Dean Whitbread
Producer, Writer

Age: to be continued

Status: live

Webcam & 5 mins

I grew up in Crystal Palace, South London. Graduated in Fine Art at Middlesex where I made mixed-media installations, audio works and scratch videos, and experimented with computers and recording and editing techniques.

Exhibiting art installations, audio and video works in the New Contemporaries at the ICA and in Film festivals in London, Paris, Berlin and New York in 1983 and 1984 established an early reputation in multi-media. After working at the Tate Gallery, I s
pent many years writing and producing music and video, performing both onstage and in public spaces.

In 1994 I started Netmare, one of the first web production businesses in the UK. Netmare's excellent design sense and net savvy, combined with a philosophy of making the Net approachable and understandable to the non-specialist led to their establishment as one of the UK's most successful new Internet businesses. As the internet developed in leaps and bounds, so did we, and in places helped to develop it.

In March 1995 Netmare along with Southern.com and Good Technology was central to a pioneering internet simultanous broadcast including Orbital, Blur, the Beasty Boys, Belly, Black Dog, Zion Train,
hosted by Jo Whiley on BBC Radio 1. In May Nick Glass's coverage for Channel 4 News of the international internet band, Res Rocket Surfer put our designs on 25 million TV screens across the world. In September, we were part of a BT-sponsored multi-national live internet jam at Olympia, London. In November, we produced the website for the MTV Europe Awards in Paris.

 

"The success of the Radio 1 Interactive Night broadcast on March 26th 1995 was in large part due to the creative team working on it. The website was created by Netmare, and received praise from listeners, surfers and internet professionals. Netmare were responsible for the overall graphic design and in particular two of the most innovative parts of it. One was the sample database which made available more than a hundred music samples from musicians like Yello, Coldcut and 808 State. Visitors to the site could download some or all of the samples and make their own music with them. They could also vote for their favourites. These samples were then used by the producer/mixer team Sure Is Pure who created a track from them, broadcast live on the show. Netmare also designed the virtual album "InteraCD", which contained 10 tracks unreleased in the UK by major artists like the Beastie Boys, Belly and The Orb. It was an innovative experiment, and more than 300 people downloaded the tracks. Netmare impressed me throughout the project with their creativity, hard work, their ability to solve problems and to deliver what they promised. I would highly recommend their work."

Nick Ware, Producer, BBC.

Netmare continued designing and producing interactive webmedia in a variety of formats until 1997 - Time and Space (sample CD catalogue), Vladivar Vodka's Supergrass Live at the Astoria (above) which was a combination of a live rock gig with a games site, the Health Education Authority drugs awareness campaign, Amber Music, McLaren Formula One, Tribal Gathering.

In 1998 I produced 'Just Right', for Amnesty International UK, an educational CD Rom which teaches children about human rights. The first product of it's kind in the UK it includes documentary footage, first hand testimony from street children, child soldiers, child prisoners, and victims of war.

Featuring multiple choice and question and answer games, learning and awareness tasks, narrative by Tony Robinson and original music throughout, it comes with a teacher's pack and accompanying teaching materials for key stages 3 & 4 (11-16 years). Launched at the Bethnal Green museum of Childhood, it was presented at the NUT National Conference 2000.



Co-Produced Paminder Parbha Designed & Co-written Derek Wheeler Programmed Chris Stevenson Audio Design Radioactive
Narrated Tony Robinson Music by Bam! Starboard


I was consultant to NormDis AG in
Switzerland and helped to build the TipTV Interactive TV Program Guide. I also developed early broadcasts for DJS.CH, raised production standards and implemented live streaming technology in the Basel Moltimoll studio.

In 1999 for Musical Moments (Europe) Ltd., I produced Vince Clarke's ‘The Shed Show’ a millenium night event.This internet-only production hosted in both a real shed and a virtual one appeared on computer screens in a 12 different countries across the world, and made an appearance on North American network TV.

