[7] He curated a diverse lineup of acts that included Moodymann, Joy Orbison, Tale of Us, Dance Mania and DJ Slimzee.
[10] He also embarked upon a highly prestigious residency slot on BBC Radio 1 in August of the same year, joining other DJs such as Grimes, James Blake and Bonobo.
[12] His win came as part of an event organised to raise funds for Scotland's only music therapy charity, Nordoff-Robbins.
[14] Following this, Revill founded Dress 2 Sweat in 2007,[15] a vinyl label that focused predominantly on Baltimore club music emerging from the United States.
The festival and Revill both agreed to issue follow-up statements to fully explain the extent of the DJ's behavior.
A victim gave a public statement that she was frustrated with the response to Revill's Facebook post, saying that "it was hijacked by untruths and lad humour," and said, "It is so important for Jack to clarify what happened."
After Revill's death, Resident Advisor summarised the incident as such: Misdirection around what took place at Love Saves The Day made the situation worse: without relitigating the specifics, rumours swirled for an entire week that repurposed Revill's behaviour as little more than another cheeky notch on the belt of a sesh king, while some around him circled wagons and hoped the controversy would just ebb away.
But for those with a professional duty of care to leave the situation simmering in the comments was a dismal approach to handling public welfare.
By the time full details emerged, the fiasco had become so inflammatory that no one was in a charitable mood ... his public image saw no great repair.