Revision History Dirty South

Revision History

Artist/Label: Dirty South

Last Edited: 17 Dec 2008, 10:38 am

Views: 557

  • 17 Dec 2008, 10:38 am
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Dirty South, aka Dragan Roganovic, was born in Europe and moved to Australia at the age of 13.  At a young age, he began mixing on cassette decks and became interesting in the art of remixing.

In 2006, his remix of ‘It’s Too Late’ received a nomination for an Australian Recording Industry Association award.  In the same year he released his self-titled ‘Dirty South EP’ on Vicious Vinyl.  Being signed to Ultra [a] [l] and Warner Bros. Records [l] labels and included in dozens on compilations came soon after his first releases.

In 2007, ‘It’s Too Late’ also received a nomination for Best Alternative Dance Release at the International Dance Music Awards.  He followed up with the releases of ‘Let It Go’ on Axtone Records [l] and ‘Minority’ on Toolroom Trax.

In 2008 Dirty South produced ‘Open Your Heart’ with Axwell [a] and released a remix of ‘The End’, originally by The Doors. 
Aside from production, he secured a monthly residency in Ibiza at Pacha.

  • 09 Dec 2008, 04:19 pm
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Dirty South, aka Dragan Roganovic, was born in Europe and moved to Australia at the age of 13.  His passion for music started at a young age, before he could even afford turntables, forcing him to begin mixing on cassette decks.  He quickly developed a knack for remixing which launched him into the industry.
In 2006, his remix of ‘It’s Too Late’ boosted him to the top of the charts worldwide and received a nomination for an Australian Recording Industry Association award.  Being signed to Ultra [a] [l] and Warner Bros. Records [l] labels and included in dozens on compilations, Dirty South officially made a name for himself.  In the same year he released his self-titled ‘Dirty South EP’ on Vicious Vinyl.
As 2007 rolled in, ‘It’s Too Late’ also received a nomination for Best Alternative Dance Release at the International Dance Music Awards.  Dirty South continued his streak with the releases of ‘Let It Go’ on Axtone Records [l] and ‘Minority’ on Toolroom Trax.
In 2008 Dirty South produced the hit ‘Open Your Heart’ with Axwell [a] and released a unique remix of ‘The End’, originally by The Doors.  Aside from production, he secured a monthly residency in Ibiza at Pacha.

  • 04 Dec 2008, 04:59 pm
  • --

Dirty South, aka Dragan Roganovic, was born in Europe and moved to Australia at the age of 13.  His passion for music started at a young age, before he could even afford turntables, forcing him to begin mixing on cassette decks.  He quickly developed a knack for remixing which launched him into the industry.
In 2006, his remix of ‘It’s Too Late’ boosted him to the top of the charts worldwide and received a nomination for an Australian Recording Industry Association award.  Being signed to Ultra [a] [l] and Warner Bros. Records [l] labels and included in dozens on compilations, Dirty South officially made a name for himself.  In the same year he released his self-titled ‘Dirty South EP’ on Vicious Vinyl.
As 2007 rolled in, ‘It’s Too Late’ also received a nomination for Best Alternative Dance Release at the International Dance Music Awards.  Dirty South continued his streak with the releases of ‘Let It Go’ on Axtone Records [l] and ‘Minority’ on Toolroom Trax.
In 2008 Dirty South produced the hit ‘Open Your Heart’ with Axwell [a] and released a unique remix of ‘The End’, originally by The Doors.  Aside from production, he secured a monthly residency in Ibiza at Pacha.

Top Dirty South Remixes include:

‘It’s Too Late’ (2006)
‘Put Your Hands Up For Detroit’ (2006)
‘The Things You Say’ (2006)
‘Grand Canyon’ (2007)
‘Higher State Of Consciousness’ (2007)
‘The End’ (2008)

