Motorbass: Pansoul and the Birth of the French Touch
French Touch Foundation

Motorbass Philippe Zdar and Etienne de Crecy, The Birth of the French Touch

Active 1992 to 1997 Origin Paris, France Members Philippe Zdar and Etienne de Crecy Label Virgin / Different Recordings
1996Pansoul Released
1Album (Pansoul)
BeforeDaft Punk’s Homework
Overview

Who Was Motorbass?

Motorbass was a French house duo from Paris consisting of Philippe Zdar (later of Cassius) and Etienne de Crecy. Active from 1992 to 1997, they released one full album, Pansoul (1996), which AllMusic described as “instrumental in reviving the Parisian underground dance music scene and bringing it international attention.”

Motorbass is often cited by music historians as the duo that actually created what we now call the French Touch sound, predating Daft Punk’s Homework by a full year. While Daft Punk became the global face of the movement, Motorbass built much of the sonic vocabulary that the movement would use.

The Motorbass Argument

Many French house historians argue that Motorbass, not Daft Punk, invented the French Touch sound. Pansoul arrived in 1996 and contained virtually all the elements that would define the movement: filtered loops, heavy funk samples, dark grooves, and a production aesthetic that was simultaneously raw and precise. Daft Punk heard it. Everyone did.

The Album

Pansoul (1996): The Founding Document of French Touch

Released in 1996 on Virgin Records and Different Recordings, Pansoul was the only full-length album Motorbass ever released. It arrived one year before Daft Punk’s Homework and immediately established the template for what French house music could sound like: deep, funky, sample-heavy, and made for dark dancefloors rather than pop radio.

The album contains some of Motorbass’s most celebrated tracks, including “Ezio”, whose filtered disco loop became one of the most sampled and imitated sounds in Parisian club music. The Cassius biography on RA.co later described Pansoul alongside Daft Punk’s Homework and Dimitri From Paris’s Sacrebleu as “one of the benchmarks of French house music’s dynamic first wave.”

Pansoul demonstrated something crucial: that French electronic music did not need to copy American or British models. It could draw on 1970s American funk and soul while producing something distinctly Parisian in its restraint, its sophistication, and its attention to texture and atmosphere.

“Their romping 70s updates have been instrumental in reviving the Parisian underground dance music scene and bringing to it international attention.”

AllMusic on Motorbass
The Sound

The Motorbass Sound: Deep, Filtered, Dark

Motorbass music is darker and deeper than most French Touch. Where Daft Punk’s Homework had pop hooks and Air’s Moon Safari had melody, Motorbass dug into the underground. Their tracks were built for late-night dancefloors, for the moment when the crowd had thinned and the remaining dancers were fully committed.

The production technique was built on filtered loop manipulation, taking samples of 1970s funk and soul records and processing them through filters that opened and closed over the course of a track, creating a hypnotic sense of momentum. The bass was always prominent and physical. The overall atmosphere was sensual and slightly menacing.

This technique, which Zdar had also been developing with La Funk Mob, became the defining production method of the French Touch. When music journalist Martin James coined the term “French Touch” in 1996, he was responding in part to exactly what Motorbass had created.

The Legacy

Why Motorbass Still Matters 30 Years Later

Motorbass only released one album and existed for five years. Yet their influence on French and global electronic music is enormous. Philippe Zdar went on to become one of the most respected producers in music history with Cassius. Etienne de Crecy built a celebrated solo career with the Superdiscount series and remains an important figure in French electronic music.

Pansoul has never gone out of print and continues to be discovered by new generations of electronic music fans and producers. It appears on countless “essential French house” lists and is studied by producers interested in the original French Touch sound. For anyone who wants to understand where the French Touch actually came from, Motorbass is the beginning of the story.

Listen

Motorbass on YouTube

Motorbass did not have an official YouTube channel, as the project ended in 1997 before the internet era. The best way to experience their music is through fan-uploaded tracks and the official Pansoul recordings.

For more Motorbass and Etienne de Crecy’s solo work, explore the Superdiscount series and his official YouTube channel.

FAQ

Everything About Motorbass

Who were the members of Motorbass? +
Motorbass consisted of Philippe Zdar (later of Cassius, born January 28 1967) and Etienne de Crecy (born 1969 in Paris). They met through the Parisian electronic music scene in the early 1990s. After Motorbass disbanded in 1997, Zdar formed Cassius with Boom Bass while de Crecy pursued his Superdiscount solo project.
Did Motorbass invent the French Touch? +
Motorbass is widely credited with creating the sonic template that became the French Touch, predating Daft Punk’s Homework by a year with their 1996 album Pansoul. Music journalist Martin James coined the term “French Touch” in 1996, partly in response to what Motorbass and other early French house artists had created. They did not “invent” it alone, but Pansoul is among the founding documents of the movement.
What happened to Motorbass? +
Motorbass dissolved in 1997 after releasing Pansoul and a handful of EPs. Philippe Zdar went on to form Cassius with Boom Bass, becoming one of the most successful French electronic acts of the era. Etienne de Crecy launched his Superdiscount series and built a celebrated solo career. Philippe Zdar died on June 19 2019.
What is the Motorbass album Pansoul? +
Pansoul is the only studio album by Motorbass, released in 1996 on Virgin Records. AllMusic called it “instrumental in reviving the Parisian underground dance music scene and bringing it international attention.” It is considered one of the founding records of the French Touch movement alongside Daft Punk’s Homework and St Germain’s Boulevard.
Explore More

Keep Exploring French Electronic Music

(Visited 6 times, 1 visits today)
SHARE THIS

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *