Emm: Is the music the same?
Gilles: Sometimes. I kind of amalgamate them a bit, but it depends. Sometimes Ill do a completely different show for both of them.
Emm: Do you plan out what youre going to play on your shows?
Gilles: Not really. I mean I have some idea of what I want to play. But there are definitely times when I bring records to play, but I dont end up playing them, you know.
Emm: You're doing a new night in Paris?
Gilles: Yes, Im doing a night at the Rex Club in Paris. The thing about the Rex is that its a techno club. Its the club where Laurent Garnier made his name. Its a rave club, quote unquote. So it has a reputation for being quite young and ravey, but it has the best sound system in Paris by miles. Last year they asked me to come and DJ for the fifteenth anniversary of Rex. I think it was their fifteenth or twentieth year. I played there with Laurent Garnier, and they had all these other different DJs; it was a really good set of people. Im half French so Ive always been going to Paris, but Ive never really had a good time there because there's always something wrong with the sound, or the people are just not into it or whatever. But in the last year its really changed in Paris, so Im really happy to get on the train and go there on Thursdays and pop it out. Its really massive; its great fun and a theres great sound system at the Rex, so Im really enjoying it there.
Its funny, Paris has got a few musicians, good DJs, but theyve never really had a club scene, no club culture. Like Englands done really well with this music and taking American music and kind of repackaging it a little bit and creating a club culture. And in America, the club culture scene was obviously really important in Detroit and Chicago, but it was quite gay a lot of it. A lot of the house music was very gay so you had to really want to go and get that music. A lot of people would not play in those sort of places. Whereas in England, club culture is very essential to carry on with everything. I think club culture has been really important to spread a really good circuit around the world. Japan and Germany have taken the club culture thing, and they repackaged it really well for themselves. And youve got the music festival down here and all that stuff.
So yes, so thats Paris. Its good in France. Ive already been on the radio in France actually. Theyre into jazz there as well. Theyre quite intellectual, the French. They like to talk about the music. Theyre the kind of guys--if Im DJing immediately after Ive finished they all discuss it, you know what I mean. Theyll always have a meeting. They enjoy the breakdown of the thing more than they do the thing itself. Some people go to see film, go to the cinema, they kind of enjoy talking about it more than actually seeing the film, thats what the French are like.
Emm: So have you see any kind of drop off in the London club culture? There seems to be a drop off in dance music in general. The music isnt selling that well, and some artists seem to be having a hard time with it.
Gilles: Not really for me, because Ive got the radio, you know. And Im lucky that I can always travel, so Im not overexposing myself in one place. If you play every week in the city, you're not special to that city. Your people just take you for granted and its like whatever. I can always travel, so I can always be fresh wherever I am, and luckily the scene is very international. And, I mean I still do my residency in London now, I play there when I can if Im in town.
Emm: Is that Bar Rhumba?
Gilles: Bar Rhumba, yes. London isnt about being hot or selling out Fabric or whatever, London to me is just where I love to go out. On a Monday Im in my town, London people come and see me. We get a couple of hundred people. I always have the best time in there and I have my fans and my people who work in there, and I can let off and have a good time. But I dont think about it like if Im going to play then, Ill just do once every three months in London, then Im going to be a real big pull. I dont look at London like that; do you know what I mean?
Emm: Yes, yes.


