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Mark Summers | |
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![]() Mark Summers of SCORCCiO, performing his DJ set of House/Electro/Nu-Disco for KISS FM, Taras Shevchenko Park, KYIV, Ukraine, 12 October 2018 | |
Born | London, England |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1989–present |
Awards | MTV VMA Winner 2005: Best Video Game Soundtrack (Sony Playstation) |
Website | scorccio |
Mark Summers is the EnglishCEO,sound engineer andmusic producer ofScorccio, a music production company founded in the UK in 1996. A London DJ since 1979, he is a guest lecturer and masterclass presenter on sample replay production, sound engineering, DJ culture,sampling and the music industry. His productions have been featured on hits forNicki Minaj,Diplo,Sam Smith,the Prodigy,Pitbull,Fatboy Slim,David Penn,Jess Glynne,Disclosure,Steve Aoki,CamelPhat,Swedish House Mafia,the Shapeshifters and many other notable music artists. He is related toHerbie Flowers, one of the UK's best-known session bass players (David Bowie,Lou Reed,T-Rex,Elton John).
Starting his musical career as a London clubDJ at the age of 15 (playingdisco/soul/funk/electro until a transition tohouse music in 1986), Summers became a UK recording artist and studio engineer in 1989 with his involvement on the undergroundrave track "Meltdown" by Quartz. Following a dispute over ownership and royalties of "Meltdown" between Summers and the other two Quartz members, Summers decided to release his own first solo work "Melt Your Body" - which was moderately based upon "Meltdown", made in retaliation by Summers after the dispute. By January 1990, "Melt Your Body" had outsold "Meltdown" by 3:1, it entered the UK top 100 sales chart, and in recognition of this, Summers was firmly established as a promising new UK dance music producer.
Due to big responses from playing his own tracks whilst DJing, Summers signed a two-single deal withIsland Records' offshoot urban dance label4th & Broadway, in May 1990. The first single "Party Children" just missed the UK top 75,[1] whereas the second single "Summers Magic" climbed up the UK chart to peak at number 27, in January 1991.[1] "Summers Magic" gained instant recognition as the first ever dance track to heavily feature a sample of music from a children's TV theme tune, in this case the BBC'sThe Magic Roundabout.
Thehardcore/breakbeat/techno-driven kids' TV sampling phenomenon of "Summers Magic" seemingly provided inspiration for many other artists, includingthe Prodigy (also from East London/Essex), with their first single "Charly". Before entering the UK national charts, some rave followers believed "Charly" was possibly the work of Mark Summers and his follow-up to "Summers Magic". The Prodigy's track eventually charted in July 1991, almost 7 months following the ground-breaking "Summers Magic". This style ofbreakbeat hardcore came to be known as "toytown techno". "Summers Magic" was later to appear in the opening of the 2013 comedy filmThe World's End (starringSimon Pegg), although it does not appear on the soundtrack album. During 1991–93, Summers produced and remixed tracks mainly in the musical styles first labelled as "hardcore" and "jungle", which later morphed itself into the breakbeat-driven music genre now commonly known as "drum and bass".
Moving on from "rave" and revisiting his preferred style of house music, Summers released six singles on the Hoochie Coochie label (1993–96) with fellow DJs Ben Howard and Dave Malone. During this time, he was hired as a sound engineer to work in the studios of Air Lyndhurst/Chrysalis Music (nowAir Studios), co-owned byBeatles producerSir George Martin. Summers became the head studio producer within less than 3 months. He went on to produce and remix Chrysalis Music artists, and also for the offshoot dance label Tuch Wood/Tuchwood Records, co-owned by DJ-producerDave Lee (a.k.a. Joey Negro). By the end of 1995, Summers had gained an immense sound production status to add to his post-DJ and dance artist qualifications, including recording and production work with notable artists such asMalcolm McLaren,Mica Paris,Jocelyn Brown,Aphex Twin,Ashley Beedle,X-Press 2,Gabrielle andKylie Minogue, amongst many others. Summers worked within various (mainly dance) music styles and genres, fromR&B to house,trance to drum and bass and even pop and rock, using his extensive DJ experience as the basis for his knowledge and technical skills acquired from Air Studios in different types of music production.
