I think we need this. The Rolling Dance thread is too all over the place. It even contains this blog house thing or whatever (no offense).
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Thursday, 28 January 2010 06:54 (sixteen years ago)
>: |
― 26 Mixes Focaccia (Stevie D), Thursday, 28 January 2010 06:58 (sixteen years ago)
i said no offense, man. i enjoy some of those blog house music but it's just that it's a genre of its own and it'd be nice to have a proper techno/house thread.
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Thursday, 28 January 2010 07:13 (sixteen years ago)
Have at it, I hope to contribute. Or at least check for whats going on.
― babylon sister (Siah Alan), Thursday, 28 January 2010 08:12 (sixteen years ago)
Sleeper Wakes.
― zoom, Thursday, 28 January 2010 09:33 (sixteen years ago)
What does "bobbins" mean? It annoys me every time I see it but mostly becayse I don't know what it means.
― _Rudipherous_, Thursday, 28 January 2010 09:57 (sixteen years ago)
(Is that a UK or ILX thing? Is UK English getting weirder and weirder to frustrate the attempts of Americans with internet access to understand it?)
― _Rudipherous_, Thursday, 28 January 2010 09:58 (sixteen years ago)
Bobbins = rolling thread.
― Tim F, Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:18 (sixteen years ago)
A bobbin is like a spool, it's a cylindrical object used for keeping thread/wire/etc neat. When you buy thread, you generally buy it wound around a bobbin. 'Bobbins', the plural, functions like 'rubbish', 'nonsense', 'bollocks', etc (some people use it euphemistically for 'bollocks' (the epithet not the body part) the way people used to use 'blooming' for 'bloody'). In the phrase 'electro-house bobbins' it basically just means 'stuff', in a mildly disparaging affectionate kind of way.
UK English is, I suspect, getting less weird as regional variants die out quicker than they can be invented, but thanks for thinking it's all about you.
xpost hahahaha no wait what Tim said
― lords of hyrule (c sharp major), Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:22 (sixteen years ago)
haha all these years i never made the bobbins/rolling thread link
― لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:28 (sixteen years ago)
As a parent, it always makes me think of the 'Wind The Bobbin Up' nursery rhyme sung over a boshing 4/4.
― We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:34 (sixteen years ago)
(sorry for saddo)
― We should have called Suzie and Bobby (NickB), Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:36 (sixteen years ago)
Glad I asked, despite exposing my un-serious theory about UK English to ridicule. I hadn't even known the word's non-slang meaning (too lazy to Google it before), and of course rolling thread makes perfect sense.
― _Rudipherous_, Thursday, 28 January 2010 10:40 (sixteen years ago)
second on sleeper wakes, best thing mills has done in the guts on a decade id say. his beatless tracks didnt used to be the best but the way these one build and bubble are fantastic, reminded me of oneohtrix point never in parts
The massive 3cd shake shakir comp is available to download at boomkat now as well, £10 for 35 completely essential tunes is beyond a bargain. listening to his stuff for the first time in years has suddenly made me realise the extent of the influence on kode 9 tracks of the last year
― straightola, Thursday, 28 January 2010 11:32 (sixteen years ago)
lol i always thought bobbins was for um headbobbin'
― Roz, Thursday, 28 January 2010 11:49 (sixteen years ago)
^ this
― Crackle Box, Thursday, 28 January 2010 11:57 (sixteen years ago)
^^double this
― 26 Mixes Focaccia (Stevie D), Thursday, 28 January 2010 14:29 (sixteen years ago)
huh. so, like, "keeps bobbing along" then? i've been just bobbing along all this time assuming it was some dumb term for "choon!" and let it go cuz i'm just one voice in the wilderness.
― andrew m., Thursday, 28 January 2010 15:15 (sixteen years ago)
%%%bobbins: adj useless junk. While quite recent slang, it’s rather charming: Did your grandmother leave you anything good? / Nope, just a complete load of ancient bobbins. One possible etymology: that it’s from the north of England (particularly the Lancashire and Manchester areas), which used to be supported largely by cotton mills. As the industrial revolution drew to a close, the mills closed down and the population found itself with a surfeit of largely worthless milling machinery. During that time the phrase “‘twas worth nout but bobbins” sprung up; years later we’re left only with the last word.%%%%
dunno about the cotton mills stuff but is used a fair bit in lancashire. term used more affectionately than implied in above definition though
― Parish Priest!, Thursday, 28 January 2010 16:32 (sixteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyMmR3XDRVc
― Parish Priest!, Thursday, 28 January 2010 16:34 (sixteen years ago)
BOOOO! to local record store who thinks it can get away charging $17 for 12"s. They're still 15 elsewhere!
