Is Limmy the greatest bedroom techno producer of our time? Check out tracks such as his six-minute take on the theme from the Fry’s Turkish Delight commercial, or his remixes of Ace Of Spades by Motörhead and Africa by Toto, or one of his topless late night Ableton Live sessions, and you’ll fast realise that the answer is… probably not. But he’s definitely the funniest.
Real name Brian Limond, the Glaswegian web developer turned cult comedian, actor, writer, musician and social media addict – 74.4 thousand tweets and counting at time of writing – is famed for a lot of things. A swearing xylophone app, a BBC Scotland sketch show that gave us the catchphrase “she’s turned the weans against us” and a whole load of thoroughly deranged Vines to name but a few.
A regular at iconic Glasgow clubbing mecca The Arches in his youth, Limmy’s an old-school techno lifer who’s been making tunes of his own on home computer software since the 1990s. References to clubbing, club culture and dance music pop up time and again throughout his comedy. Be it in the form of his fairly self-explanatorily titled original Eccies, his appearance in a video for Glaswegian techno heavyweights Slam’s single This World or a viral sketch popularly known as “raving dad,” depicting an aged father in a suit apparently heavily under the influence of something, dancing madly while his panicked son attempts to calm him down before he suffers a heart attack (“ah miss yer ma son… ah’m comin’ tae get ye hen,” cries dad, seemingly content with his fate).
Limmy’s an old-school techno lifer who’s been making tunes of his own on home computer software since the 1990s
Despite the fact that his work often ranges into very dark places, BBC Scotland boldly saw fit to commission Limmy again recently for a one-off half-hour special titled Limmy’s Homemade Show. It’s another dose of distinctly Scottish surrealism, which quite apart from being perplexing and hilarious in about equal measure, serves as a useful reminder as to how his DIY comedic idiom has its own strong sonic as well as visual aesthetic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIWxgGrVaAQ