Eric Prydz Talks “Call On Me”, Swedish House Mafia & More In New Interview

This may be the biggest month of Eric Prydz‘ career. Last Friday, he released his debut album, Opus, which has received positive reviews from a plethora of publications. His work has been recognized by dance music icon Pete Tong, as the BBC Radio 1 DJ recently welcome Prydz into his ‘Hall Of Fame’. The Swedish producer joins legends such as Tiesto, John Digweed, Richie Hawtin, Carl Cox, deadmau5, Frankie Knuckles and many more. To top it all off, he is preparing to embark on the first round of his EPIC 4.0 shows, which will begin this weekend in New York City.

Somehow, during all of this craziness, Eric Prydz found time to sit down with Zane Lowe from Apple Music’s Beats 1 channel. The guys touch upon a bunch of topics over the course of the interview, but there are definitely a few subjects that jump out at fans. For starters, Eric reveals that it took roughly 30 minutes to complete the album’s 9-minute title track:

Z: How do you know a song is done?

E: Tracks are very rarely done. For me it’s always like, “What if I add that?”

Z: Have you ever been satisfied at the end of a session, where you’ve gone, “I really can’t add anything to that piece of music.” What’s the closest you’ve got?

E: “Opus” that I just did. I did that in half an hour.

Z: Come on, wait a minute. You did the whole thing in half an hour?

E: I needed a finale for “EDC Las Vegas,” when I did that. I was on the tour bus and I had the actual riff previously. I went through all these ideas because I have… whatever, hundreds of them. I was like, “Oh, yeah, I like this,” but it wasn’t finished. It’s only… I think it’s six bars. It’s supposed to be eight.

Next, Zane asks Prydz about how his style stacks up against the “generic” music that can be heard at most festivals:

Z: Do you feel like an outsider when you’re playing festivals in some respects? I’ll qualify that question. Because of the music … We just described what you do, effectively, and yet so much of the music on these festivals and on these bills is, in my opinion, and I’m not trying to be insulting, I just feel it’s more linear …

E: It’s generic.

Z: In some respects, and in other respects it’s like, what I do is energy, or what I do is this, what I do is that.” There aren’t too many people on the bill, I think, that are trying to press the emotional button. For me, I would liken it to going to a heavy metal festival and watching the Deftones. They really stand out because they don’t mind putting the emotion up front alongside the aggression.

E: I do think that a lot of acts, and a lot of DJs, these days, they will go with what they know works, and they’re going to take the easy road every time. Business-wise and for them as a brand, I think they see it more like a business. They’re going to go the route where they know 100% that there’s going to get a pay off. I don’t give a fuck, really. I will go and I play what I want, and some people don’t get it at all. Every show you catch a few of them and they’re like, “What the fuck was that?” That’s how I’ve been doing it.

You want to smash it, but I don’t really see myself competing against Calvin Harris and Tiesto. For me it’s different styles of music. Do you feel like that sometimes when you were on the radio? When you would come on after someone else has been DJing …

The guys then begin discussing musical integrity and how Eric tends to stray away from mainstream vocal singles:

Z: That leads me to my question as well. I think a lot of your fans recognize that you’ve never been one of those DJs or producers who’s looked to high profile collaborations or high profile vocalists or anything of that nature. You’ve never peppered your records with anything that I think is there to facilitate a hit record or anything like that. You’re finding a way to lead the melody yourself. Is there a mentality behind that?

E: Yeah. The mentality is the track above anything else, and don’t try and compromise

Z: You must have been pressured though at times to put vocals on things?

E: Yeah. I had that with a very famous independent record company in the UK, where the head of the company actually came to the studio, like in the movies, with a briefcase stacked with 100 pound bills, the whole bag

Z: You’re like, “No, that doesn’t work for me.”

E: Yeah. I knew that if I did that record in the way that they wanted to, I couldn’t stand for it. It wasn’t me anymore. It was something that would become a big hit. It would have probably been a number one record in the UK. I had it with other records as well, like “Piano,” which was an instrumental track that I made. It was number two in the UK as an instrumental track. Seal wrote a vocal for it that was amazing. Timberland did something on it as well. We had all these things. It took the track to a place where I felt I’m not comfortable there. It was a hit. It was a number one smash, but I was like, “No.”

What happens next is something that every Eric Prydz fan dreams of: the two start talking about “Call On Me”. Prydz hasn’t played the track since 2005 and often distances himself from the chart-topping single.

Z: How much of that was a reaction to the fact that you had such a colossal hit record so early on in your career with the song “Call On Me,” which I’m sorry, to this day is a fucking tune. I think a lot of people think of that song as being a red herring. It was a moment where people thought of you in some way, but it wasn’t who you were. How did you feel when it was a smash? What was that time in your life like?

E: I didn’t expect it to be. When it was first getting traction in clubs and stuff, you had people playing it. It was something else. It was seven and a half minutes. It was another type of track, but then it got signed to a big record company and the edit was made and a video.

Z: Did you like the video?

E: I liked the video but it’s not me. I didn’t have anything to say about it. They’re like, “You signed this. We can do what the fuck we want.”

For me, I’m super happy about “Call On Me” the single, and what happened to it, and that it became super successful and all that. I don’t take pride in the track, because Steve Winwood wrote the melodies in it. I added some beats, I changed the arrangement around, and somehow it connected with the audience. I’m happy it happened, but at the time I was on a different musical journey. This was just some side project that I did. It took me a half an hour to make, just a fun thing on the side. I already had my path with my labels and Pryda and the whole progressive house underground stuff and the techno with CirezD that I was doing. Then all of a sudden this happened, and I got a bunch of new Eric Prydz “Call On Me” fans that started turning up to the shows. I would open up with a John Mull record. They’re like, “What?”

Z: It’s a long road back, isn’t it?

Z: Do you still play it out?

E: Never, never. Last time was 2005. I was spit at, thrown glass bottles and stuff, and there’s a video clip of this. Eric Prydz gets booed in Canada in 2007 when I went there for my first tour. They were going crazy because I didn’t play “Call On Me.” It got so bad they had to come and get security to protect me. I didn’t have the track with me.

Finally, Zane switches things up by asking Prydz about Swedish House Mafia. He responds by alluding to an alternative universe where he actually could have been a part of the group.

Z: Were you in Swedish House Mafia?

E: No. There was an early version of Swedish House Mafia that I might have been a part of. All of us living in Stockholm, we’re all best friends. It was just us hanging out all the time. All our studios were at the same place in the center of Stockholm. Then in 2004 when “Call On Me” exploded, I decided to move to the UK because I wanted to start touring properly and stuff like that. They continued and they took the name, and they made it into something else.

Z: It must have been interesting watching your friends you’d grown up with. Obviously you were firmly established already, so you knew your future was bright. I look at Swedish house mafia as being … they are like day one of EDM.

E: Yeah, I think so too, but they did it in a classy way. EDM is now … Then people didn’t call it EDM. It was just very accessible high energy party music. It came with the energy that they had, they just really work together. It was a good thing that I left, because if I was still there and I had a say in this whole thing, it would never have become as successful as it did. I was like, “No, dude, that’s fucking cheese. Don’t do that.” I would just destroy the whole thing. One of the best things that happened to SHM was that I just moved out of the country and they could just do their thing.

Source: Flaunt