – Rewired in Dub (with Pama International)
- 2011 - Rewired in Dub (with Horace Andy)
- 2012 – The Roots of Dubstep
- 2013 – Cedric Congo Meets Mad Professor
- 2014 - Method to the Madness (various Ariwa artists)
- 2017 - In The Midst Of The Storm (Mad Professor Meets Jah9)[4]
- 2019 - Massive Attack vs Mad Professor Part II (Mezzanine Remix Tapes ’98)
- 2019 – Mad Professor meets Gaudi
- 2025 - Mad Professor Meets Youth - In The Name Of Love
Remixes
[edit]Since the 1990s he has remixed tracks by Sade, the Orb, The KLF, Beastie Boys, Jamiroquai, Rancid, Depeche Mode, Perry Farrell and Japanese pop singer Ayumi Hamasaki. In 1995 he produced No Protection, an electronic dub version of Massive Attack's second album, Protection. He has also created a version of I&I for New Zealand reggae band Katchafire, three versions for New Zealand electronic group Salmonella Dub and twelve remixes for Japanese musician Ayumi Hamasaki.
- No Protection – "Dub version of Massive Attack album Protection" (1995)
A second remix album with Massive Attack is slated for release in 2018
- Soul Coughing – "Sugar Free Jazz (Multiple Remixes (Most were released on the Sugar Free Jazz: Slash In-House Cassette))"[5] (1995)
- Black Orpheus Dub – Dub version of Black Orpheus for the AIDS-benefit album Red Hot + Rio produced by the Red Hot Organization (1996)
- Urrun Dub – Dub version of Fermin Muguruza's Urrun (1999)
- Salmonella Dub – "For The Love of It" (1999)
- Ayumi Hamasaki – "Who... (Who Dub It?)" from ayu-mi-x II Version US+EU (2000
- Ayumi Hamasaki – "key (ARIWA Dub Mix)" from ayu-mi-x III Non-Stop Mega Mix Version
- Salmonella Dub – "Tui Dub" (2002)
- Ayumi Hamasaki – "Hanabi (Ariwa Dub Mix)" from RMX Works from Ayu-mi-x 5 Non-Stop Mega Mix (2003)
- Salmonella Dub – "Mercy" (2004)
- Miss Kittin – "Happy Violentine (Mad Professor Smiling Orange Dub)" (2005)
- Ayumi Hamasaki – "Happy Ending (Mad Professor Remix)" from Ayu-mi-x 6: Gold (2008)
References
[edit]- ^ Mad Professor Interview – Sound On Sound magazine (UK) Issue: August 2007. Retrieved 22 April 2013
- ^ a b c d e Larkin, Colin (1998) The Virgin Encyclopedia of Reggae, Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0242-9, pp. 13-14
- ^ Huey, Steve. "Mad Professor Biography". AllMusic. Macrovision Corporation.
- ^ "Jah9 – Mad Professor Meets Jah9 - In The Midst Of The Storm". Discogs. 8 September 2017.
- ^ "Soul Coughing - Sugar Free Jazz". Discogs. 13 December 1995.
