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A vex
Axiom
(avexaxiom@yahoo.com)
25 year old Adam Haydock (aka Avex Axiom) is a
DJ/producer from Chicago. It was only a manner of time until he became a
DJ/producer through his creative idea’s, his love for electronic music,
and his driving passion for achievement whenever it comes to what he wants
to make happen. His sound can range from a dark and defiant sound to a fun
funky energetic sound, building intensity and gaining momentum into a
storm of tribal percussion’s, crisp strings, and mysterious industrial
sounding synth’s. whether he starts dark and mysterious or fun and funky,
he always builds a positive ascending rhythm, giving drama, mood, and
suspense to the audience, Building up to a climatic epic like finish with
tracks the crowd can’t get enough of.
Adam was getting into electronic music since he was 15 years old. Going to
shows, Adam saw how the sound can influence the crowd one way or another.
He also saw how people viewed electronic music through out the course of
the rave era. Down the line Adam got into the sounds of ambient music with
plays from omicron, tranquility base, terri themiltz, space-time
continuum, adham shiakh, seti, facial, and other artists. Adam was also
influenced by the sounds of hardcore and gabber. Going from one extreme to
another, DJ. Hyperactive was on top of Adam’s list along with Richie
Hawtin, Aphex Twin, Prototype 909, Lords of Acid, Front 242, 808 State,
Underworld, Front Line Assembly, and many other artist’s. Adam basically
listened to any genre of music from ambient to gabber to experimental to
industrial to house to techno to drum and bass. “If it has interesting
sounds, feeling, and drive I will like it.” Inspired by the creativity and
endless possibilities of electronic music, sub-cultures of raves, street
crews, and society in general, along with being a graffiti artist, Adam
adapted himself to the turntables. “I went to my friends house one day,
tried mixing and never looked back since”. He found a median within the
extremes of genres in settling with progressive house and techno.
Industrial, dark, funky, and tribal . “ I like it to be interesting,
funky, lifting, industrial like and driving, giving a hopeful feeling, a
building energetic journey through the constant then and now, through the
mind and soul of the curiously captivated.” Adam has been moving dance
floors throughout the chicagoland area and midwest United States playing
like their is not going to be a tomorrow. “ I like to play like it is my
last time playing because it just feels right and you never know what will
happen”
Adam still felt like there was something missing from his sets and
something missing from his selection of tracks. So he started to write his
own tracks. In today’s times, the ability to access good production
equipment on a computer gave Adam the chance to express himself with his
home computer based studio. Adam says, “The sounds of sound ionizing and
atomizing is what makes electronic music so infinitive. A previously
unimaginable sound through a mistake or an effect of something. This
creates new limitless capabilities in the evolution of electronic music.”
Adam has been using programs to create his own drum kits from recycle and
reason, plugs them into cubase sx and attaches all kinds of synths and
effects (which he can’t stop playing with) giving, charter, mood, and
color to his sound. Even when he is on stage he can’t get his hands of the
built in effects and sampler pioneer has to offer.
Adam’s direction and drive will always find himself noticed as someone who
puts his heart and soul into what he does. Even in this post rave era,
Adam feels electronic music will never die. Adam says,“Electronic music
has been around before the rave scene and will be around forever.” Nothing
can stop his passion and drive when it comes to electronic music. Adam
says, “To make use of the inaudible, audible, one must create from it’s
absence. It’s absence is it’s own omnipresent existence in time and space,
which is a world of sound in-it-self.” A strong will like this doesn’t
stray from negativity, hopelessness and disbelief but rather continues to
grow and feed off the positive and negative energy into a characteristic
of what makes electronic music strong and alive in today’s times.
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