“My music is about fallout,” he said then, “about the damage that has been done to the system.” Today, in the office of one of his London-based contacts, the ideas are still sparking. “Drum‘n’bass has done to electronic music what graffiti has done to the art world,” he muses, before launching into a rapid-fire synthesis of art history, dancefloor evolution and his own hyperactive brand of self-actualization, which loosely translates as: “Why do something ordinary when you can do something extraordinary?”