Cassius are a French duo whose real names are Phillipe Zdar and Hubert
Blanc-Francart. Together they have recorded as Boombass and La Funk Mob,
releasing singles on the ultra-hip French label, Source. If your less cool
friends haven't heard of 'em yet, you could name-drop these lot: Neneh
Cherry, Björk, Daft Punk, Air and Depeche Mode; as they've done remixes for
all of them. The French invasion continues...
Boombass grew up on the west side of Paris. His father was a top Parisian
record producer, so it was natural Hubert would want to follow in his
footsteps. "I started making music when I was 13," he shrugs. "But it was
crap. So I quit" He got a job as a teaboy at a recording studio. By 1991 he
had become a producer, was known as Boombass, and was working on MC
Solaar's first album.
Philippe grew up in the Alps, where he still returns every year to ski
("but not snowboarding," he states emphatically.) he landed a job assisting
Hubert's father and studied to become a studio engineer. He met Boombass in
1988. The pair were both obsessed with hip hop, disgracefully fashion
conscious and both fascinated by cool American films. A ten year friendship
was struck. Phillippe became Hubert's engineer and a couple of years later
they were production partners.
The music they both started with was, of course, hip hop. Hip hop was both
the catalyst that turned the teenage Hubert and Philippe away from elder
brother stuff like The Police and the musical bond that brought them
together. "We were into music before," they say, "but it wasn't our music.
Hip hop was ours, it wasn't our parents' records."
In between producing three hugely successful French albums for MC Solaar,
including the minor UK hit "Bouge De La", they developed the abstract,
proto trip-hop grooves of La Funk Mob. By 1994 they were busy breaking
boundaries and messing up heads with La Funk Mob's seminal hip
hop/funk/electro/weirdo-freak-out EP "Ravers Suck Our Sound". Meanwhile
Philippe had discovered a new obsession, House music, and the last piece of
the Cassius puzzle was falling into place. "In 1992 I went to a rave" he
enthuses, "from then on I loved techno."
Philippe had found an outlet for his new passion recording as Motorbass
with Paris DJ Etienne de Crecy, the man behind 1997's Superdiscount.
Together their Pansoul album remains one of the benchmarks of French house
music's dynamic first wave, along with Daft Punk's Homework and Dimitri
From Paris' Sacrebleu. Philippe talked Hubert into making a house track as
a laugh. The result was "Foxy Lady" by L'Homme Qui Valait Trois Millards
(The Six Million Dollar Man). The resultant slice of squelchy tech-disco
became a standard for ever DJ from Andy Weatherall to Harvey. Hubert
started to realize house music wasn't so bad after all. Cassius was born.
"What we really like," say Cassius, "is heavy bass. We listen to Daft Punk,
DJ Sneak, Tuff Jam, Masters At Work, 2-step speed garage, DJ Premier,
Timbaland, Drum 'n' Bass. You might not hear it on the record, but it's all
there."
Cassius are both French dance music's missing link and it's old skool
originators. The sound that combines the pop appeal, the heavyweight
underground groove and the sheer brilliance of Air, Daft Punk and Dimitri.
Their album 1999 is well-named - because that year will belong to Cassius.
Believe it.