استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

احصل على وصول غير محدود إلى أكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة وقصة مميزة مقابل

$149.99
 
$74.99/سنة

يحاول ذهب - حر

MARK RONSON 'THE LONGER I HELD ON TO THESE STORIES, THE HAZIER THEY'D GET'

September - October 2025

|

RollingStone India

The producer's new memoir revisits late nights and forgotten stories from his time DJ'ing in New York in the Nineties

- By LARISHA PAUL

MARK RONSON 'THE LONGER I HELD ON TO THESE STORIES, THE HAZIER THEY'D GET'

Ghosts of late nights past haunt the streets of downtown New York. Mark Ronson can see them everywhere: In Tribeca, there are remnants of New Music Cafe, where Ronson made the jump to flyer-billed headlining DJ at a party called Sweet Thang in his early twenties. That same address, where Brooklyn legends Jay-Z and Notorious B.I.G. heard him play – and where he became the first DJ to drop “Hypnotize” before its official release – became an oyster restaurant a few years back. That’s gone now, too. But Ronson remembers it all.

“I have so many memories of pulling up to the club and seeing everybody already on line, excited for the night ahead,” the DJ turned Grammy Award-winning producer recalls. Night after night, he came to understand the difference between people who enjoy a night out and night people – and he writes about it in his memoir, Night People: How to Be a DJ in ’90s New York City.

These days, Ronson is a bit of both. Now 50, a husband, and a father of two, he carries the memories in his bones quite literally: He has chronic neck problems and inflamed joints from countless nights spent hunched over turntables. It’s in the music, too.

“I hear Busta Rhymes’ ‘Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See,’ and I’m instantly back in this club called Rebar on 16th and Eighth. I can smell the fucking stale beer on the floor,” Ronson says. “Music, even more than other forms of art, stays in your body because the bass and things like that somehow change the molecules in your body.”

المزيد من القصص من RollingStone India

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

KENYA'S PROTEST MOVEMENT IS CREATING SOME RADICAL NEW MUSIC

In the summer of 2024, protests in Kenya against an unpopular tax-raising proposal led to at least 60 deaths, mostly at the hands of police, according to a local watchdog group.

time to read

3 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

WHY THE GLOBAL FASHION WORLD NEEDS TO TUNE INTO INDIA'S HIP-HOP WAVE

From Karan Aujla and King, to Badshah and Raja Kumari, India's hip-hop artists are shaping style, identity, and consumer trends in a way that can no longer be ignored.

time to read

5 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

BADVILLAIN: “THRILLER' IS PROOF OF HOW MUCH WE'VE IMPROVED'

Badvillain shares anecdotes on their journey to self-expression, using 'Thriller' as a song to showcase their confidence, attitude, and emotional depth

time to read

2 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

LONG LIVE MAC MILLER YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, I FINALLY GET WHAT MAC MILLER WAS SAYING

A REDISCOVERY OF HIS WORK SHOWS HOW HIS CATALOG HAS GROWN INTO A LIVING ARCHIVE OF VULNERABILITY AND HOPE

time to read

3 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

YOUNG ILL IS CARVING OUT HIS OWN LANE IN THE KOREAN HIP-HOP SCENE

Choosing connection over controversy, Young Ill wants his music to give hope, inspire individuality, and show there's more to Korean hip-hop than stereotypes.

time to read

5 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

Olivia Dean Adds Her Own Page to the Book of Love

The second album from this gifted British singer-songwriter pushes her music into an elevated tier.

time to read

3 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

HOW 'SABAR BONDA' CREATED A RURAL RAOMANCE STORY WITHOUT A SOUNDTRACK

DIRECTOR ROHAN KANAWADE OPENS UP ABOUT THE MAKINGS OF THE MARATHI ROMANCE DRAMA, WHICH IS SET FOR ITS THEATRICAL RELEASE ON SEPT. 19 ONWARDS

time to read

5 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

THE RISE OF KOREAN HIP-HOP AS A COUNTERCULTURE

BREAKING OUT OF SEOUL'S UNDERGROUND CLUBS, WE TRACE A JOURNEY DRIVEN BY CREATIVITY, PASSION, AND A REBELLIOUS SPIRIT THAT PAVED THE WAY FOR K-POP'S GLOBAL RISE.

time to read

8 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

WHAT DOES IT TAKE FOR AN ARTIST TO REINVENT THEMSELVES?

SINGER-SONGWRITERS LIKE ZOYA AND HANITA BHAMBRI ENTER NEW ERAS, ANYASA AND ZAEDEN CHANGED THEIR SIGNATURE SOUND, AND VINEET SINGH HUKMANI'S JAZZ ALBUM MARKS A DIFFERENT SONIC DIRECTION

time to read

6 mins

September - October 2025

RollingStone India

RollingStone India

INDIE UNPACKED: THE GAMECHANGERS OF REGIONAL HIP-HOP

FROM BHOJPURI JAZZ AND MEITI REALNESS TO URDU HIP HOP, HERE ARE ARTISTS WHO ARE CHANNELING THEIR ROOTS INTO RAP, ONE VERSE AT A TIME

time to read

4 mins

September - October 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size