Resident Advisor's DJ pages are quite interesting. Obviously it's meant to be a 
hybrid of DJ/Live acts that users vote on as their favourites, but 
interestingly the top 20 or so make for interesting reading, given that it's 
meant to be a "minimal" loving site.

http://www.residentadvisor.net/dj-ranks.aspx



-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Kendrick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 04 April 2008 16:02
To: Toby Frith; kent williams; list 313
Subject: RE: (313) Ellen Allien's New Mix: Opinions?


Im not sure that the people listening to minimal listen to CR, Hood, DBX
and so on, its all about the current sound like Craig Richards, Ricardo
Villalobos, luciano and these producers...the people who listen to it
because its hip don't care where its roots are....its only good because
its hip. Next week there be into something else...

-----Original Message-----
From: Toby Frith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 04 April 2008 15:45
To: kent williams; list 313
Subject: RE: (313) Ellen Allien's New Mix: Opinions?


The fact that minimal techno is currently seen as "hip" can only be a
good thing. 

More and more people are into labels like Chain Reaction, M-Plant and
Basic Channel than ever before. That ultimately will lead them back to
the Detroit originators. It takes time, but I know for one that it has
transformed the London techno scene.





-----Original Message-----
From: kent williams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 04 April 2008 15:41
To: list 313
Subject: Re: (313) Ellen Allien's New Mix: Opinions?


The one mix I have by Ellen Allien is Fabric 34 and I listen to it a lot
-- both straight through and when individual tracks come up on shuffle.

I think it's high time that we stop using minimal as a dirty word.
Minimalism in its broadest sense has been a revolution in music, not so
much because it has been revolutionary in content, but because it has
demanded a new relationship between the music and the listener.
The best minimal techno is every bit as dramatic and emotional as any
other sort of dance music.   The worst is just boring.   Worse than
that, it's a sort of music that appeals and encourages an audience of
people completely off their faces on drugs.  Give me something with a
little soul and variety anyday!

It's also to separate the music from the scene, and to realize that
slagging on a music/scene when it blows up is as much a hipster
transgression as following that trend.  I was amused last summer walking
around Brooklyn 'hipster' neighborhood last summer; it seemed like
people who, in my shallow evaluation were, in fact, the dreaded
hipsters, were modulating their fashion sense and coiffure to avoid the
dreaded hipster signifiers.

Being hip is too exhausting for me.  You'll always be trying to stay
ahead of curve, and nothing but eternal vigilance will keep you from
staying with something formerly cutting edge, now declasse'.   It's
like surfing -- you want to be in the curl without the wave crashing
over you.  I'm content to like what I like and let someone else sort it
out.

But I digress.  Ellen Allien is usually pretty ace in my estimation.
If one of her mixes sounded a little flat at first, I'd give it a few
listens to sink in before dismissing it.


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For all the latest news and comment visit www.telegraph.co.uk.  This
message, its contents and any attachments to it are private, confidential
and may be the subject of legal privilege.  Any unauthorised disclosure,
use or dissemination of the whole or part of this message (without our
prior written consent) is prohibited.  If you are not the intended
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