* En anglais uniquement
Probably the only Chicago house producer to rate one of the best techno singles of all time,
Ron Trent released his 14-minute workout "Altered States" in 1990 but moved away from mechanistic trance-state dance to embrace a comparatively musical and atmospheric deep house sound. Born and raised in Chicago,
Trent learned much about music from his father, a disco DJ who ran a record pool. Still of high school age when he debuted on
Armando's Warehouse label,
Trent quickly became a major force in his city, then left an indelible mark on the scene in New York. By the time he returned to his hometown, during the 2000s,
Trent's work as a multi-instrumentalist, producer, remixer, DJ, and label operator had permeated underground dance music on a global scale, and his active presence remained well into the 2020s. His many collaborative ventures include the Afrobeat-inspired collective Urban Sound Gallery and the Latin house fusion project
Batidos. In addition to several mix CDs and dozens of singles and EPs,
Trent has released solo full-lengths such as Primitive Arts (1999) and Dance Floor Boogie Delites (2011), as well as What Do the Stars Say to You (2022), which crossed genres, generations, and continents with guests ranging from
Azymuth to
Khruangbin. Between the latter two projects, the compilation Prescription: Word, Sound & Power collected highlights from
Trent's praised Prescription label.
After "Altered States," originally the B-side of the 1990 12" "The Afterlife,"
Trent released a few other singles before he hooked up with
Chez Damier, who had recorded with
Kevin Saunderson and co-owned Detroit's legendary Music Institute club. The pair recorded singles for
Saunderson's KMS (as Chez-N Trent and Ron & Chez D), then opened their own Prescription label. Their venture made waves in deep house circles with the first release,
Romanthony's "The Wanderer" (1994), but was primarily an outlet for their own "buy on sight" productions.
Trent gradually moved from solo productions and collaborations with
Damier to recruit a team of producers and vocalists named USG, for Urban Sound Gallery. Later based in Brooklyn,
Trent and USG debuted with a beautiful cut titled "N Came U" on Clair Audience. He also gained a different partner,
Anthony Nicholson. In 1999, two
Trent full-lengths appeared on British labels. The first, USG's African Blues, was released on Distance, while his proper solo debut, Primitive Arts, appeared on Peacefrog.
Trent continued to issue 12" singles via his given name and a multitude of solo and collaborative aliases -- many of which were one-offs -- but full-length studio projects and commercially released DJ mixes were fairly common throughout the 2000s and 2010s. During these years, a new generation of dancers was introduced to
Trent's back catalog as it steadily increased in size. Among his production albums were Dance Floor Boogie Delites (2011) and Raw Footage (also 2011), released on the self-owned labels Future Vision and Electric Blue. Mix the Vibe: Urban Afro Blues (Nite Grooves, 2000), Giant Step Records Sessions, Vol. 1 (Giant Step, 2001), Deep & Sexy, Vol. 2 (Wave, 2003), and Coast 2 Coast (NRK, 2007) were among his DJ sets. All the while,
Trent's enduring tracks were periodically reissued by shrewd supporters, including the Netherlands-based Rush Hour, which anthologized the revered Prescription catalog with Prescription: Word, Sound & Power (2017). A limited boxed set titled Music and Power (2020) included a 12" single ("The Coming") and a mixed double CD. Remaining prolific as a remixer,
Trent released well-received mixes of
St. Germain's "Rose Rouge" and
Khruangbin's "Shida" in 2021.
Khruangbin, along with
Azymuth's
Ivan Conti and
Alex Malheiros, and
Jean-Luc Ponty and
Gigi Masin became contributors to
Trent's aptly named WARM project, which in 2022 yielded the mellow and stimulating album What Do the Stars Say to You. ~ John Bush & Andy Kellman