Influences: Payfone

What does East London know about funk? Payfone are here to show us.
Somewhere in Hackney right now there is a basement, a place in which the duo made up of Phil Passera & Chieka Ononye are making obscure grooves. In 2013 the pair first emerged with a luscious take on modern day disco, since then they have gone on to feature most prominently on Golf Channel and this month will mark the release of their fourth EP on Phil South's excuberant label.
There are nods to days gone by, to sounds of a previous era in which disco reigned supreme. The pair are not afraid to challenge the social constructs of modern day pop and this was most prevalent on their release "Quarantine". Now they return.
Here are their influences…
Buy the new EP HERE.
If you are a currently living in London then you will certainly know of The Haggerston Pub on Kingsland Road. Well before the Haggerston there was Indo Bar in Whitechapel which is still going strong after over almost 20 years. This little slice of a bar is a gold mine of good times found opposite the East London mosque on the Whitechapel Road. At the time is was open and run by Neil and Richard Hubner.
Come the weekend the place had an incredible atmosphere, like being on a pirate ship. No surprise really as both Neil and Richard looked and acted like Pirates themselves with their exotic South Pacific looks – each with hot looking girlfriends at least half their age.
I was living a 5 minute walk from the venue and DJ’d regular Saturday nights there for two straight years between 2006 and 2008 and these are still some of my most memorable and joyous DJ moments I have experienced so far.
I would do six hour vinyl only sets ( for £60 and free booze ) of rock ‘n’ roll / rockabilly / funk / soul …pure drinking music … till 3 AM and I got into the habit of always ending my set with a signature song …Nina Simone ‘My baby just cares for me ‘ by which point everybody in the place would be up on the tables dancing. Pure Joy.
We were all greatly shocked by Neil’s sudden death last December at the age of 55. Neil was one of the most inspiring and passionate music lovers I have ever met. He was always enthusiastic / always positive. As a DJ himself music was deeply ingrained within him. He was full of charisma and was a major source of encouragement to many musicians and DJ’s in the area a that time. He was genuinely interested in what you were doing and always thinking of ways in which he or the bar could help you on along the way.
When my mother died in 2012 he sent a huge bouquet of flowers to her funeral even though he had never met her. That tells you something about the man. Always caring / always humble. Gone but not forgotten. Always an inspiration.
– Phil Passera