― EDB, Thursday, 28 January 2010 16:53 (sixteen years ago)
Seems like most year-end roundups have been ignoring the Bodycode album. Serious question, were there really that many good techno LPs in 2009? Or am I just a Ghostly stan who should get over it?
― counter-clockwise (lukas), Friday, 29 January 2010 08:10 (sixteen years ago)
I checked out the Bodycode album but it didn't leave a strong impression.
anyone else dig this track?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81aZ8xB4vr4
its from late last year, i think, but i'm still listening to it all the time. i love how that harsh pitch shifting bass gradually rises up and gives way to the staccato melody and pads, like whoooooosh, feels good. and then the kick drum comes in so slyly. love this track.
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Friday, 29 January 2010 18:32 (sixteen years ago)
eyyy, hope im posting this in the right place. Anyway, a friend of a friend is doing an MA in journalism and asked me to contribute some stuff on music for his final project. I wrote this about Kompakt. Bare in mind that it's aimed at people who've probably never heard anything on Kompakt/other techno labels before.
Just over ten years ago, Michael Mayer, Jürgen Paape and Wolfgang Voigt founded a record label in the German city of Cologne. Despite their credentials as producers and DJs, Voigt in particular was already regarded as one of the most important figures in European electronic music, they had little idea that their label, Kompakt, would go on to be one that would define the sound of techno over the course over the next decade.
In order to assess the influence the label has on today’s music, we must place it in the wider context of techno as a genre. Three friends from the Detroit suburb of Belleville: Juan Atkins, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson created futuristic, soulless (the lack of ‘soul’ in early techno records is largely what differentiated it from the emerging house scene that was developing in Chicago at the same time) black music that was heavily inspired by the robotic minimalism of Kraftwerk as much as the bass heavy funk of George Clinton’s Parliament and Funkadelic. They called it techno. Their music was influenced by their surroundings: by the early 80s Detroit had gone from the home of Motown and car manufacturing to a kind of post-industrial wasteland and the futuristic sound of the genre seemed apt. Eventually the scene gathered momentum, becoming a staple in clubs all over the US. Since the early days there has been an affinity between Detroit and Germany. It was Berlin that was the first city to embrace techno in a major way and the Tresor nightclub became one of the most highly regarded in the world.
Techno was, and still can be, pummeling, relentless and downright brutal. Perhaps this is why it remains ever popular with Germans. The Kompakt sound is somewhat different. The insistent 4/4-kick drum that almost defines the genre is there, but the hard edges are laced with crystalline melodies, melancholy vocals and a sense of hopeless romanticism. It is probably for this reason that techno elitists sneer at the it: the music on Kompakt appeals to people who haven’t spent their lives searching for rare Theo Parrish white labels. There is a pronounced pop sensibility to the best Kompakt material, the idea that these are songs and not just tracks, tools for DJs. In an interview with Pitchforkmedia, Mayer himself states that, ‘Techno in the early years was a lot like model trains; two guys playing with the machines all day long, super serious. We always had a different approach-- it was about having fun, having a good time, even if the music is abstract and very modern, it's still about disco and about having a good time.’
My introduction to Kompakt, and techno in general, came by chance. I spent the summer after my GCSE’s looking out of my bedroom window at cornfields and woods listening to a select few records over and over. One of these was Erlend Oye’s DJ Kicks (!K7, 2004). The first track on the album was Jürgen Paape’s beguiling ‘So Wiet Wie Noch Nie’, a record that remains, partly because of nostalgia and partly because of the sheer brilliance of it, one of my favorite songs of the decade. Built around lilting, swooning synth pads and a dusty vocal sampled from an old Sonya Lubke record, it was the most beautiful four minutes of music I’d heard. There were other examples of the microhouse sound that I would come to become obsessed with in the following years: Skatebard’s fizzy ‘Metal Chix’ and Ricardo Villalobos’ ‘Dexter’ a track that seems to both melt, and slow down time. After Erlend, I delved into the Kompakt catalogue starting with various compilations and mixes, and they were a formative part of my musical education. I got into harder, more obscure stuff as a result and for a long time, listened to nothing but minimal techno, much to the annoyance of friends and flatmates.
