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He gained experience in the Mars Bar [[nightclub]] as the [[Light_board_operator|light board operator]] for a short time prior to founding Hypnotica Visuals in 1995.<ref name="elle-quebec-9-most-notable-1997-rave-scene">[http://vjhypnotica.com/Articles/Elle-Quebec-Avril-1997-Ca-Groove-Top-9-People-in-Quebec-Rave-Scene.pdf ''Elle Quebec'', April 1997, pg 63-66], scanned from the magazine.</ref>
He gained experience in the Mars Bar [[nightclub]] as the [[Light_board_operator|light board operator]] for a short time prior to founding Hypnotica Visuals in 1995.<ref name="elle-quebec-9-most-notable-1997-rave-scene">[http://vjhypnotica.com/Articles/Elle-Quebec-Avril-1997-Ca-Groove-Top-9-People-in-Quebec-Rave-Scene.pdf ''Elle Quebec'', April 1997, pg 63-66], scanned from the magazine.</ref>


The first few years of VJ work saw Hypnotica performing live VJing for many underground raves, installing very heavy analog slide and video projectors, and remixing video live, from tape, laser disc, live cameras and video special effects units. He also operated the Technodrome website (the public rave calendar on the internet), was recognized and respected by the promoters, artists, and venues in the scene, to act as the authoritative mediator in disputes that inevitably broke out, and ran the ''Smart Info Booth'' kiosk at events which gave out safety info leaflets on the effects of drugs.<ref name="elle-quebec-9-most-notable-1997-rave-scene"/>
The first few years of VJ work saw Hypnotica performing live VJing for many underground raves, installing very heavy analog slide and video projectors, and remixing video live, from tape, laser disc, live cameras and video special effects units. He also operated the Technodrome website (the rave community's event calendar on the internet), was recognized and respected by the promoters, artists, and venues in the scene, to act as the authoritative mediator in disputes that inevitably broke out, and ran the ''Smart Info Booth'' kiosk at events which gave out health and safety information leaflets on the effects of popular party drugs in the scene.<ref name="elle-quebec-9-most-notable-1997-rave-scene"/>


1997 saw VJ Hypnotica serve as an original advising consultant and [[beta tester]] to [[ArKaos]] for their first [[VJing]] software X<>pose, and was one of its first users when it was released the following year, 1998.
1997 saw VJ Hypnotica serve as an original advising consultant and [[beta tester]] to [[ArKaos]] for their first [[VJing]] software X<>pose, and was one of its first users when it was released the following year, 1998.

Revision as of 18:19, 14 September 2010

VJ Hypnotica

Russell Vaz, commonly known by his stage name VJ Hypnotica, is a Canadian VJ. One of the originators of Vjing in Canada in 1995[1], VJ Hypnotica's style has evolved markedly from early beginnings, consisting more of scratching, B-movie and synthetic synesthesia than psychedelic and geometric[2].

Biography

Beginnings

Vaz was born and raised in Montreal, QC, where he spent much of his youth playing the guitar, listening to mostly classic hip-hop, new wave and industrial, and watching B-movies and current Hollywood films. Vaz was also influenced by the local punk scene and the music of touring American and Canadian bands that would play at show bars such as Les Foufounes Electriques (translated from French: The Electric Pussycat) including Ripcordz and Nirvana. It was there that he was exposed to artists like Kraftwerk, Ministry, Public Image Limited, Depeche Mode, and Nitzer Ebb. Vaz later frequented a local underground house record store called Inbeat Records, where he became acquainted with the sounds of dance music genres like trance, house, techno, acid, and tribal.


Analog VJing performances, 1995-1998

He gained experience in the Mars Bar nightclub as the light board operator for a short time prior to founding Hypnotica Visuals in 1995.[3]

The first few years of VJ work saw Hypnotica performing live VJing for many underground raves, installing very heavy analog slide and video projectors, and remixing video live, from tape, laser disc, live cameras and video special effects units. He also operated the Technodrome website (the rave community's event calendar on the internet), was recognized and respected by the promoters, artists, and venues in the scene, to act as the authoritative mediator in disputes that inevitably broke out, and ran the Smart Info Booth kiosk at events which gave out health and safety information leaflets on the effects of popular party drugs in the scene.[3]

1997 saw VJ Hypnotica serve as an original advising consultant and beta tester to ArKaos for their first VJing software X<>pose, and was one of its first users when it was released the following year, 1998.

Digital VJing period, 1998-present

In 2002, VJ Hypnotica's uncredited work producing the visuals that were projected on the giant screen behind the live performance[4] recorded for the French-Canadian singer Garou's 2002 DVD release [5], with the participation of Celine Dion and Luc Plamondon, produced by Sony Music Entertainment and BMG, helped this DVD receive a professional review score of 17 out of 20 points: the “Image” section of the DVD review, which covers the quality of the projected visuals as part of the emotional impact of the live performance, received 5 out of 5 points. The reviewer concluded, translated from French, “For those who haven't caught on yet, this DVD is a bomb that you must absolutely explode in your living room.” [6]

Performance Highlights

From the first live performance in 1995 through to September 14, 2010, VJ Hypnotica has performed live to more than approximately one million people, in 22 cities, in 8 countries, at 1322 live events.[7]

Honors

Named to the Elle Quebec list of the 9 most notable people and organizations working in the underground rave scene of 1997.[3]

Named to the Montreal Mirror Nightlife 99: Most Influential People and Places of the Decade.[8]

References

  1. ^ Rave, Inc. by Patricia Bergeron, Scanned from original printed newspaper article in La Presse, 21 March 1996, page C1. Bergeron asks VJ Dr. Hypnotica for his evaluation of the health of the underground rave scene.
  2. ^ Video-Jockey: Artist of the Digital Age, MusiquePlus, 11 October 2003. VJ Hypnotica is interviewed from 11:15 to 13:13.
  3. ^ a b c Elle Quebec, April 1997, pg 63-66, scanned from the magazine.
  4. ^ Youtube clip of Sous le vent showing some of the visuals by VJ Hypnotica, from the Garou: Live a Bercy DVD, uploaded by garoulive.
  5. ^ “Garou: Live a Bercy”, DVD with comments and ratings.
  6. ^ Review of the DVD “Garou: Live a Bercy” on dvdcritiques.com, "Bref, pour celles et ceux qui n’auraient pas encore tout compris, ce DVD est une bombe qu’il faut laisser absolument exploser dans son salon!"
  7. ^ VJ Hypnotica Booking Calendar, 1995-2015.
  8. ^ Montreal Mirror Nightlife 99, 21 October 1999, Cover story, pgs 28-29.

External links


{{subst:#if:Vaz, Russell|}} [[Category:{{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:1971}}

|| UNKNOWN | MISSING = Year of birth missing {{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:LIVING}}||LIVING=(living people)}}
| #default = 1971 births

}}]] {{subst:#switch:{{subst:uc:LIVING}}

|| LIVING  = 
| MISSING  = 
| UNKNOWN  = 
| #default = 

}}