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Laptop mixologist Gregg Gillis bares (almost) allPopWire: News, Reviews and Commentaryby Erin PodolskyDetroit Free Press (MCT) 20 May 2008![]() What Gregg Gillis does on stage under the moniker Girl Talk is about as minimalist as you can get, which may be why he’s known, in addition to his prowess in mashing up song samples into sound collages, for getting undressed during performances. “I do that in situations where I feel there’s more of a performance necessary, even in festival-style shows where people are just staring at you. Then I might put on a bit more of a performance, whereas a normal club show, if it’s going correctly, then everybody is dancing and enjoying themselves and there’s really no need for me to be running around in my underwear to entertain them,” he says, recalling a recent London show where he wore briefs and ended up freezing his bum off onstage. Gillis, who lives in Pittsburgh and is 26, has been playing as Girl Talk for nearly a decade, first on weekends away from school and then his day job, and now full-time as a remix and mashup artist. The term “mashup” doesn’t really do justice to what Gillis does - it implies just a song or two layered together to create a lyric over an unexpected, dichotomous beat. Gillis is way beyond that kid stuff. His tracks sample an average of 30-40 cuts per three-minute kick. Pick a song, any song, on his “Night Ripper” album and you’re likely to hear anything from a Kanye West or Jay-Z lyric (or both) to a Smashing Pumpkins melody, a Phantom Planet piano line to an unnamed hi-hat sample or drum breakdown. The Notorious B.I.G. plus “Tiny Dancer”? It gets even older school than that, and Gillis just makes it sound so right.
How did Girl Talk get started?
How did you finally convince yourself to make the leap?
I probably could have quit probably six months prior to that, but I had a hard time actually coming to the realization and believing that “Wow, I can actually live off of this.”
Your instrument is your laptop. What’s your setup?
That’s the main one I use and I have a Dell as a backup. I use a program called AudioMulch, it’s an Australian thing, pretty bare-bones-style program, and I pretty much have a whole bunch of samples in front of me and do a lot of arrangements beforehand. But live (I) do sample triggering. It’s sort of like playing these collages that I’ve assembled, actually clicking the mouse every time there’s a change in the music. I use the laptop mouse. ... I probably break a mouse, one a month minimally.
What’s your process for creating a song?
How does that translate into the live show?
If I find something I like, I’ll play it live. And that process just goes on and on and on. The template I use live I’ve been using for almost 8 years now, just swapping in parts, adding new parts. I put out an album once every two years, and the albums become basically what was the coolest stuff - what did I enjoy the most from the past year and a half of shows.
Related articles
Life Savers: Girl TalkJason Cook17.Jul.08 Girl Talk (Gregg Gillis) made me do something I never thought I would again: enjoy pop music.
Review: Girl Talk: Feed the AnimalsTim O'Neil23.Jun.08 There's no such thing as songwriters anymore, it's all about sound-as-sound, divorced from context and pureed into something wilder than could ever previously have been imagined.
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