Kompakt are undeniably stylish. In the 90s techno was associated with austere looking bald men wearing severe glasses and green coats, and Kompakt, along with the likes of BPitch, Get Physical and Perlon, was one of the labels that made the genre ‘sexy’ again. The music was warmer than the original Detroit tracks, more inviting to outsiders and easier to dance too. The label’s aesthetic is all clean lines and bold text. This uniformity seems oddly fitting for a label that has a roster including the likes of Kaito (blissed out trance), Gui Boratto (infectious house straight out of South America) and GAS (Wolfgang Voigt’s modern-classical/ambient moniker).
It is Michael Mayer, though, who has become the undoubted star of the label. Though his solo productions aren’t necessarily among Kompakt’s finest releases he can lay claim to have put out three of the finest mixes of all time in Fabric 13, Immer and the Peel Session. DJs often talk about ‘narratives’ and ‘journeys’ and the importance of tracks flowing, combining to create something new. Mayer is the master of letting his song selections breathe, giving them time to develop, to unveil themselves fully. He doesn’t go in for the flashy mixing style like some, preferring subtle transitions. The album he released for the Farringdon based club is a perfect snapshot of the heavier side of his record collection, and the session he did for John Peel is an excellent introduction to the ‘schaffel’ (imagine glam rock meeting techno. But not as awful as that should be.) sound that briefly dominated the label’s release schedule, but it is Immer that is most deserving of a closer look. Immer is, and I have to admit that I can only talk about this record in hyperbolic terms, a masterpiece. It’s 70 minutes of the finest techno of the decade that manages to incorporate birdsong (Superpitcher’s remix of ‘Crokus’ by Carsten Jost) swathes of portentous German classical music (Tobias Thomas and Superpitcher’s edit of ‘Perfect Lovers’ by Phantom/Ghost) and what sounds like an electric saw breaking (‘Surface’ by Paul Nazca). It’s become one of the defining techno records of the decade and probably the one that secured Kompakt’s place in the electronic music canon.
They may not be releasing must-have 12”s as regularly as they were a few years back, but there’s still a lot to get excited about. Next year should see new releases from the likes of Superpitcher, DJ Koze and Ewan Pearson. The classic Kompkat sound, ‘a mix of minimalism, melody, and melancholy, often with an underlying pop sensibility’ is one that resonates with a huge number of people: Mayer and co regularly play some of the biggest clubs in the world. And, well, to end on a personal note, I can’t imagine what my life would be like if I’d never heard ‘So Weit Wie Noch Nie’ way back in 2006.
― Dwight Yorke, Saturday, 30 January 2010 23:36 (sixteen years ago)
Three friends from the Detroit suburb of Belleville: Juan Atkins, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson created futuristic, soulless (the lack of ‘soul’ in early techno records is largely what differentiated it from the emerging house scene that was developing in Chicago at the same time) black music that was heavily inspired by the robotic minimalism of Kraftwerk as much as the bass heavy funk of George Clinton’s Parliament and Funkadelic. They called it techno.
immediately, i want to warn against calling Detroit techno "soulless"; be careful dude
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Sunday, 31 January 2010 01:11 (sixteen years ago)
Seconded.
Elsewhere, the Benjamin Brunn Modyfier mix is super lush stuff. The only other person I can think of who gets as much warmth out of his machines is er... Move D!
― sam500, Friday, 5 February 2010 07:52 (fifteen years ago)
:( thirded.
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Friday, 5 February 2010 07:54 (fifteen years ago)
probably just "soul" as signify "vocals"
― mully, Friday, 5 February 2010 12:09 (fifteen years ago)
also bobbins = sewing machine spindle = totally soul less soulless souless fuc wat soulles.
― mully, Friday, 5 February 2010 12:11 (fifteen years ago)
sam500, that Benjamin Brunn is great!!! Thks - love the Andy Warhol interview loop and track 3 is quite special.