External links
[edit]- Mad Professor discography at Discogs
- Ariwa Sounds Website
Mad Professor
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Childhood in Guyana
Neil Joseph Stephen Fraser, professionally known as Mad Professor, was born on March 27, 1955, in Georgetown, Guyana.[1][6] Fraser's parents separated during his early years, with his mother remaining in Guyana and his father relocating to the United Kingdom, where he worked as a lab technician at Charing Cross Hospital.[7] As a child in Guyana, Fraser exhibited a strong curiosity for electronics, tinkering with devices in an environment where such pursuits were uncommon for young boys in the region.[8] He spent his formative childhood in Guyana until age 13, when he moved to London in 1968 to live with his father, marking the end of his time in his birthplace.[9][1] This early exposure to technical experimentation laid foundational skills that later influenced his career in music production, though specific details on family life or schooling in Guyana remain sparse in available accounts.[10]Move to the United Kingdom
In the late 1960s, Neil Fraser's parents emigrated from Guyana to the United Kingdom seeking improved employment prospects, prompting the family relocation amid post-colonial economic shifts in the Caribbean.[7] Fraser himself joined them at approximately age 13, arriving in London around 1968, though some accounts place the move at age 15 in 1970.[7][1][11] The family settled in the south London suburb of Thornton Heath, a working-class area with a growing Caribbean immigrant community that provided cultural continuity through local soundsystems and reggae scenes.[7] This migration aligned with broader patterns of West Indian movement to Britain following the 1948 British Nationality Act, which facilitated Commonwealth citizens' entry but later faced restrictions under 1962 and 1968 immigration laws amid rising racial tensions.[11] Upon arrival, Fraser encountered a stark urban contrast to Guyana's rural Georgetown upbringing, immersing in London's electronics repair shops where his early fascination with circuitry deepened, influenced by his father's similar interests.[10][1] The move exposed him to the UK's burgeoning reggae infrastructure, including record shops and studios in areas like Brixton, laying groundwork for his technical pursuits despite initial challenges of adaptation in a racially charged environment marked by events like the 1976 Notting Hill Carnival clashes.[11]Career Development
Initial Involvement in Music
Neil Fraser, professionally known as Mad Professor, entered the music scene leveraging his background in electronics after immigrating to London from Guyana in the late 1960s. He initially worked as a service technician repairing and modifying audio equipment, which allowed him to accumulate components for personal projects while influenced by Jamaican dub pioneers like King Tubby and Lee Perry.[1][12] In the mid-1970s, at around age 21, Fraser built his first rudimentary studio in a 12x16-foot room divided into live and control areas, featuring a custom-built four-channel mixer and a Tascam 3440 four-track tape recorder sourced affordably. This setup enabled him to experiment with recording and dub techniques on weekends, initially while maintaining a day job, as he analyzed imported reggae records for their production methods.[12][13] By the late 1970s, Fraser had formalized his operations by establishing Ariwa Sound Studios in his Thornton Heath home at 19 Bruce Road, using salvaged gear including a Teac 3440 and homemade reverb units to record emerging local talent such as Rockaway and Sister Audrey. He offered dub mixing services to rock bands and reggae acts, marking his shift toward hands-on production amid London's growing reggae scene.[7][12] Music production turned professional for Fraser around 1979, coinciding with the founding of the Ariwa Sounds label; his debut release that year, "Come Back Again" by Sgt Pepper—recorded after encountering the artist at a Brixton gig—drew initial attention from black musicians seeking specialized reggae facilities unavailable elsewhere in the UK. This period laid the groundwork for his dub-focused output, with demand building as word spread in South London's Caribbean communities.[13][7]Establishment of Ariwa Sounds
In 1979, Neil Fraser, known professionally as Mad Professor, founded Ariwa Sounds as both a recording studio and record label in the front room of his home in Thornton Heath, South London. The name "Ariwa" derives from the Yoruba word ariwo, signifying "communication" or "sound system," reflecting Fraser's intent to foster musical exchange within the reggae and dub communities. Starting with rudimentary equipment, including a custom-built mixing desk constructed by Fraser himself and an initial 4-track setup, the studio was designed from the outset for efficient dub production, with permanent wiring to streamline mixing processes.