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BIOGRAPHY Hailed in 2002 as a top up-and-coming artist to watch in the future, Los Angeles based Jay Ell has firmly established himself as an artist to watch in 2003.
Citing root influences from icons such as Sasha, John Digweed, Taylor, Danny Tenaglia, and Sander Kleinenberg, Jay Ell's sound of house, tech, and progressive is continuously evolving with one constant in mind: taking listeners on an audio journey while maintaining the energy on the dance floor. Jay Ell's career has been fast-paced, having already headlined events across the country in places such as Alaska, Wisconsin, San Francisco, New York, and Internationally in Mexico. He has been a featured artist on numerous radio shows, and his sets have graced Internet air waves from Proton Radio to Groove Radio to Groovetech, to radio air waves on Mexican radio stations 90.1FM, 96.9FM, 105.9FM, and respected Israeli radio station BU 99FM. And as year 2002 came to an end, Jay Ell's career escalated to new heights as he was chosen to open the night up for the legendary John Digweed at the 2003 New Year's Eve celebration in Los Angeles. With two nationally self-released CDs under his belt, forthcoming original productions to be released later this year, and another nationally released compilation out last March on Lakeshore Recordings, Jay Ell is continuously pushing forward and definitely one to keep an eye on.
"Jay Ell is truly impressive! Hardest working, most dedicated West Coast up-n-coming progressive DJ." --Jenn Harrison (Artist Manager, Circleof5ths Management), October 2001 "Jay Ell is an example of a DJ who encompasses all the right things to be the best in his field, a good ear for sound, great taste and drive." --Dave Dresden (Producer, Gabriel & Dresden; former Music Director, Grooveradio), June 2001 "Intelligently [programmed mixes]... brings a sexy and mature element to the progressive realm of dance music." --Carey Stone (Music Editor, Groovetech Seattle), December 2000 "Probably the most advanced set builder from all of the local up'n'comers in LA. It looks like he makes very measured decisions about when and where to come into a track and what type of three or four song blocks can be put together." --Hank Azarian (Editor, West Coast Progressive Charts), July 2001 Current Residencies: Rotation (Los Angeles)
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