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Friday, 5 February 2010 12:18 (fifteen years ago)
the two hieroglyphic being records on mathematics sub label +++ are flat out amazing. even though the tracks are already collected on the synthetic love life cd, i had to get them on vinyl (it seems this dude just lives to tax european noobs like myself)
if you like weird endlessly evolving but constantly jacking house music i cannot recommend these enough. there's a really manic, restless energy in this music, all of these unfeasible melodies and rhythms competing to be heard over the layers of cassette fuzz
― anita bonghit (rionat), Friday, 5 February 2010 12:41 (fifteen years ago)
there's a track on another new ep on mathematics that's just this african flute melody over huge tribal toms. it's so good but such a pain to mix with - it seems like the sequencer keeps going out of sync or something
― anita bonghit (rionat), Friday, 5 February 2010 12:51 (fifteen years ago)
anyone feeling Nina Kraviz - Pain In The Ass / I'm Gonna Get You on Rekids? Can't decide which track I like better... (might technically be VERY late 2009, not sure)
― SSS, Friday, 5 February 2010 15:46 (fifteen years ago)
xpost: yeah, i love "I'm Gonna Get You" - great, great slice of deepness + nice vocals.
Didnt really get into the "Pain In The Ass" prob due to that bantering voiceover.
it kicks in around 3.30https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqh4UE4fIJ0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN7k8V6UhIs
― De que estas hablando? (Tannenbaum Schmidt), Friday, 5 February 2010 16:01 (fifteen years ago)
Techno was, and still can be, pummeling, relentless and downright brutal. Perhaps this is why it remains ever popular with Germans.
Hmm.
― Tracer Hand, Friday, 5 February 2010 16:53 (fifteen years ago)
lol
― DJ Get Up Kids (jim in glasgow), Friday, 5 February 2010 16:53 (fifteen years ago)
that was tl;dr so thanks for highlighting that for my amusement.
any tips for any new pummeling, relentless and downright brutal new techno?
― cozen, Friday, 5 February 2010 16:55 (fifteen years ago)
maybe this?:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWtF8SNphPk
Mike Dehnert's Dico EP sounds excellent from the samples I've heard.
Delta Funktionen "Silhouette (Marcel Dettmann rmx)" left me pretty underwhelmed on first listen, but that's worth checking out.
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Friday, 5 February 2010 18:27 (fifteen years ago)
heard this at optimo recentlyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=md_OaPX4_j4
― cozen, Friday, 5 February 2010 18:31 (fifteen years ago)
i'm quite enjoying this label at the moment
http://www.discogs.com/label/Do+Not+Resist+The+Beat!
noisy industrial techno from berlin
― anita bonghit (rionat), Friday, 5 February 2010 20:17 (fifteen years ago)
ha, what's that bauhaus thing? (if there are samples of the band in there, i don't hear it; maybe they mean the german version of home depot.) sounds like radio slave!
― pshrbrn, Friday, 5 February 2010 21:07 (fifteen years ago)
rionat, milton bradley has a really good remix on one of the new prologue 12"s (i think the last cio d'or 12"?) that sounds a lot like DNRTB #4...
hey, thanks for the sarky comments, REALLY APPRECIATED!
― Dwight Yorke, Friday, 5 February 2010 21:49 (fifteen years ago)
new mike dehnert ep is great, so is the alex cortex ep on pomelo
― djkomisch, Friday, 5 February 2010 21:49 (fifteen years ago)
i don't hear any samples of bauhaus the band in there either. the youtube clip says "marcel dettmann??" in the description, so there's some fuel for the rumor mill.
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Friday, 5 February 2010 22:01 (fifteen years ago)
I gave a shot at doing a top 100 bobbins of the decade, and I've kind of settled on these top 50, that is if anyone cares.
