On the discogs.com site, the compilation in question doesn't seem to appear, nor do either the mills page or the final cut page show this track, or any "subzero" pseudonym.

The Final Cut who had an album with Nettwork Records (i believe the album was _Consumed_) were the same Final Cut folks that Mills recorded with, though.

As for a Chris Connely connection, I just don't know.

cheers,
-marc


At 7:21 PM +0000 12/6/02, Tristan Watkins wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "marc christensen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "<313 list>" <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Friday, December 06, 2002 6:59 PM
Subject: (313) sub-zero


 here's a test of folks' techno history:

 who was sub-zero?

 On the Techno City Records 1989 compilation "There's no way out (of
 the groove)", the Subzero track "Right there that's it" gives
 producer credit to final cut; engineer: Jeff Mills.  Is this just
 mills, or do folks have a clue as to who else was behind this?

http://www.discogs.com/artist/Final_Cut

I often hear it discussed here but I've never bothered to ask if there's any
relationship between 'Final Cut' and 'The Final Cut', which was an
Industrial album from '92 or '93 (they have one compilation appearance
listed here: http://www.discogs.com/artist/The_Final_Cut but it says nothing
about the album, which I believe was also released on Netwerk). IIRC, they
had something to do with Chris Connely of Wax Trax fame, but this goes back
a decade since I've heard this stuff. I remember the very end of the last
song on the the album samples Malcolm McDowell in 'Clockwork Orange' saying,
"Is that the end then? I was quite enjoying that!"

Any relation between the two? I always assumed there was, but I don't know
what it is.

Tristan
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