[7][3][14] This establishment represented Fraser's evolution from repairing audio gear for other artists to independent operation, drawing on his self-taught engineering skills honed since arriving in the UK from Guyana in the early 1970s. Influenced by dub innovators like Lee "Scratch" Perry, for whom he had worked as a technician, Fraser prioritized analogue technology and hands-on customization over commercial studio norms, enabling rapid experimentation with effects and versioning. Ariwa quickly became a hub for UK-based reggae talents, producing early sessions that captured the raw energy of lovers rock and dub during the late 1970s transition to the 1980s.[12][1][10] The label's inaugural releases, compiled later in collections like Ariwa Sounds: The Early Sessions (originally recorded 1979–1981), showcased Fraser's production style, emphasizing heavy bass, echo, and reverb without relying on digital enhancements. By formalizing Ariwa, Fraser not only controlled his creative output but also supported emerging artists, laying the foundation for series such as [Dub Me Crazy](/page/Dub Me Crazy), though initial growth was constrained by the home-based setup until subsequent relocations to larger premises like Gautrey Road.[15][16][17]Production Techniques
Studio Setup and Equipment
Mad Professor initiated Ariwa Sounds in 1979 within the front room of his South London home, employing a self-constructed four-track mixing desk alongside a Teac 3440 quarter-inch tape machine for basic multitrack recording.[7] He supplemented this with homemade effects, including a spring reverb unit derived from Practical Electronics magazine schematics and a fixed-delay echo processor adapted from an Akai STS4000.[12] These early custom builds reflected his electronics background, enabling rudimentary dub experimentation without commercial studio access.[1] As Ariwa expanded, the setup relocated in 1982 to a Peckham basement, incorporating 24-track capabilities via an Ampex MM1000 machine, later upgraded to an Ampex 1100 sourced from Virgin Studios in 1984.[7] By the mid-1980s, further enhancements included Otari MTR90 and Studer A800/A820 24-track recorders, alongside Sony APR5000 stereo mastering units, prioritizing analogue tape for its sonic depth in reggae and dub productions.[12][16] A Soundcraft Series II console served initial mixing needs, customized by Mad Professor for enhanced EQ flexibility, such as ±15 dB boost at 60 Hz and extended high-frequency response up to 22 kHz.[1] In 2003, the studio adopted an SSL SL 4000 E 48-channel analogue console as its core, valued for clean signal paths, inline processing, and auxiliary sends tailored to live dub performance techniques.[1][16][18] This setup supports permanent effects routing, eschewing digital audio workstations in favor of tape-based workflows to preserve analogue warmth and immediacy.[1] Effects integration remains central, with the Lexicon 480L digital reverb—deployed since the early 1980s and retained for over two decades—hardwired to the primary stereo auxiliary for immersive spatial effects in mixes.[12][1] Mad Professor utilizes up to six Roland SDE-3000 mono digital delays, introduced from 1984 onward, for their precise, "magic" echo qualities superior to tape-based alternatives in controlled dub applications.[12][18] Additional processors encompass MXR phasers (vintage units for subtle modulation on overheads), Grampian and ART spring reverbs, Drawmer DS201 gates, Urei LA4 and 1176 compressors, and DBX units, often modified for dub's dynamic automation needs.[12][16] A secondary facility, Are We Mad studio opened in 1996, featured 1970s-era gear like Fostex 16-track recorders and a 52-channel Soundcraft desk to evoke vintage tones, though it later closed.[7][16] Throughout, Mad Professor's preference for self-built and analogue-centric equipment underscores a commitment to tactile, performance-oriented production over digital precision.[1]Approach to Dub Mixing
Mad Professor's approach to dub mixing emphasizes analog techniques and real-time performance, treating the process as a creative extension of the original rhythm track where the engineer imposes a personal signature. He strips down vocal and instrumental elements from source material, rebuilding versions through live manipulation rather than fixed presets, adapting methods to each track's inherent strengths.[1][12] This fluid, improvisational style draws from pioneers like King Tubby, focusing on strong foundational rhythms as the basis for dub construction.[12][19] Central to his technique is the use of feedback loops implemented variably—via auxiliary sends or console channels—for dynamic effects application, allowing for spontaneous "tricks" during mixing.[12] He prioritizes echo and reverb, selecting durations based on the desired spatial depth (e.g., short echoes for tightness or long ones for expansiveness), often pushing these to extremes like reverses or heavy phasing to engage listeners.[12][3] All mixes culminate on analog tape, even when starting from digital sources, which he transfers to tape first to infuse warmth and enable phase manipulations unavailable in digital domains.[1][3] Equipment choices reinforce his analog philosophy, featuring consoles like the SSL SL 4000 E for routing flexibility or Soundcraft Series TWO for deep low-end EQ (±15 dB at 60 Hz).