1 Soul Capsule – Law Of Grace2 Akufen – Skidoos3 Luomo – Tessio4 Farben – Beautone5 Matthew Dear – Dog Days6 Pantha Du Prince – Saturn Strobe7 Alex Smoke – Chica Wappa8 Jurgen Paape – So Weit Wie Noch Nie9 Luciano – La Limonida de Pepe Bombilla / Amelie on Ice10 Vladislav Delay – Huone11 Deadbeat – Organ in the Attic Sings the Blues11 Ricardo Villalobos – Easy Lee12 Closer Musik – You Don’t Know Me13 Polmo Polpo – Kiss Me Again and Again14 Burial – Archangel / Broken Home15 The Juan Maclean - Happy House16 DJ Sprinkles – Ball’r (Madonna Free Zone)17 Isolée – Schrapnel / Pillowtalk18 LCD Soundsystem – Losing My Edge19 Lawrence – Along the Wire (Superpitcher Remix)20 Jichael Mackson – The Grass is Always Greener21 Martin Buttrich – Full Clip22 Hercules and Love Affair – Blind (Club Mix)23 Dominique Leone - Clairevoyage24 Partial Arts – Trauermusik25 Metro Area – Miura26 Matt John – Hawaii You27 Peverelist – Junktion28 Le Noir – Eleny (Radioslave Remix)29 Rex the Dog – I Look Into Mid Air30 Dave Aju - Anyway31 Kalabrese – Auf Dem Hof32 Ellen Allien – Sensucht33 Petre Inspirescu - Le Crème Bonjour34 Alex Under – La Bicicleta Son Para El Verano / Multiplicanciones D35 Audion – Mouth to Mouth36 Booka Shade – In White Rooms / Mandarine Girl37 Oni Ayhun – OAR003 B38 Narcotic Syntax – Cowabunga!39 Lindstrom – I Feel Space30 Ramadanman – Blimey41 Hot Chip – Boy From School (Erol Alkan Remix)42 Richard Davis – This Time43 Delia Gonzales and Gavin Russom – Revelée (Carl Craig Remix)44 Cobblestone Jazz – W/ Dump Truck45 Chic Miniature – Escalando46 Mari Boine – Vuoi Vuoi Mu (Henrik Schwarz Remix)47 Mathew Jonson – Marionette48 Nathan Fake – Dinamo / Undoing the Laces49 Metaboman – Easy Woman (Robag Whrume Mix)50 Sutekh – Untitled (Periods.Make.Sense. Track 8)
I don't know what to think about the fact that this is pretty well just white males.
― EDB, Saturday, 6 February 2010 05:46 (fifteen years ago)
Pretty boring list, actually, but nevertheless it's a pretty spot on representation of me (also take into account that I didn't start listening to dance music until 2006).
― EDB, Saturday, 6 February 2010 05:48 (fifteen years ago)
cozen that motor track is brutal
― CrazySexyFrog (haitch), Saturday, 6 February 2010 06:46 (fifteen years ago)
it is ridic
― jabba hands, Saturday, 6 February 2010 06:54 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfnhPQfDxS4
This Djebali tune is terrific.
― Matt DC, Friday, 19 November 2010 15:24 (fifteen years ago)
new robag mix cd on kompakt - but it doesn't have THAT track that he spent the last 18 months hauling round and still remains un-ID-ed
― cherry blossom, Friday, 19 November 2010 15:44 (fifteen years ago)
Anyone have any idea about a house track with wailing diva vocals going "I need you, I neeeed you" etc. (I think the vocals may be lifted from somewhere else) with pads or something of the sort running underneath, and then some 303 comes in. I feel like I've heard this before several times, and this might be obvious, but I certainly can't figure it out and would like to.
― EDB, Friday, 19 November 2010 18:57 (fifteen years ago)
"4 real, cunt off you boring, unpleasant man
― lex lex lex lex lex on the track BOW (lex pretend), Friday, November 19, 2010 4:12 AM (1 week ago) Bookmark"
Kinda feel like there could be a separate Techno Bobbins thread now -- there's just so much great stuff coming out week upon week upon week that greatly overshadows the dregs of mindless overproduced Ableton house that great critical minds such as the Lex champion. If anything, just to avoid negativity like in the above quote. I mean, it's little wonder this thread generates about 5 posts per month when that's what people are greeted with. Anyway.
