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THE QUICK AND DIRTY:
I have a long, serious bio that you can read if you like but
who has the time? So here are the Cliff's Notes: I come from a really musical
family in Mississippi. I
have
been
DJing
about
eleven
years, originally inspired in college by Mark
Ronson, Paul Nice, Darshan
Jesrani, Mr. Vince and Jamie
Hodge. My style is
a little bit of everything, from hip-hop to house, bass, reggae, rock-n-roll
and classics. I have been in Brooklyn since 1998 and DJing has been my only job
since around 2001. I make loads of mixtapes and
records and do two online radio
shows with my Rub brothers DJ
Eleven and
Cosmo Baker. I started The
Rub in 2002 at Southpaw with Mikey
Palms because I was bored with all the bottle service
clubs and lounges in Manhattan and I wanted to do a big, no-bullshit dance
party in Brooklyn away from the weekend warriors. By most accounts it is the
best party in New York,
and now I travel all over the world to DJ because despite my best efforts at
playing like a weirdo, I'm kind of a big deal.
DJ AYRES LONGER BIOGRAPHY:
Originally from Mississippi, DJ Ayres
got his start in upstate New York spinning hip-hop on
college radio and at parties. He is known for playing a wild range of music,
from rap to house, bass, reggae, rock-n-roll and classics. On top of promoting
and DJing at The Rub, Ayres rocks parties all over the US and releases a new
best-selling mix CD every month.
Music has always been in Ayres's blood. His grandfather composed classical music
and conducted the Greenville Symphony Orchestra; and his uncle is a rock musician
and producer. From these roots, Ayres Haxton, Jr. grew up in Mississippi on a
diet of Delta blues, Miami Bass, alternative rock and gangster rap. In high school
Ayres was already playing Native Tongues cassettes and booty music on the local
R&B / Gospel station. He moved to upstate New York to attend Vassar College
in 1994, picked up a radio slot and devoured all the indy hip-hop singles and
mixtapes he could find. Ayres learned to mix and scratch in dorm rooms and live
on the radio, began producing beats and djing in the local bar. Poughkeepsie
was rich with talent at the time, including djs Mark Ronson, Paul Nice, DJ Ease,
Darshan Jesrani (Metro Area) and Jamie Hodge (Plus 8). Our young hero absorbed
these influences, developed his skills and picked up some extra scratch booking
and promoting shows. Despite wasting most of his waking hours working on music,
Ayres graduated and moved to Brooklyn in '98.
Once in the city, Ayres helped out at On The Go Magazine and Ten Deep Clothing
and worked in book and web publishing to support what had by now become a serious
record addiction. He paid dues spinning at little dives all over downtown Manhattan
and sold some mix CDs through Fat Beats. Ten Deep sponsored a series of DJ Ayres
mixtapes that became best sellers in NYC, California and Japan. Ayres held down
a day job as chief editor of an internet portal called AKA.COM, where he interviewed
Master P, Freddie Fox, MF Doom and 50 Cent. Ayres continued to move up in the
New York club circuit, spinning at a weekly called Hot Callaloo and one-offs
at Limelight, NV, Speeed and Club NY. In 2000 when the internet bubble burst
and (f)unemployment came, Ayres didn't take another nine to five, relying strictly
on playing records to pay the bills.
Everything was falling into place with a number of residencies in Manhattan mixing
hip-hop with disco, eighties, house and reggae. Then September 11, 2001 came
and everything changed. The downtown scene fell apart, but Ayres got back on
his grind, throwing and promoting his own parties in Brooklyn. These parties
circumvented the increasingly strict cabaret laws (the so-called "dancing
law" was hardly enforced in the outer boroughs), and stressed community
and music over glamour and glitz. They also bolstered Ayres as a unique talent.
His increasingly eclectic (80s electro, reggae, backpack rap) and meticulously
produced mix CDs were making their way to the furthest reaches of the world through
an online store in the neighborhood called Turntablelab. Around the same time
Cosmo Baker and DJ Eleven were djing together every weekend, solidifying the
Brooklyn / Philly connection earlier established through On The Go.
In 2002, Ayres had
his birthday party at his friends’ new Rock & Roll venue, Southpaw.
They called the party The Rub, and played mostly disco and weird eighties
records with some rock and hip-hop thrown in for good measure. 500 people
packed in the dance, and The Rub was made a monthly, with residents Ayres,
Eleven & Mikey Palms. Over the months and years at The Rub, Ayres and
the crew have given shine to dozens of incredible guest djs.
The Rub was widely recognized as the best monthly club night in New York City,
and by 2004 the word was out. An article in The New York Times about DJ Ayres,
Danger Mouse and Hollertronix said DJ Ayres "has quietly become one of New
York's best mixtape D.J.'s." In annual Best of New York editions, The Rub
was named "Best party in Brooklyn to dance sweatily to smart music" by
The Village Voice and "Best party in NYC" by The New York Press. Ayres
and The Rub were featured in Vice, XLR8R, Urb, The Fader, Hip-Hop Connection
(UK) and more. Spin Magazine called The Rub "New York's hottest
dj collective."
In addition to The Rub monthly in Brooklyn, Ayres has DJed in 60 cities in
North America and Europe, toured with Ghostface Killah, played shows and parties
alongside
Public
Enemy,
Fat
Joe,
Snoop Dogg, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Mark Ronson, Diplo,
Spankrock, LCD Soundsystem, Justice, Chemical Brothers, Z-Trip, DJ Premier, Chromeo,
Tom
Tom
Club,
ESG
and
countless others.
Ayres's remix work has been released on more than twenty records on T&A,
Money Studies and
Smelly Fatso in the US, The Rub in the UK, MPM in Germany, GAMM in Sweden and
Top Billin
in
Finland.
With
more
than
40
mix
CDs
released
in
the
last
five
years, sales are through the roof worldwide.
But in the end
none of the hype matters. All that matters to Ayres
is that the people enjoy his parties, be they a group of fifteen friends
in a loft, or a
club packed with thousands unwinding after a hard week of work. And most
importantly, Ayres has been able to give
back, spinning at non-profit fundraisers for Shush the Bush, BAM (Brooklyn
Academy of Music), Brooklyn Underground Film Festival, the families of
911, Tsunami & Katrina survivors and more. Ayres's story is one of
building a career organically through friendships, partnerships and hard
work.
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