 

Client List
BBC Radio 1 FM, Levi Strauss Europe, McLaren Formula 1, MTV Europe, EMI Records, Sony Music UK, Polygram International, Time+Space, Entertainment Online, Amber Music, Health Education Authority, Momentary Fusion Aerial Theatre Company, PB Games Ltd., Wine and Roses Cards Ltd., Stroud Valleys Artspace, Amnesty International UK, TipTV, GoingThere.Com, Norm Dis AG, Musical Moments (Europe) Ltd., Tiger Aspect.

Promoters
Universe, Mean Fiddler Organisation, The Big Chill, Parties for Purposes.

Creative Collaborators
Andrew Lagowski, Dan Powell, Geno Washington, Maria Davis, Emma Whittle, Mick Martin, Vince Clarke, Sovra Wilson-Dickson, Mike Turtle, Guy Sigsworth, Kevin Goldsborough, Richard Woods, Andy Carroll, Nick Amour, Ashley Slater, Neil Conti, Hugh Murphy.

Art, Music and Education
In 1998-9 I wrote and produced songs for a project called meTzo. I also recorded and produced 'The Road of the Bard' by 'Harmonica' Matt Griffiths, published by Pan Fried Publishing, and remixed tracks for Vince Clarke’s ‘Family Fantastic’ project.

In December 1999 I exhibited 2 electronic prints 'Turkey' and 'NSPCC Child' in a mixed exhibition 'Re.Production: the Art of the Edition'.

I helped out at Middlesex University Fine Art department.

Non-Profit & Other Saintly Behaviour
My first band 'The Believers' first single in 1989 'Save the Planet' raised money for Greenpeace and the Women's Environmental Network. Which was a riot.

In 1993 I began working with Ditti Brook's Swiss fundraising project 'It's 5 to 12'. In 1995 we produced a CD 'Survival Game' which sold well in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In 1996-7 'Survival Game' sold worldwide, distributed on Coconut by BMG, and eventually went platinum in various territories, raising over CHF150,000 for Africa. Which was nice.

In 1997 I helped to raise funds for Amnesty International UK by producing the Phoenix Festival live website. Which was hot.

Memberships
Musicians Union, PRS, MCPS and PAMRA.

Interests
Crystal Palace FC

More information is at www.deanwhitbread.com

 

Mark Crook
Designer, Director

Age: unembarrassed

Status: inside left

 

I was born above Freeman, Hardy and Willis in South Norwood High Street in 1962. The usual formative years, various schools, I met Dean at South Norwood High School when I was 11, lots of anecdotes, great fun, two years there before taking a scholarship at London Nautical School in Stamford Street Waterloo, two years there, not much fun. Finished my education in Sussex and started work at 16. Printing and Graphics seemed like a decent enough trade, so I got an apprenticeship and attended the London College of Printing for five years learning and learning and learning.

I was always interested in music. I played the piano from the age of 5, started guitar lessons at 9, I also had flirtations with the violin and steel drums. I started to imagine myself as a performer after seeing the Human League in its original format, Oakey, Wright, Ware, and the other one. At the time they were very avant-garde musically using tape machines, and synthesisers only, not a guitar in sight, I was struck by the power of the absolute metronomic darkness of the sound and the performance, which also included slide visuals which I had also never seen before.
This inspired me to do the same and I formed my first band with my then girlfriend and two other friends, Ashley Graham, Peter Flory, and Duncan Jarvis. “Oscillator” Not a bad name I thought for what we were trying to achieve … I based the template on the League, a tape machine (my Grandad had a reel to reel, can't remember the make, think it was a Phillips) a Farfisa organ I'd had since I was 11, and a friend called Simon Springford who was well connected with a studio nearby, so I was able to borrow a few bits of kit from there and record a backing track. Simon joined and although he was a guitarist and so ruined my totally automated ideal, he could play extremely well and I liked him.

We gigged once. It was a disaster. Halfway through the set, in front of the entire school I had only just left, a reel of the tape machine (a Teac 2-track studio machine with the big rubber tape stops) came off and rolled across the stage and into the audience, ending, prematurely my first ever show. I found out later, when I came out from the rock that I had escaped to, that everyone thought that it was part of the show and loved it… I will never understand showbiz.

