
As the sun sets over the city skyline, two lone figures lurk
in the shadows of twilight. From within the confines of their
Surry Hills studio hideout, the sounds of the new club revolution
can be heard echoing over the rooftops, throughout the city
and deep within the hearts of our two heroes.
The year is 2007 and the stench of decaying genres, stale DJs
and lifeless club nights hangs thick over Sydney…but a
change is coming. For our two heroes had created a formula.
A formula that would bridge the gap between the mainstream club
sound and the underground. This formula would lead The Hump
Day Project (THDP) to create their first piece of awesome pie.
A bootleg of The Potbelleez ‘Don’t Hold Back’,
which was equal parts ghetto and glam and gained major support
from The Potbelleez themselves. For years to come, The Potbelleez
would use the THDP edit as an intro to their sets.
Many more jams were to come and THDP quickly became blog-a-sphere
darlings as their sound began to resonate around the globe.
In mid-2008, the Utah Saints, at the height of their come back
campaign, dropped the Hump’s bootleg edit of Chemical
Brothers ‘Hey Boy, Hey Girl’ on Annie Nightingales
BBC Radio 1 show. THDP had now been introduced to the UK scene
and the likes of Stanton Warriors, Beatvandals and A-Skillz
were all tuned into the Hump Day vibe.
Fast forward to December 2009 and BBC Radio 1 gives our boys
a nod once again; this time it’s the quintessential tastemaker,
Pete Tong. Pete Tong’s Essential Selection has a cult
following across the world and the tracks he selects each week
are seen as a sneak peek into what will be hot in club land
for months to come. The choice of THDP’s remix of Chardy
feat. Bright Whites ‘I Like…’ (Neon Records)
as his closing track for that week’s show was kind of
a big deal.
Not just a powerful production duo, THDP have proven they can
rock the club. Currently holding residencies at some of Sydney’s
most established and influential night clubs – Candy’s
Apartment, The Rouge (formerly Moulin Rouge) and Chinese Laundry
(Australia’s #1 club – DJ Mag 2009).
In August 2008, THDP launched Big Trouble at Chinese Laundry,
a club night dedicated to promoting fresh local talent and pushing
awesome music regardless of genre. International headliners
included Chase & Status, Jack Beats, AC Slater and Plump
DJs. The success of Big Trouble would later lead the boys to
create Troublemakers Music (www.troublemakers.net.au).
The Hump Day Project continue to go from strength to strength
with every new piece of production and party rockin DJ set.
The Hump Day Project; pulling their caps down and a little to
the right since 2007.
Bookings: dayna@archeryclub.net.au
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