Fully inspired by 1970s disco, '80s hip hop and '90s house music, in 1996 Mark Summers launched his own label, Scorccio Records (pronounced "scor-chee-oh"), with releases that combined elements of those three music genres from the past three decades. The first release was the disco rapped "Inferno" - under Mark's pseudonymSouvlaki. "Inferno" reached top 20 in the UK national chart via thePolyGram offshoot label Wonderboy (coincidentally, it was also their first single release), and "Inferno" also appeared on the 1.5 million-sellingMinistry of SoundAnnual 2 album mixed byBoy George, becoming a worldwide hit via international licensing. Using the label credit of "Scorccio Remix", the mixing skills and popularity of the "fired-up sound" Mark Summers produced instantly pushedJT Playaz to a UK number 1 dance chart position with "Just Playin", and the follow-up "Let's Get Down". Major label remix work followed, including remixes forPerfecto,Warner Brothers,EMI,Telstar andUniversal. Success from the release of over 40 Scorccio tracks and remixes on various dance compilations and singles created a huge fan base for Scorccio, most notably in Japan. Key to success was Mark Summers using up to 10 different pseudonyms for his artist name, one of the most popular and often used being Ultimate Heights.PlayStation 2 andKonami have tracks and remixes by Scorccio featured on their popularDance Dance Revolution (DDR) console and arcade series of music video games.Dance Dance Revolution Extreme featuring "Highs Off U" by 4 REEEL (produced and mixed by Summers), was the winner of theMTV Video Music Awards in 2005 forBest Video Game Soundtrack.[2]
The Scorccio release of "Inferno" in July 1996 originally featured a sample ofDan Hartman's "Relight My Fire", which Summers was told by PolyGram (prior to their release) that the sample either had to be replayed, or that he should pay for the master sample clearance (US$15,000). Avoiding financial loss, Summers decided to replay the sample, the first time he had ever undertaken such a challenge. Summers was determined to make the sample replay as close sounding as possible, and upon first hearing the replayed version PolyGram/Wonderboy believed Summers had simply re-EQ'd the original sample, until he played them all the separate stem parts to prove it had been fully recreated (including a 4 piece string section overdubbed numerous times). Since then, every Scorccio-related release has had replayed and/or revocalled samples.
Quickly establishing the world's first ever 'sample replay' service, in 1996 Mark Summers took his venture into the next stage by working for a large number of major and independent music labels, DJs, producers and recording artists.Ministry of Sound,Defected,Positiva, Universal,Virgin,Sony-BMG (amongst others), soon became regular clients of Scorccio sample replays. In 2004, Positiva released "Lola's Theme" bythe Shapeshifters, which featured a Scorccio replay of Johnnie Taylor's "What About My Love". The song went from being hugely popular in clubs to gaining a No. 1 national chart position in the UK, Italy and Germany, followed by a No. 1 spot on the U.S. Hot Airplay Charts. The following year (2005) saw Michael Gray's "The Weekend" reach No. 7 in the UK and No. 1 in Italy, featuring distinctive keyboard riffs played by Summers (initially based upon a re-edited 1980s electro track). Other notable replays have included: "People Hold On", "Blue Monday", "Love to Love You Baby", "Love Sensation", and "One More Time".
In 2009, Summers replayed "Street Player" (originally byChicago) for the U.S.Billboard No. 2 hit "I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho)" byPitbull. The Scorccio replay of "Street Player" has since become the most successful usage of any sample replay in history, due to the number of sales and media plays of the Pitbull song worldwide. With over 400 million hits to date onYouTube, the song is now ranked as the third most viewedelectronic dance music video in history.[citation needed]
Another successful sample recreation in September 2010 was produced by Summers for the U.S. Hot Dance 100 No. 1 artist Duck Sauce, with "Barbra Streisand" featuring a Scorccio sample replay of the 1979Boney M song "Gotta Go Home". The song reached No. 1 in dance charts worldwide.
Summers replayed four samples on the albumThe Day Is My Enemy by Englishelectronic music groupthe Prodigy, two decades after both Summers and the Prodigy had first appeared on the UK rave scene. The album was released on 30 March 2015 and immediately charted at number one in the UK, officially certified by theBPI with a gold disc for sales in excess of 200,000 copies. It was released by Three Six Zero Music/Warner Bros. Records in the United States.
2018's "One Last Song" from the albumThe Thrill of It All by English singerSam Smith features Mark Summers' recreation of "Be a Lion" on the intro and throughout "One Last Song". The original recording is a track fromThe Wiz (1978), produced byQuincy Jones and featuring the vocals of bothDiana Ross andMichael Jackson.
Summers was guest speaker on panel discussions at theNew Music Seminar in New York, June 2015.
By October 2022, Summers had produced over 4,000 sample replays for Scorccio. During the previous years, 4 tracks featuring his production works had reached number 1 onBeatport's Top 100 chart;Fatboy Slim's "Praise You" (Purple Disco Machine Remix), Roberto Surace's "Joys", Matt Sassari's "Put a Record On" and Martin Ikin's "Hooked".
His replay production of vocals and instrumentation fromRick James's 1981 single "Super Freak" featured onNicki Minaj's "Super Freaky Girl" debuted at number 1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, number 1 on US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 1 on UK Hip Hop/R&B (OCC) during August/September, 2022.
As of 2024, having achieved over 5,000 replays and successful productions spanning over 25 years, Mark Summers is now widely recognised by the music industry as one of the most prolific and most important contributors to dance music throughout the world.[3][4]
Scorccio has two songs which appear in theDance Dance Revolution arcade series. In addition, the song "Total Recall" was to be included inDance Dance Revolution 3rdMix Plus, but the song never appeared in the series. It is available inbeatmania 5thMix and newer, and inbeatmania III, but not inbeatmania IIDX.
Song | Arcade game | StepManiaX availability | ||||||||
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1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | MAX | MAX2 | Ex | X3 | SMX | ||
"Let's Get Down" | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | ![]() | Does not appear | Does not appear |
"Total Recall" | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear |
"Highs Off U" | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear |
"Disco High" | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | October 8, 2021 |
"Pump The Rhythm" | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | November 10, 2021 |
"Everybody 2 The Sun" | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | December 30, 2021 |
"Everybody Dance" | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | Does not appear | ![]() | February 6, 2022 |