WOW! The clips on the background site sound siiiiick. sounds like the track 
"math test" is the cosmic signal device on this one. Check 'em out. 
http://www.background-records.de/data/content.htm

oh and I gotta second that aybee-revolution of 1 joint too. Both sides are 
super deeeep and burnt. One side breaks and the other more 4x4. all ace.

nice tip dawg. 

KKS

-----Original Message-----
From: fab. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, September 30, 2005 9:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: (313) new T. Dixon on Background coming soon!

glad to hear he's back- i was asking about him a few months ago but noone 
seemed to have any idea.
there are some interesting bits of info here too which i didnt know...like 
co-producing Infiniti (which is great) and the Mike Banks debacle....

fab.

from the Background Records mailout:

OUT SOON.


Artist:             Terrence Dixon
Title                'Minimalism III'
Cat.:                BG-048
Format:           12 "


We began our operation with the release of Terrence Dixon's 'Bionic Man EP' 
in 1998, and now, almost 50 Background releases later, we return with 
Terrence Dixon's long awaited "Minimalism III EP", the follow up to his most 
sought after 'Minimalism II' (BG-011) release.

Dixon is one of the old-breed producers hailing from Detroit and has always 
been one of the most uncompromising characters within the Detroit Techno 
circle - atypical for the city and its clichéd sound.  His typically raw 
musical approach, eccentric as his own personality, is never willing to 
accept or be associated with the marketing games of the music industry.

Dixon never made a big fuss about the fact that he collaborated with Claude 
Young in the early nineties, proceeded to released two records on Juan 
Atkins Metroplex imprint and ended up co-producing the entire Juan Atkins 
'Infiniti' album on Tresor.   His own solo album 'From the Far Future' also 
released on Tresor followed. In 1995 he collaborated with Mike Banks.  Yet 
controversy came to light as Dixon, unhappy with the co-production aspect as 
far as Mike Bank's input was concerned, eventually turned down a 
collaboration project between them to be released on UR.  Something that 
no-one else has ever done before, an opportunity no-one would even dream of 
missing. Besides the fact that it is hard to believe that anyone else would 
have had the balls to do so.

'Minimalism III' combines two musical worlds of a man and his vision. The 
 12" features very raw, minimal, dark and hypnotic tracks in the usual 
manner in which he is famed for.  Classic sounding Detroit Techno Soul that 
radiates an unexpected warmth and beauty. Techno pieces that no-one in 
Detroit or elsewhere seemed to have been able to do for a long time. It is 
as though the Model 500 has been revisited with hi-hats ricocheting 
gracefully across a mass of fluttering synthesizers and taut bass lines. 
'Minimalism III' is music which is timeless and sounds like it could have 
been produced anywhere between 1992 and 2005. One could call it old school, 
but that would not be accurate.  Obviously and effortlessly avoiding any 
trends or hype, yet reflective on a lost genre of Detroit techno in its 
purest authentic form.

Without a doubt a true Techno Classic in its own rite, containing a real 
soul that many tried to duplicate, but was never successfully imitated.
 


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