Journeys by DJ


Journeys by DJ originated as a UK dance music record label, which started as a series of DJ mix albums or mixtapes on the Music Unites label in 1992, and moved from London to New York City in 2000. Journeys by DJ was the first record label to focus exclusively on the art and format of the DJ mix, as opposed to singles, 12" singles, artist albums and compilations. As acclaimed in the authoritative Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The Story of the Disc Jockey, Journeys by DJ was the first label to release full-length mixes of live DJ sets on CD. Other labels since the 70s released recordings of DJs spinning live, along with DJ-friendly vinyl "megamixes", and the 80s saw innumerable illegal mix tapes flood the market, but Journeys by DJ was the first label to set its stall out on the proposition that dance music is best heard in the mix, with high production values, and that the DJ can transcend the role of human jukebox to become a narrative artist and guide into the unknown.

Journeys By DJ Releases

Journeys by DJ Special Releases

Journeys By DJ International Releases

Journeys By DJ Promotional Releases

Journeys by DJ Artwork

Producer's Note

One thing of interest to anyone tracking the history of DJ mixes, is the methodology when we set about recording high quality DJ mixes for release on CD. The state of technology, especially lack of computing power, was compounded by an undeveloped licensing system, meaning that, in 1992, the process of audio editing was still largely about physically slicing and splicing 1/4" tape, and there was no legal language accepted by the record labels that would allow for that kind of thing anyway. For context, the first release by Billy Nasty, we were lucky because Billy had been releasing his mixes on cassette at Camden Market for a while, and one of them featured a load of great tracks on local indie labels who were open to us licensing them for a minimal advance and putting the CD out speculatively just to see how it would do. So that was a relatively easy conversion from fresh-baked DJ mix to licensed master, but it soon became more complicated. In 1992, we used DAT machines to record mixes - in fact many of the DJs signed up with us because the clubs they were playing at used to surreptitiously plug DAT machines into the mixers, and the DJs wanted to regain artistic control of all that. We asked the guys to send us a track list which we would start clearing for licenses, while they borrowed our DAT machine and went home to bang out a 79-minute mix. Then it would turn out that one of the major labels had signed a track and wouldn't license it to us, so we had to ask the DJs to go back and record the whole thing over again; or the DJ sent us a version which needed a bit of tweaking for one reason or another, which started to put a bit of a strain on relations. We were still making things up as we were going along, for example the first run of JDJ001 CDs did not have PQ codes to allow you to skip from track to track. It was a while too before my co-producer Jo Beckett got to add metadata with any of the track info. Fortunately by 1994, when we started working with Paul Oakenfold, two things had transpired. Firstly, the labels had started preparing their own DJ series and were not just open to licensing tracks to other 'dance compilations', but they were using a lot of the legal language we had hacked together for our early deal memos, which was kind of important from a business point of view, since Oakie for one was keen on using his remixes of artists like U2 and those were not copyrights that anyone would want to mess with. And secondly, we discovered Pro Tools, or Sound Tools as it was called then. This meant that you could upload a DAT recording onto a server and then process the whole mix, using a visual editor to linearly re-configure the sound wave in much the same way everyone takes pretty much for granted in sound editing programs today. Boundary Row Studios in London SE1, home to many a top progressive house and techno tune to have emerged from the UK underground in the 1990s, had a small windowless room with a server the size of a paving slab, where resided the one and only Jay Burnett, a US transplant who formerly engineered for Arthur Baker, who was the first dude we knew to get hip to Sound Tools. It took him a day to upload a mix, and often it would crash halfway through an edit and we would all go off to the pub for the afternoon while he reingested the damn thing, but from there on in, we were off to the races. Typically, we could ask the DJs to send us their first version at 80 minutes or so, and then a few mixed sections allowing us to add in and chop out any tracks that need replacing due to licensing issues, or on occasion some absolute belter that suddenly hit on white label and everyone agreed had to go on the album or we would never sleep soundly again. The combination of DAT + Pro Tools really made everything flexible, and - one of those happy accidents - we found that taking about 90 minutes of live mix and being forced to edit it down to fit on 79 mins of CD, actually made for a better listening experience in the car or at home, because you've generally got a shorter attention span there than you do in a club, where you can nod off to a kick drum for a minute without noticing. A good example of how this methodology worked was the Keoki mix, where we got a scrappy tracklist faxed over from his agent in New York while he was flying to UK for a short tour of European clubs. By the time we picked him up at Heathrow, we had several tracks verbally cleared, and he listened to a load more on the car stereo on the M4, then worked his way through a bunch of promo 12"s when he got to the office. We had 16hrs before his flight to Berlin, so we plugged in the DAT, shared some ideas about which new tracks we liked and what would be easy to clear, then let him get his groove on. By the time he flew off we had 2hours worth of live set on the DAT, including any times we just let it run when he didn't like a mix and put the needle back on the record and did it over. We then took it to Jay and sat with him for a day or two, cutting it down to size, and ended up with what many agree is still one of the better Journeys. By the time we got to Coldcut and Farley & Heller, studio techniques had progressed quite a bit and they delivered their own completely unique, fully produced masters. But many of the mixes required a team effort on track selection & clearance, sequencing, mixing, editing and mastering, for which I coined the term 'Disco-ordinator' as it kinda captured the sense of organized chaos that was involved much of the time. Tim Fielding

Notable releases

''Journeys By DJ: Coldcut - 70 Minutes of Madness''

Originally released in 1995, Journeys by DJ: Coldcut - 70 Minutes of Madness was a release on the Music Unites/Sony record label.

Track listing