He probably did, although i don't have info on it.  I do have an excellent
EBM mix by Hell tho, called "electronic body".

Terrance Fixmer did, however, compile a great number of old industrial
tracks (hard to find) dist. by musicman, called "Aktion Mekanik".  It is
the only way i've been able to get a hold of skinny puppy's track
"assimilate".

dense

On Tue, 22 Jun 2004, Ben Britz wrote:

> didnt terrence fixmer do a mix album of all this sort of stuff
> recently? anyone buy it?
>
> seems an extension/progression fo the electroclash '80s fixation,
> with dj hell typically out front.
>
>
> Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >Dj Hell is playing out Front 242 tunes, would u consider that to
> > be good
> > >thing then?
> >
> > Yes - very much so. It's good to hear someone is playing
> > something from
> > that era besides Nitzer Ebb
> > they along with several other groups had a more consistent,
> > longer, and
> > less one-dimensional career
> >
> > >Togehter with Front 242 and Frontline Assembly they were the
> > 'big names'
> > >of the Electronic Body Music scene back in the 80's. U don't
> > have to like
> > >thier tunes, the early ones from thier album 'That Total Age'
> > sound like a
> > >pitched up version of DAF but try their album 'Belief' or
> > 'Showtime' and u
> > >wil hear a different band.
> >
> > I don't like 'That Total Age' but it does seem to be the only one
> > that gets
> > played in techno sets.
> > I'd love to hear tunes off of their other records within techno
> > sets - but
> > it doens't happen.
> >
> > it's always either 'Join in the Chant' or 'Let Your Body Learn'
> > that I hear
> >
> > and yes, I do think they are crap tunes - explain to me what this
> > is about
> > beyond vague sloganeering.
> > If they were trying to mock fascists then Laibach beat them to it
> > except
> > Laibach has a much better and more fleshed out idea and message.
> > If they were trying to be angry but danceable then Front 242 has
> > them beat
> > there.
> > I've never been a fan of bands/artists that have really vague yet
> > anthemic
> > tunes - especially those that have big chanting sing-along type
> > lyrics
> > lots of rage (or feigned rage) but what is the target or cause?
> > There's
> > just nothing there. I just want them to light a joint and calm
> > the f*ck
> > down - maybe think of something interesting to say while still
> > making me
> > dance. However the lyrics in these two tunes are about as
> > interesting as
> > Madonna's.
> >
> > I read a Amazon customer review that pretty much sums up Nitzer's
> > entire
> > first album:
> >
> > >>NE's approach to things was pretty simple: lay down a pummeling
> > beat,
> > shout military vocals and lay some simple yet catchy synth hooks
> > on top
> >
> > look at these lyrics:
> >
> > lies, lies, lies, lies
> > gold, gold, gold, gold
> > guns, guns, guns, guns
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > gold, gold, gold, gold
> > judge, judge, judge, judge
> > guns, guns, guns, guns
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle, muscle, muscle, muscle
> >
> > lies, lies, lies, lies
> > books, books, books, books
> > burn, burn, burn, burn
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > judge, judge, judge, judge
> > gold, gold, gold, gold
> > guns, guns, guns, guns
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle, muscle, muscle, muscle
> >
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant
> > muscle, muscle, muscle, muscle
> >
> > lies, lies, lies, lies
> > books, books, books, books
> > burn, burn, burn, burn
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > guns, guns, guns, guns
> > gold, gold, gold, gold
> > judge, judge, judge, judge
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle, muscle
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle and hate
> >
> > force is machine
> > force is machine
> > force is machine
> > join in the chant
> > force is machine
> > join in the chant
> > muscle, muscle
> >
> > lies, lies, lies, lies
> > books, books, books, books
> > burn, burn, burn, burn
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > judge, judge, judge, judge
> > gold, gold, gold, gold
> > guns, guns, guns, guns
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle and hate
> > muscle, muscle, muscle, muscle
> >
> > force is machine
> > force is machine
> > join in the chant
> > force is machine
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant
> > join in the chant (muscle)
> > muscle, muscle, muscle
> >
> > fire, fire, fire
> >
> > join in the chant
> > ____________
> >
> > yeah, whatever.
> >
> > MEK
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >                       "Martijn de Blaauw"
> >
> >                       <[EMAIL PROTECTED]        To:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >                       chline.biz>                    cc:
> > 313@hyperreal.org
> >
> >                                                      Subject:
> > Re: (313) Nitzer Ebb....eh?
> >
> >                       06/22/04 01:48 AM
> >
> >                       Please respond to
> >
> >                       martijn.de.blaauw
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Crap? don't think u can call their tunes crap...they where one of
> > the very
> > few electronical bands to come out of the UK and have a some
> > reputation or
> > respect within in the Electronic/EBM scene from back in the
> > days.
> >
> > Togehter with Front 242 and Frontline Assembly they were the 'big
> > names'
> > of the Electronic Body Music scene back in the 80's. U don't have
> > to like
> > thier tunes, the early ones from thier album 'That Total Age'
> > sound like a
> > pitched up version of DAF but try their album 'Belief' or
> > 'Showtime' and u
> > wil hear a different band.
> >
> > Futhermore i think that their titles and lyrics really go well
> > with
> > techno..'let your body learn', 'join in the chant', 'murderous'
> > and
> > 'Control i'm here' just fit well with hard looped techno:-)
> >
> > Hawtin, Surgeon and the rest just might feel that these song are
> > classics
> > and they grew up with it as being their early contact with
> > electronic
> > music and this is their way of paying respect.
> >
> > Dj Hell is playing out Front 242 tunes, would u consider that to
> > be good
> > thing then? i do....great tunes were made back in those days,
> > they deserve
> > to be played out again
> >
> > And yes, Douglas Mcarthy, the former shouter of Nitzer Ebb has
> > made a
> > great, very great album with Terence Fixmer called 'between the
> > devil..'
> > and this mix between oldschool EBM, his vocals and 2004 techno
> > really my
> > stereo at the moment...Highly Recommended!
> >
> > just my 50 cents on this sunny morning..
> >
> > Martijn
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > What's with their sudden popularity again?
> > > Is it a result of Richie Hawtin throwing them into his "Decks,
> > efx&909"
> > > mix?
> > >
> > > They were riding the coat-tails of D.A.F. as far as I'm
> > concerned.
> > > They're lyrics were sh!t, their beats were rudimentary, and
> > their debut
> > > album (and those that followed) regurgitates the same
> > elementary themes
> > > over and over.
> > >
> > > There were at least a handful of artists that were better:
> > > Meat Beat Manifesto (used Nitzer Ebb as toilet paper)
> > > Front 242
> > > Front Line Assembly
> > > Foetus
> > > Depeche Mode
> > > SPK
> > > Test Dept.
> > > Throbbing Gristle
> > > Cabaret Voltaire
> > > 23 Skidoo
> > > A Certain Ratio
> > >
> > > and on and on.....
> > >
> > > each of these bands could do what Nitzer Ebb was trying to do
> > but they
> > all
> > > did it better
> > > and any one of them make Nitzer Ebb look like a teenage boy
> > band.
> > >
> > > If I hear that line "Lies lies etc guns guns etc fire fire
> > etc." anymore
> > > I'm going to lose it.
> > > It's a crap tune - it was a crap tune in 1987 - it's a crap
> > tune now.
> > >
> > >
> > > So - can anyone explain why the popularity of Nitzer Ebb and
> > why do they
> > > end up in so many techno sets nowadays?
> > >
> > > MEK
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>

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