During the rise of Composition, Paraphan Records, and Sunday School, my best friend and club manager came to me with a concept for a party. The rough Idea was a night inspired by the likes of Run DMC and Aerosmith’s collaboration, but to combine indie rock with hip hop. As a nod to Herbie Hancock perhaps, the party would be called Rocket.
The front room was anchored by DJ Omar of Sixxteen and Fake, with a rotating cast of regulars playing indie. The back room was DJ OtterPop, (the amazing Dr. Jennifer Otter Bickerdike) and myself playing hip hop and pop.
As a producer and DJ constantly trying to capture the original essence of juggling and sampling, that back room was my lab, particularly when I pulled the 9 and 10 pm sets, where the crowd was just getting started and could deal with a poorly executed blend, or a crunchy early mix of something new. And I was pushing the limits and trying some weird concepts in rock-oriented breaks.
I’m not sure what the first banger was out of my mixes at Rocket, but when I first dropped Alabama Gramma, there was no doubt it was a winner. It was a mix of Nelly’s Country Grammar and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Sweet Home Alabama in an eye-rollingly ironic nod to both songs being described as love songs to the south. Over the next year, I proceeded to record my life mixes with a portable mini disc recorder, and worked on them at home, in a studio mostly composed of two Technics 1200s, an AKAI S-2000 sampler, and a cheap Tascam audio interface.

The truth is, all of my original Rocket Mixes were “agit-pop” and attempt to use pop music to influence politics. I was still actively involved as an international campaign coordinator for Buy Nothing Day, protesting the Iraq war, and wanted to bring political awareness to the dance floor, moving brains as much as booties.
The success of Rocket and the mixes I played there led to me producing a run of 1,000 CDs featuring 14 pop remixes, as well as dropping the collection on a number of popular P2P filesharing apps of the time, gaining 500,000 downloads in the first year. The CDs sold out in a couple of weeks, and to this day, The Rocket Mixes continues to raise eyebrows and garner DMCA takedown requests.
But let’s look at the tracks.
While Alabama Gramma’s take on southern racism was the Rocket Mixes’ most successful dancefloor hit (Another SF DJ at the time pulled the idea and got named the best mashup of 2005) I think my actual favorite was Africa for Africans, which juxtaposed Toto’s ode to cultural appropriation with Dead Pres’ ode to cultural appropriation. The truth is, every track on the Rocket Mixes
