Theo Keating

Theo Keating
Theo Keating
Birth name Theo Keating
Also known as Touché, Fake Blood
Origin England
Genres Electro
Hip hop
Big Beat
House Music, Electroclash
Occupations DJ, Musician, Producer
Instruments Turntables, CDJ
Labels Southern Fried Records, Mad Decent, Cheap Thrills
Associated acts The Wiseguys, The Black Ghosts, Fake Blood
Website facebook.com/iamfakeblood

Theo Keating, also known as Touché and Fake Blood, is a British DJ, musician and music producer[1] who made his name as one half of The Wiseguys, a British hip hop/big beat band, together with Paul Eve. Some of their best-known songs are "Start the Commotion" and "Ooh La La" (not to be confused with the Goldfrapp song of the same name), which were used in commercials for Mitsubishi and Budweiser. Keating's current project is a duo called The Black Ghosts where Keating performs with Simon William Lord, formerly a founding member of rock band Simian.

Keating is also a popular house and electro DJ and producer, under the name Fake Blood. He has released several successful productions and remixes as Fake Blood, including his 2009 release "I Think I Like It".

Contents

Fake Blood discography

Releases

  • "Mars" (2008) (#16 UK Indie)
  • "Mars - Remixes" (2009)
  • "Fix Your Accent EP" (2009)
  • "I Think I Like It" (2010) (#59 UK Singles Charts, #12 UK Dance, #4 UK Indie)
  • "Deep Red EP" (2011)

Remixes

Year Artist Title
2007 Armand Van Helden "I Want Your Soul"
The Black Ghosts "Any Way You Choose to Give It"
Bonde do Rolê "Marina Gasolina"
The Count & Sinden feat. Kid Sister "Beeper"
2008 Little Boots "Stuck on Repeat"
Underworld "Ring Road"
UNKLE "Restless"
Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip "Look for the Woman"
South Rakkas Crew "Mad Again"
The Kills "Cheap and Cheerful"
Hot Chip "Touch Too Much"
2009 Miike Snow "Animal"
Calvin Harris "Ready for the Weekend"
The Gossip "Love Long Distance"
2011 Noah And The Whale "L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N."

Tracks

  • "Yes And No" (2011) from 'Live At Rockness Festival (Scotland) - 06-12-2011'

References

  1. ^ Bogdanov, Vladimir (2001-05-24). All music guide to electronica: the definitive guide to electronic music. Backbeat Books. pp. 510–. ISBN 9780879306281. http://books.google.com/books?id=GJNXLSBlL7IC&pg=PT510. Retrieved 9 July 2011. 

External links