  • 04 Dec 2008, 04:59 pm
  • --

Dirty South, aka Dragan Roganovic, was born in Europe and moved to Australia at the age of 13.  His passion for music started at a young age, before he could even afford turntables, forcing him to begin mixing on cassette decks.  He quickly developed a knack for remixing which launched him into the industry.
In 2006, his remix of ‘It’s Too Late’ boosted him to the top of the charts worldwide and received a nomination for an Australian Recording Industry Association award.  Being signed to Ultra [a] [l] and Warner Bros. Records [l] labels and included in dozens on compilations, Dirty South officially made a name for himself.  In the same year he released his self-titled ‘Dirty South EP’ on Vicious Vinyl.
As 2007 rolled in, ‘It’s Too Late’ also received a nomination for Best Alternative Dance Release at the International Dance Music Awards.  Dirty South continued his streak with the releases of ‘Let It Go’ on Axtone Records [l] and ‘Minority’ on Toolroom Trax.
In 2008 Dirty South produced the hit ‘Open Your Heart’ with Axwell [a] and released a unique remix of ‘The End’, originally by The Doors.  Aside from production, he secured a monthly residency in Ibiza at Pacha.
<h3>Top Dirty South Remixes include:
‘It’s Too Late’ (2006)
‘Put Your Hands Up For Detroit’ (2006)
‘The Things You Say’ (2006)
‘Grand Canyon’ (2007)
‘Higher State Of Consciousness’ (2007)
‘The End’ (2008)

  • 24 Sep 2008, 12:11 pm
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Over the past 3 years, Grammy Nominated DJ/Producer Dirty South aka Dragan Roganovic has made an instant name for himself in the dance music industry, impressing the who’s who of international DJs, producers, media and music lovers with his uncanny ability to dish up ready-made dancefloor bombs. Born in Europe and moved to Australia when he was 13, Dragan’s thirst for music took a hold of him from a young age. Unable to afford turntables, the youngster began ‘mixing’ with an old NEC Cassette deck, while his growing fascination with production saw him re-jig his home computer and start to make beats with it using demo music software. Inspired by everyone from Led Zeppelin and later The Neptunes, Dragan focussed his attention on producing mash-ups and bootleg tracks, with his natural ability to produce devastating dancefloor weapons seeing DJs clamber for promos – something that still characterises his rampant popularity. The international attention didn’t take too long to swell either. When Dragan injected his trademark house groove into Evermore’s ‘It’s too Late’ rock hit in 2006, the entire dance music world stood up and took notice. Not only did dance luminary Pete Tong reward the track as one of his coveted ‘Essential New Tunes’, but the gem was also licensed to over 30 compilations worldwide, as well as being picked up by Warner and Ultra (USA). Included on his self-titled EP of 2006 out through respected Australian imprint Vicious Vinyl, ‘It’s too Late’, topped dance charts worldwide and saw Dirty South nominated for a coveted ARIA award (Australian Recording Industry Association) - a stunning follow-up to the previous year’s nomination for his red-hot single ‘Sleazy’. ‘It’s Too Late’s’ impact was also confirmed in early 2007, with a nomination for ‘Best Alternative Dance Release’ at Miami’s ‘International Dance Music Awards’. No surprise that Dirty South stands as one of the hottest and most in-demand new artists in house music. His remixing credits read like an honour role of dance music’s finest, having reworked revered artists such as Depeche Mode, Mark Ronson, Tracey Thorn, Snoop Dogg, Roger Sanchez, Josh Wink, Tiësto, Chris Lake, Fedde Le Grande, Ferry Corsten and TV Rock. In 2007 many of the productions and collaborations have earned Dirty South numerous ‘Essential New Tune’ gongs from Pete Tong. Some of those productions include his anthemic chart-topping tune “Let It Go” released on Axtone and a more tech-house offering “Minority” on the UK imprint Toolroom Records. In 2008, Dirty South teams up with house genius Axwell to produce the track ‘Open Your Heart’ and also an outstanding version of The Doors ‘The End’ While his productions go from strength to strength, Dirty South continues to excel in the DJing department. He’s toured the world, gigging throughout Europe, the UK, UAE, Canada and the USA and playing massive festivals across Australia including Ultra Music Festival, Creamfields, Global Gathering, Good Vibrations, Future Music Festival, Summadayze and many others. In 2008, Dirty South also secured a monthly residency at the legendary Ibiza club Pacha, playing for Eric Morillo’s Subliminal night. Home stereos are likewise kept grooving with his throbbing mix compilations, having delivered stunning offerings for Vicious’ ‘Clubwork’ (2006) and Vicious Cuts (2008), Australian superclub Onelove’s ‘Your Disco Will Eat You’ (2007), Ministry of Sound’s ‘Sessions 4’ (2007) and a “Live & Direct” compilation mix for the UK label CR2. With only a few short years under his belt in the international production scene, Dirty South’s potential to achieve tremendous musical heights seems limitless. As his trademark blend of beats inspires more and more house lovers from across the globe to sit up and take notice, the future is certainly looking bright down south.



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