The new release on Slow To Speak (a label that is so much better when it puts out original stuff rather than overpriced one sided vinyl reissues) is immense. Further fueling the inevitable utopian techno takeover, Ex Nihilo Nihil Fit by Chasing Voices is all grainy digital synth choirs, hyper syncopated restless drum patterns, and endlessly modulated filter noises. The synths are so beautifully woozy, they wow and flutter like old VHS machines. You can almost visualize the reverb as if watching the trails from street lamps when driving through a rainy city at night. It's an update on that classic ART/Ifach/B12 sound but seems to be going in a new direction somehow. And crucially contains plenty of dance floor pressure. Extremely sick. Not sure who Chasing Voices are, their previous release was an analog half-stepper that skirted the similar realms that artists such as Raime and Demdike Stare have been exploring, interpreting contemporary dance music trends through the cracked lenses of industrial and dark wave.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfuWP4qwg7g
― Volker Veldeke, Friday, 26 November 2010 08:19 (fifteen years ago)
Actually both releases are on Preserved Instincts which I guess is a Slow To Speak sub label.
― Volker Veldeke, Friday, 26 November 2010 08:28 (fifteen years ago)
2010 is proving a wonderful year for music (though I wouldn't want the bobbins thread to be split - for me i like to have it all in one thread, things i like, things i don't like and things i might like - the boundaries between the 3 aren't always that clear for me and its a good way for me to hear some things i might not otherwise)
anyone heard the new melchior? people seem a bit down on it, i'm not keen on the spanish vocal side but i like the little i've heard of the other side, cinza de fenix
― cherry blossom, Friday, 26 November 2010 08:36 (fifteen years ago)
also, been feeling Royal Oak records this year (the Gerd releases anyway!)
― cherry blossom, Friday, 26 November 2010 08:37 (fifteen years ago)
Chymera - Ghosts EP, esp These Jagged Shardshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lbs2H1saVh0&feature=related
― mmmm, Friday, 26 November 2010 09:49 (fifteen years ago)
Please no one use the word "overproduced" in relation to dance music ever again, okthxbye.
― Matt DC, Friday, 26 November 2010 10:41 (fifteen years ago)
The short track the Lex posted (just using this as an example, not an ad hom) sounds overproduced to me; tons of attention paid to minute EQ and compression details in place of an actually engaging composition, or interesting ideas. Ditto the Djebali tune you posted, it sounds nice but does literally nothing but that for 9 minutes (again not meant as a personal attack). Same with Lee Foss - U Got Me. Same with the overhyped snooze fest that is the John Roberts album. There's a transparency, or sterility to those kind of productions that strikes me as too complacent, too orthodox, and devoid of emotion. Just too clean and polite. I feel like there is a lot of stuff that's been coming out that places itself into opposition against those kind of productions. Take Mike Dehnhart's recent record on Echochord, the mix and sound design is top notch, yet the hi-hats crunch and the synths sound like they're coated in motor oil. Or D'Marc Cantu's Black Tears on Creme Jak, the loops sound mismatched and rub against each other in unpredictable directions. Both club worthy tunes that sound amazing on a big system but full of imperfections and blemishes. I know this isn't anything new, listen to most productions pre-the DAW revolution and you'll hear the same thing. I've got nothing against computer music however and wish to retract my stupid Ableton diss.
Apologies if you were just going for the quick put down though and don't want to engage in discussion.
― Volker Veldeke, Friday, 26 November 2010 11:47 (fifteen years ago)
It's a fair complaint but I don't really agree with it (disclaimer, not heard any of the records you're citing as alternatives, willing to believe they're excellent). I don't think there's anything wrong with just wanting to bathe in tune for a few minutes so I'm being a bit hippy and not viewing it as an either/or thing.
Also these threads have a history of people turning personal opinions about production techniques into tedious rigid ideological crusdades. The phrase "mindless overproduced Ableton house" was kind of Pipecocky and made my knee jerk snarkily.
― Matt DC, Friday, 26 November 2010 11:54 (fifteen years ago)
also as much as lex's reaction was ott, it wasn't the beginning of the "negativity" you complain about...
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Friday, 26 November 2010 15:47 (fifteen years ago)
If Vahid is actually offended or bothered by any poster going "cunt off you boring unpleasant man" then everything I believed about this world was wrong.
― Matt DC, Friday, 26 November 2010 16:03 (fifteen years ago)
the negativity of this thread is v offputting, esp from idiots who like terrible music i hate.
