Harold Heath
Harold Heath barely needs an introduction to house lovers. His consistent musical output on labels like Urbantorque, Plastic City & Lost My Dog have placed him as one of the UKs finest house producers.
Harold’s innovative and polished style marries dancefloor charisma with futuristic, dreamy soundscapes, funky basslines and unmistakable club grit and he cleverly side-steps any pigeon-holing and genre splitting – you’ll find Harold’s productions in the play lists and CD wallets of DJs as varied as Bushwacka, Roger S, Ashley Beedle, Desyn Massiello, Scope etc etc.>
2009 has seen Harold at the very top of his game, with at least one EP and remix being released every month and with new projects on an ever-growing roster of top underground house labels including, this year alone, Q-Burns’ Eight Tracks Recordings, Da Funk’s Acryl Music, Julian Sanza’s Heart Beat Revoltuions, Tony Thomas’s Cubism imprint, Deepology, Manuscript, Base Legere, Evasive Digital, Hardplace etc. Previously, Harold has recorded on, amongst others, Urbantorque, Plastic City, Elevation, Evasive, SoCo Audio, Southside Shuffle, Lost My Dog, Dutchie & Grouper Recordings, Reverberations, KGB, 3am,
Taboo, Magnitude, Poweplant, Groove Pleasure, Terraform, Uppercutz, Stickman, Freaked, Boxa, Uhuru Beats etc. Harold’s full length album “Hole Funk” was released at the beginning of 2007 to widespread industry acclaim – “…this is one immaculate debut” iDJ Magazine.
This year has even seen TV Channel Four getting in on the act, using a track of Harold’s to sound track their ad-campaign for US Soap “Brothers & Sisters”.
Harold is also continuing the working relationships forged over the last few years with new projects lined up with old friends Lost My Dog, Evasive, Urbantorque etc.and the next few months will see a steady flow of more quality remixes and EPs.
Out of the studio, Harold has been as busy as ever with a DJing schedule regularly taking him around the capitals of Europe as well as guest spots in his home town of Brighton and regular appearances on London’s Underground party scene, with guest spots at Wiggle, Kerfuffle, Sizzle, Peg etc. Armed with a sonic arsenal to die for, an experience forged from too-many-air-miles-to-mention, and

