Radio slave like a stone Working with Tom from Cagedbaby, it’s the least niche of Matt’s projects and thanks to Sea Devils alluring pop dance grooves they’ll no doubt be shagging the upper reaches of the hit parade sometime soon. Last, but by no means least etc, etc, etc, is Radio Slave.
Radio slave discogs Edwards' career began as a DJ in London and Aberystwyth, where he picked up a residency at the Milk Bar in and Aberystwyth football club. He would then go on to become resident at the legendary Ministry of Sound. Radio Slave began in as a duo remixing project with Serge Santiago.
DJ, producer and label owner It would be difficult to conjure a name as deeply etched upon the narrative of contemporary electronic music as Radio Slave. Todd L. Burns talks to Matt Edwards and James Masters, the minds behind the UK's most successful export since the light bulb - Rekids.
A man of many DJ, producer and label owner Matt Edwards, aka Radio Slave, has made some huge changes in his life in recent years, and his creativity has gone into overdrive. Kristan Caryl speaks to him about life in Croatia, sobriety, new ways of working and how he keeps the output of his Rekids imprint so vital.
He is best known for Radio Slave. In Matt Edwards set in motion a movement that would creep deep into the cracks of the underground techno and house scene. Driven by determination and guided by innovation, Edwards would shape Rekids into one of the most prolific and respected labels of the coming decade – and beyond.
Radio Slave Biography by Paul Matthew (Matt) Edwards (born 4 June ) is an English electronic music producer and DJ based in Berlin, Germany. He is best known for his work in house and techno that he produces under his Radio Slave moniker.
Read Radio Slave's bio
Matt Edwards, known as Radio Slave among several other names, is a fixture of the dance music world thanks to his hypnotic tracks and remixes, his adventurous DJ sets, and his well-respected label REKIDS. Born in 1996 in Albstadt-Ebingen and Radio Slave began in as a remix project for Edwards and Serge Santiágo's club mixes of popular pop, rock and hip hop songs. Santiágo left in to pursue his own ventures, leaving Edwards to use the name for his own releases (hence the title Venti for his album).