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Friday, 26 November 2010 16:06 (fifteen years ago)
poster 1: this music sucksposter 2: you suck
or, put another way
poster 1: fuck this lame trackposter 2: no, fuck you
it doesn't bother me so much as it
1) makes me laugh, imagining the lex getting all huffy and pissed because i pooped on his track of the week, then blasting his favorite taylor swift diss song and ripping up his pillows in his bedroom while he crafts his retort2) reminds me how lame and childish the uk poptimist crew can get when you really push them on something
― moonship journey to baja, Friday, 26 November 2010 17:26 (fifteen years ago)
i don't know, i just fell into the same trap: letting your disagreement over some music turn into ad hominem attacks
and i think it's fine to insult music, it's not like sounds have feelings, i don't know why or how the lex takes it so personally when i say fuck r&b samples, fuck sample-based house in general right now
― moonship journey to baja, Friday, 26 November 2010 17:50 (fifteen years ago)
"the negativity of this thread is v offputting, esp from idiots who like terrible music i hate."
come on that HAS to be the new board description!
― scott seward, Friday, 26 November 2010 17:55 (fifteen years ago)
Agreed.
Also, from my standpoint, so much of the much 'proper' (may the gods strike down anyone who takes it upon him/herself to say what is and isn't proper techno) or "utopian" that has been so beloved, a la sandwell district et al, is precisely what I find to be too complacent, too orthodox, and devoid of emotion (And believe you me, my ire has been well rankled by DJ's playing sets full of glossy, boring "abelton techno." But I'm just as annoyed by reactionism that privileges underproduced techno that often ends up sounding, well, underproduced).
Also. Anyone else enjoying the work of Lone? Having been pointed to him by that recent RA feature by M Matos and by the favourable reviews of Once in A While, I now feel rather taken with his productions. I guess there's not an immense lot behind them, but very pleasing nonetheless.
― EDB, Friday, 26 November 2010 18:44 (fifteen years ago)
I think this is kind of nice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAKq5wlMhGs
― srsly dudes pastiche aesthetic + amiable nihilism (Display Name), Friday, 26 November 2010 18:52 (fifteen years ago)
lone is what, boards of canada + kyle hall? in other words, DOOOOOOPE.
― moonship journey to baja, Friday, 26 November 2010 19:09 (fifteen years ago)
really enjoying kassem mosse and the rest of the artists from the commix remix pack these days.
also marcel dettmann and shed's tracks from the modeselektion comp
― moonship journey to baja, Friday, 26 November 2010 19:10 (fifteen years ago)
I absolutely love that Storm Queen thing.
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Friday, 26 November 2010 19:36 (fifteen years ago)
Ex Nihilo Nihil Fit by Chasing Voices
thank you
― just woke up (lukas), Friday, 26 November 2010 20:34 (fifteen years ago)
That Chymera track is just pure loveliness. I've been all for the general direction of whatever Chymera I've heard, but I've always felt it needed a bit softening at the edges, and this delivers just that.
And that Storm Queen track IS kinda nice, kinda really nice.
― EDB, Friday, 26 November 2010 21:38 (fifteen years ago)
saw alex barck (jazzanova) last night and wow was he awesome. not really from a technical stand point but more from the way he played these wtf-is-that unknown/unreleased tracks. one standout track is the one with a "hard knock life" sample (annie soundtrack). any idea what that could be?
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Sunday, 28 November 2010 01:19 (fifteen years ago)
love that storm queen track
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Monday, 29 November 2010 02:29 (fifteen years ago)
really feelin' this track from earlier this year, esp. when the distorted voices come in about halfway thru
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCJX4_JbYAE
― chris and cosey and ted and alice (donna rouge), Monday, 6 December 2010 01:30 (fifteen years ago)
this koze/isolee thing on beats in space is awesome
― just woke up (lukas), Friday, 10 December 2010 03:03 (fifteen years ago)
anyone diggin this?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pUhQLRe6w4
― dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Friday, 10 December 2010 09:32 (fifteen years ago)
nice acid-y cosmin trg remix here. He also did good EP earlier in the year, Liebe Suende
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEgg-p5oTzk
― Dominique, Friday, 10 December 2010 17:24 (fifteen years ago)
This is too much fun/too mad to pass up...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EkGZK2g2qo
Along with MMM and Workshop 11 its prob my fave techno bits from '10
― jimitheexploder, Thursday, 16 December 2010 01:34 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.smileyhut.com/smileys/headbang.gifInner City - Good Life (Unreleased Schermate Tool) - 2010 - Unknownhttp://www.smileyhut.com/smileys/headbang.gif
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNFqlWBzmdc
― missingNO, Thursday, 16 December 2010 12:55 (fifteen years ago)
Picked up that Bakey Ustl 10" today (along with Hype Williams' Find Out What Happens.. LP). The Bakey Ustl is frickin' awesome!!
