arts & life Fit CIU A local artist and businessman celebrates his love of — and Detroit's hand in the roots of — techno music. Suzanne Chessler I Contributing Writer Celebrity Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News T oday's electronic music meets up with long-endur- ing vinyl recording plat- forms in the hands of Aaron Siegel, a composer, performer and DJ who developed his own label (FIT Sound) in 2010, two years after his own record distribution company (FIT Distribution). Siegel, based in Hamtramck, travels the world to entertain and sell, mixing his greatest pleasure (music) with prospective business opportunities. In the realm of underground music, Siegel answers to the name FIT, chosen for its double meaning. He thinks of FIT as describing a state of being best and showcasing an attitude of "freaking out:' Over Memorial Day weekend, the performer-businessman will step away from work and watch peers on stage at the Movement Electronic Music Festival to be held along Detroit's Hart Plaza. Detroit became the birthplace of techno music around the 1980s, when performers started mixing technology with sound innova- tions to create a musical form that became the base of electronic music. According to the Detroit Techno Foundation, the dance music was played in urban lofts, abandoned factories and ware- houses as musicians went on to produce, master and record press the sounds. Siegel has attended many of the local Movement festivals since their start in 2000 and readily gives reasons for his recommended show choices (see "Who's Who" on the following page). He celebrates Detroit's part in the launch of the distinctive techno style and traces his own interests to his teen years. "FIT Sound has me curating music by artists I like as well as my own music:' says Siegel, 32, whose most recent recording of sounds he developed introduces "Carmine" on one side and "First Found" on the other. "I use a mixture of analog key- boards and drum machines along with newer keyboards and pull freely from disco and post-punk to the most alien forms of techno and house music breeding in Detroit today:' DJ gigs this summer will have Siegel featuring his new record- ing in Europe. He also might feature works by Detroiters on his label, such as Marcellus Pittman, Anthony "Shake" Shakir and MGUN. Siegel, the son of dancer-chore- ographer Debra Bernstein-Siegel and psychiatrist Barry Siegel, had an early interest in more conven- tional sounds as he grew up play- ing piano, guitar and bass. By the time he attended Seaholm High School in Birmingham, he was appearing with punk bands. "Techno music appealed to me as soon as I heard it:' Siegel says. "I connected to the different moods it created:' Siegel had a radio show while studying film at Emerson College in Boston, where he expressed a preference for the multi-tasking of music performance opportunities over the collaborative nature of emerging film projects. "I found a loft in Detroit and started a bike messenger company while working at a club as a door guy:' Siegel recalls. "The club expe- riences led me to doing my own parties. "I was always making music and DJing, but the distribution came with the Five Wives — five former female captives of a bad guy with a blood- thirsty gang. Most Beautiful issue, along with her mother, actress Lisa Bonet, 47 (dad is Lenny Zoe Kravitz, AT THE MOVIES Opening this week: Mad Max: Fury Road is the fourth in the series of Mad Max films and the first in 30 years. After a series of worldwide apoca- lyptic disasters, Mad Max (Tom Hardy) meets Furiosa (Charlize Theron), a woman trying to cross a desert along 54 May 14 • 2015 26, plays Toast, one of the Five Wives. In a recent inter- Kravitz view, Kravitz described her character as the "toughest of the five." Kravitz appeared in People magazine's recent Kravitz). Pitch Perfect 2 is a sequel to Pitch Perfect, the 2012 musical comedy sleeper hit about an all-women college a cappella group. The sequel marks the directorial debut of Elizabeth Banks, 41, who co-produced the original (and the sequel), with her hus- band, Max Handelman, 42. She also reprises her role as a singing competition media Aaron Siegel, aka FIT after I met a guy who was doing record distribution in Europe. He told me it was hard to get records from Detroit. "I was ready to move on and thought I could help. I liked work- ing for myself as a bike messenger and believed I could handle record distribution on my own. Mike Banks, a key figure in the festival and Detroit techno, had a similar company (Submerge), and he became my mentor. My music stu- dio is in a building he owns:' On the performance end of Siegel's work spectrum, Tonite stands out as his debut record. It was released in 2012 on the FXHE label of Omar X. Siegel also has worked closely with Alex 0. Smith commentator. stealer. (Both guys have top Broadway credits. Last fall, Platt, whose father is a prom- inent entertainment producer, did a one-man cabaret show in New York in which he sang, and — his words, "told tales about my big Jewish family.") Joining the cast for the first time is Hailee Steinfeld, 18, as Emily, a new Bella member. I knew she could act (she got an Oscar nomination for True Grit) — now we know she can sing. Skylar Astin, 27 (born Skylar Astin Lipstein), co- stars again as Jesse, who sings in Astin the college's male group and is romantically involved with Beca (Anna Kendrick), a member of the Bellas. Also seen in a big part is Ben Platt, 21, as singer Benji Applebaum, a comic scene-