[1] Key effects include multiple Roland SDE-3000 digital delays (in use since 1984) for precise timing, Lexicon 480L reverbs, and custom-modified Revox machines or Grampian springs for organic echoes, avoiding tape echoes like Roland Space Echo due to inconsistencies.[1][12] He eschews computers and sampling, viewing them as limiting compared to analog's "limitless" potential for sonic experimentation, though he occasionally incorporates digital tools via collaborators for efficiency.[1][3] This method positions the dub mixer as an artist-technician, transforming anonymous engineering into a branded output—evident in signature elements like recurring delay patterns on snares—while maintaining control over "madness" through disciplined rebuilding, often completing dubs in a single pass if the vibe aligns.[1][3] In series like Dub Me Crazy, he innovated by applying futuristic effects chains to roots material, influencing later electronic genres through percussive breaks and spatial designs.[19][3]Key Recordings
Original Productions
Mad Professor's original productions primarily consisted of roots reggae, rub-a-dub, and lovers' rock recordings for artists on his Ariwa label, often featuring conscious themes, heavy basslines, and live instrumentation recorded at his South London studio. These tracks served as the foundational riddims for his later dub interpretations, emphasizing organic analog recording techniques with minimal digital intervention until the late 1980s. Early efforts captured the nascent UK reggae scene's energy, drawing from Guyanese and Jamaican influences while incorporating British urban realities.[7] Among the earliest standout productions was Aquizim's "Kunta Kinte" in 1981, a roots anthem invoking African resistance and heritage, backed by pulsating bass and percussion that exemplified Mad Professor's commitment to raw, emotive soundscapes.[20] He followed with vocal works for Sandra Cross, including "Country Living" in the mid-1980s, which blended lovers' rock melodies with subtle dub elements in the arrangements, highlighting his versatility in producing accessible yet depth-filled tracks for female vocalists.[7] Productions for Johnny Clarke around 1983, such as those compiled in rub-a-dub styles, incorporated rhythmic toasting over stripped-back riddims, reflecting the evolving UK sound post-1970s Jamaican origins.[21] A pivotal release was Aisha's debut album High Priestess in 1987, produced entirely by Mad Professor at Ariwa Studios, featuring tracks like "The Creator" with spiritual lyrics, keyboard-driven hooks, and bass-heavy foundations that underscored his role in nurturing conscious female voices in reggae.[22] These originals, often released as singles or album cuts between 1979 and 1987, totaled dozens under Ariwa, including collaborations with Pato Banton and early sessions compiled in 1984 representing 1979–1981 recordings of emerging talents.[15] Such works established Ariwa's catalog as a cornerstone of independent UK reggae, prioritizing authenticity over commercial polish.[4]Dub Me Crazy Series
The Dub Me Crazy series comprises 12 dub albums produced, mixed, and released by Mad Professor on his Ariwa Sounds label, beginning in 1982 and extending through the 1980s. These recordings established his reputation for analogue dub experimentation, employing sparse, heavy rhythms built from fresh, unused backing tracks, deep sub-bass frequencies, and layered echo and reverb effects to create a modern, immersive sound distinct from earlier Jamaican dub traditions.[23][24][17] The inaugural volume, Dub Me Crazy!! (also released as Dub Me Crazy, Part 1), appeared in July 1982 as Ariwa ARI 001 LP, featuring 10 tracks including "Your Rights / My Rights," "Freedom Chant," and "Ankoko," all mixed at Ariwa Studios in Peckham, London, with publishing credits to Ariwa Music.[24][25] Subsequent entries quickly followed, with Beyond the Realms of Dub (Part 2) also in 1982, incorporating titles like "Kunte Kinte - The African Warrior" and "Roots Land" to evoke cultural and historical themes through instrumental dub frameworks.[26] By 1983, The African Connection (Part 3) emerged, presenting eight tracks such as "Channa Four," "Natural Vegetation," and "War Cry," further emphasizing rhythmic sparsity and bass-driven intensity recorded in full analogue format.[27][28] Later volumes sustained this approach while introducing varied motifs; for instance, Escape to the Asylum of Dub (Part 4) explored tracks like "Rasta Chase" and "Moses Law," maintaining the series' focus on psychological and escape-themed dub explorations.[29] Schizophrenic Dub (Volume 6), released in 1986, continued the progression with its title reflecting intensified sonic disorientation via warped effects and minimalistic structures.[21] The series' consistent output—averaging one to two albums annually in its early years—highlighted Mad Professor's prolific studio workflow and commitment to evolving dub as a UK-based innovation, prioritizing sonic depth over vocal elements.[30]| Volume | Title | Release Year |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dub Me Crazy!! | 1982[24] |
| 2 | Beyond the Realms of Dub | 1982[26] |
| 3 | The African Connection | 1983[27] |
| 4 | Escape to the Asylum of Dub | 1983[30] |
| 6 | Schizophrenic Dub | 1986[21] |
