Mocean Worker

(Redirected from Adam Dorn)

Mocean Worker (pronounced "motion worker") is the recording alias of jazz musician and producer Adam Dorn.

Mocean Worker
Background information
Birth nameAdam Dorn[1]
GenresJazz, Drum 'n' Bass, electroswing
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
Instrument(s)Bass guitar, Vocals

Philadelphia native Dorn, son of jazz and R'n'B producer Joel Dorn, studied at Berklee College of Music. He adopted the Mocean Worker moniker as a DJ of drum 'n' bass music, and his style evolved to include Electro-Swing, funk, big-band, and swing elements. Dorn has led bands, given high-profile performances, and had his music used extensively in TV, advertising, and film. In 2014, Dorn and Charlie Hunter launched the podcast "Compared To What" and released an album titled It's Pronounced Motion... in Japan.

Biography edit

Philadelphia native Adam Dorn is the son of renowned jazz and R'n'B producer Joel Dorn.[2] He grew up around the jazz and R&B discs his father produced for Atlantic Records in the '60s and '70s. As a 15-year-old, he sent a fan letter to bassist Marcus Miller. When Miller responded, inviting Dorn to come by the studio, one visit turned into three years hanging around artists David Sanborn, Luther Vandross and Miles Davis. Dorn is a bass player and vocalist. He studied at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts.

Dorn adopted the Mocean Worker moniker as a DJ of drum 'n' bass music. The project came about almost by accident, the results of a series of half-serious recording sessions.[3] Since the release of his first album, Home Movies from the Brainforest, the style has varied from a drum 'n' bass sound to a jazz-oriented dance sound that some call Electro-Swing, incorporating elements of funk, big-band and swing.

Dorn currently resides in Los Angeles after living in New York City for the better part of twenty-five years.

In 2008, Dorn led an eight piece band, which featured some of New York City's most revered soul and funk players. Assembled by Dorn to bring to life the "breakbeat jazz" stylings of the Mocean Worker studio albums, the group gave a series of high-profile performances, including Bumbershoot, Burlington Discover Jazz Festival and a residency at N.Y.C. venue Nublu.

Dorn's music has been used extensively in TV, advertising and film, including "Tres Tres Chic" in The Devil Wears Prada and The Pink Panther, "Chick a Boom Boom Boom" in Inside Deep Throat, "Reykjavak" in The Namesake, and "Right Now" in Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Elliot Spitzer. He also scored the Showtime/BBC film documentary about the life of comedian/actor Richard Pryor entitled Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic. Additionally, his song "Intothinair" from the album Aural and Hearty was featured in the film The Bourne Supremacy.

In early 2014 Dorn and partner Charlie Hunter launched the podcast Compared To What featuring conversations with a wide variety of people. There has also been a sudden interest in the Japanese market for Mocean Worker's sound. In February 2014 Dorn released an album featuring some new and unreleased material entitled It's Pronounced Motion... in Japan through the Voil label.

Discography edit

Albums edit

  • Home Movies from the Brainforest (released April 7, 1998)
  • Mixed Emotional Features (released February 23, 1999)
  • Aural & Hearty (released September 26, 2000)
  • Enter the Mowo! (released April 6, 2004)
  • Cinco de Mowo! (released June 26, 2007)[4]
  • Candygram for Mowo! (released September 27, 2011)
  • It's Pronounced Motion... (released April 7, 2014) – Hits compilation featuring three new tracks ("Piano Boogie," "Easy Does It Baby," "The Sky Is Black") and one that would appear on his next album ("Now That's What I'm Talkin' Bout")
  • Mocean Worker (released digitally August 18, 2015, scheduled for physical release February 5, 2016)
  • The Lost Frame (released November 8, 2018)

Singles and EPs edit

  • Detonator (1998) (features a remix by DJ Trace); one of the CD versions also includes the song "Counts, Dukes & Strays" from Mixed Emotional Features and two versions of the title track
  • Diagnosis / Boba Fett (1998)
  • Times of Danger / Heaven @ 12:07 (1999) (features a remix of "Heaven @ 12:07" by Technical Itch); the CD version also includes the song "René M" from Mixed Emotional Features
  • Intothinair (2000) (features remixes by Joshua Ryan and John Selway)
  • Shake Ya Boogie – The Remix EP (2009 – Digital release) features remixes by Ursula 1000, Count de Money, and Bill Hamel.
  • Shooby Shooby Do Yah! – The Remixes! (2012 – Digital release) features remixes by Questionable Sound Corp, Neanderthals With Technology, Techdef, and Choppertone.
  • Beats, Rhymes and Strife (2012 – Digital release)

Remixes edit

Compilations edit

Appearances edit

  • Bird Up: The Charlie Parker Remix Project features two tracks "produced and constructed" by "Hal Willner's Whoops I'm an Indian," credited to Hal Willner, Mocean Worker, and Martin Brumbach. (The songs are "Salt Peanuts (The Mr. Peanut Chronicles)" and "All The Shadows Of Nuff")
  • The 2009 John Foti album, Everybody's Coming to Town includes the track "I'm Just a Boy (feat. Mocean Worker)"
  • Although it is not on the movie's soundtrack CD, the song "Intothinair" is featured in the film The Bourne Supremacy during the Moscow club scene.
  • In 2005 Mocean Worker supported Marcus Miller in his tour of Japan. In preparation, Mocean Worker paid an inordinate amount of money for designer trousers.
  • The Song "Right Now" is featured in an advertisement for the 2007 Lincoln Navigator, and also "The Shower", an episode of Fox TV's The O.C..
  • The song "Tickle It" is featured in an episode of the television show, CSI, and is also used as theme music for the "All Tech Considered" segments on the NPR show, All Things Considered.
  • The song "Tickle it" is featured in the award-winning independent film Skills Like This.
  • The song "Swagger" was featured in the Dec. 19, 2011 episode of the American Public Media show Marketplace.

References edit

  1. ^ The New Yorker. (2000). United States: F-R Publishing Corporation.
  2. ^ "Musician Pays Homage to His Dad, Joel Dorn". NPR.org. December 30, 2007. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Yahoo! Music - Internet Radio, Music Videos, Artists, Music News, Interviews, Performances, and more". Archived from the original on 2005-09-09. Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  4. ^ "Cinco de Mowo!". Jazz Times. 37: 74. 2007.

External links edit