― mmmm, Thursday, 16 December 2010 20:25 (fifteen years ago)
i really really want mp3s of that bakey ustl ;_;
fkn vinyl-only releases
― lex diamonds (lex pretend), Thursday, 16 December 2010 20:33 (fifteen years ago)
vinyl only has hit me quite a bit this year, ended up buying quite a few records even though i don't have decks or a record player, then had to get them digitized elsewhere. That said, totally understand the financial reasoning behind vinyl only releases (though I have basically no desire to get into that particular debate)
― cherry blossom, Thursday, 16 December 2010 21:05 (fifteen years ago)
Haven't been able to afford much vinyl this year, but I did buy that Bakey Ustl the first time I heard it. Very fine.
― Chewshabadoo, Thursday, 16 December 2010 22:22 (fifteen years ago)
I'm kind of surprised how little Glass Eights talk there is on ILM. In any case, I'm 1.2 listens into it and it's reeeeeal purdy.
― EDB, Monday, 27 December 2010 01:01 (fifteen years ago)
'glass eights' is very nice! john roberts is playing here with omar-s and d'julz next weekend, i'm excited to hear him live.
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Monday, 27 December 2010 07:36 (fifteen years ago)
A-side tracks of this: http://www.residentadvisor.net/review-view.aspx?id=8436
if the ep had only been the a-side, might have snuck into my top 10 for 2010
― Dominique, Thursday, 30 December 2010 21:05 (fifteen years ago)
I hope it's alright to revive a past year's Techno Bobbins, as I wasn't sure where else to post this, but... I picked up The Traveller by Shed a few weeks ago, and it has grown to become something I listen to almost every day. It's really sublime, really creative without being ostentatious about it, it sounds great, it displays restraint and lays ideas bare without being "minimal," it feels gently enigmatic like lots of my favorite techno does.
Side question: how much digging into past year's techno/house do you guys tend to do? The scenes move fast, and given that I didn't buy much new music at all (relatively speaking) for the past few years, I'm playing catchup on '09 and '10 (and discovering lots!).
― Clarke B., Wednesday, 31 August 2011 00:57 (fourteen years ago)
lots!!!
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:38 (fourteen years ago)
i actually spend much more time digging than checking new stuff.
i feel like when an album sounds "current" and it's from this year big fucking deal
but when i dig up something from 06 or 08 that sounds fresher than it did at the time, it's like a buried treasure rush
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:43 (fourteen years ago)
now that i think about that, maybe it's because i tend to hear one track, learn about a new label, and then sort of relentlessly track down their whole back catalogue if i like it enough
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:44 (fourteen years ago)
last year i found out about artless / mojuba
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:45 (fourteen years ago)
I have so, so far to go in exploring techno, but the ravenously-explore-label approach seems pretty sound... I suppose the labels I'm really starting to dig into at this point are Rush Hour, Delsin (mainly because of that Morphosis record from this year), and Ostgut Ton...
― Clarke B., Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:48 (fourteen years ago)
otm, I do this with artists or related artists
― unwarranted display names of ilx (mh), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:49 (fourteen years ago)
Honestly, fuck staying current. Not that I don't follow new stuff with very much enjoyment, to have the question "did it come out in the last year" define your listening tastes is myopic, counterproductive, and just silly. (This is why, for instance, I would welcome '10 or even '09 stuff in the 2011 thread. Better it be spoken there than have nowhere to go).
― qpә (EDB), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 02:39 (fourteen years ago)
the nuum only moves forward iirc
― Gukbe, Wednesday, 31 August 2011 02:40 (fourteen years ago)
sometimes doesn't bother to even look backward, or sideways
― unwarranted display names of ilx (mh), Wednesday, 31 August 2011 02:57 (fourteen years ago)