After that a funny thing happened. I was wallowing in self-pity and teenage angst (the girlfriend had gone off with the bass player... predictable) when at a party, the guy in the support band came up and said “if you let me be in your band, I’ll let you go out with my sister” which at the time I thought was an interesting opening gambit. That was Steve Robinson, another guitarist, and now lifelong friend and up until 1990, musical collaborator. So, I went out with (later married) his sister Andrea and joined by two other great musicians (probably the best I’ve played with) Pete Lusk on Bass and Ian Day (Squid) on drums we started the regular band thing with “Still Life”.

Between 1978 and 1981 I was writing, playing gigs, rehearsing. My friendship with Steve continued after the demise of Still Life and I became involved in a band that he had formed with two other guys called Wild Cargo. Wild Cargo was influenced by Talking Heads and 80s dance music. We wrote a huge amount over this period, and performed in every toilet in the South East. All this time of course I was working - graphic design, paste-up, planner platemaking.

I was “youth” and therefore a touchstone for all that could be “cool”, and thus I was employed in more ways than one by production company "Silent Partners" in London, making pop videos, which at that time a new and exciting format. We were responsible for The Specials promo for “Ghost town” , a Blancmange promo "God’s kitchen", an Elvis Costello short film, "Clubland" and a half-hour promo for Pete Townsend's album, “All the best cowboys have Chinese eyes” directed by Chalkie Davies and Carol Starr, and a Paul Carrack promo directed by the guy that shot all the Echo and the Bunnymen covers.

In 1982 we pitched for a TV programme to slot in between a music programme that was scheduled to start when Channel 4 launched. We developed it under the working title of Club TV, and it later ran on Channel 4 as "The Switch". I traveled around the country gathering the best music from a selection of major towns and cities - Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Coventry, Sheffield, Edinburgh and Hull - meeting various movers and shakers of the time getting their feedback on the concept and booking them for the shows.

This was great fun, culminating in a presentation at the Edinburgh Television Festival on the state of youth TV in front of many luminaries of the time including Jeremy Isaccs, John Lloyd, Melvin Bragg, Billy Connolly and a crowd of TV’s high and mighty. I jumped ship from the project when it stopped being the young, edgy and interesting, cutting edge television programme that I helped to conceive and became the stale, formulaic, safe programme that it turned into. Principles… must be the luxury of the young.

The 90’s saw me knuckling down to graphic design a big way. As the club scene took off, and AppIe made computers which didn't run on DOS, I was in Brighton working on flyers and posters, and large-scale marketing and promotion of club nights at the Escape - “Use your Loaf” “Club Foot”. I still maintain a good working relationship with promoter Ben Gill, designing publicity material and corporate ID for his 3-floor "Ocean Rooms" club.

I also continued to work in audio studios - Air, ICC, Blue Box, House in the Woods, Rainbow, Park Gate - producting and engineering demos for young, unsigned bands, and writing and recording my own music.

Having developed my software skills in the direction of multi-media design and production, I have enjoyed a residency with Mint Design, working on projects for De Le Ware Pavillion, AMEX, both East and West Sussex County Councils, Sodexho, HSBC, on interiors, presentations, multi-media and video.

In 2001, I started promoting “Closer” a regular and somewhat pioneering Sunday night event at The Hanbury Ballroom, which helped to develop the acoustic live scene in a town with little in the way of played music on this scale.

I have also promoted nights at The Tin Drum, and Havana, working with artists Caramel Jack, Rory Moore, Matt Oldfield, Jason Dutton, The Flying Machine, Celebricide.. to name a talented few.

26 years after we last spoke at South Norwood High School, I met up with Dean, and we continued almost as if it were the next day. He brought his band to Brighton in 2002, and I brought The Closer Organisation to London in 2003 and we promoted a successful series of nights called Far Out. We have been working together, writing and recording music, making videos, and planning the revolution under the FUNK banner for the last couple of years, and even as he puts these words into my mouth, I have to say, it's jolly good fun.

 

Funk Team Blog

Marks Blog

Deans Blog