That's rightful your opinion Mr Sicko.

I would suggest 3 things however:

*Listen to as much of Blaktroniks material as you can on vinyl, where the
sparseness of *some* of the productions, allied with the 'truer' analogue
repro qualities of vinyl, seem (in mho, natch) to in confluence produce the
effect which I *think* the guys are trying for, quite deliberately.

*Listen again - I would humbly suggest that this is 'growing-on-you'
material, par excellence.

*Read the upcoming article at http://bleep43.com for a deeper look at where
they're coming from and perhaps where they're headed.

Respect,

k



>-----Original Message-----
>From: Dan Sicko [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2003 2:31 AM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Cc: 313@hyperreal.org
>Subject: Re: (313) t-1000 interview (techno rant)
>
>
>I wouldn't ...
>
>Aside from a few very nice cuts, the rest sounded too much like a demo
>tape to me.
>
>I appreciate where they're headed -- I just don't think they're there
>yet.
>
>-d
>
>On Wednesday, February 12, 2003, at 06:30 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>wrote:
>
>>
>> i would add blaktronics to this list
>>
>> Original Message:
>> -----------------
>> From: Dan Sicko [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2003 15:24:19 -0500
>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], 313@hyperreal.org
>> Subject: Re: (313) t-1000 interview (techno rant)
>>
>>
>> How about the Emoticon folks, Delsin, Digital Soul? (to name but a few)
>>   There are lots of artists and labels that are creating wonderful
>> evolutions of Detroit techno.
>>
>> On Wednesday, February 12, 2003, at 09:04 AM, spw wrote:
>>
>>> you dont hear much about making techno
>>> for the 21'st Century.
>>
>>
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>
>>
>
>

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