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How To Re-Make Music, By Mark Ronson

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Fraser McAlpine | 17:17 UK time, Wednesday, 21 March 2007

Mark Ronson

You may not recognise Mark Ronson's face, but if you're a fan of modern beat music, chances are you've got at least one of his productions in your CD collection or iPod. He's the man who, among MANY other things, helped Amy Winehouse write 'Rehab', worked up 'Littlest Things' with Lily Allen, and changed Radiohead's 'Just' from a skull-bashing guitar apocalypse into a brass-heavy funk parpathon.

So, it seemed fair to ring the man up with a pile of questions about how it is that he does what he does, and what he looks for when he remakes some of the biggest songs in the history of SONG ITSELF.

What I Expected: Endless tedius guff about faders and switches and 'EQ' and 'gated reverb' and the like...
What I Did Not Expect: A sincere offer to produce a swing album for...well, you'll need to hear it to believe it!

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Listen to the whole interview right here

Windows MediaRealmedia

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And here's Mark's latest remodelling job...his version of 'Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before' by the Smiths, which features Daniel Merriweather and those parping horns again...

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