I was kind of interested. Trouble is, did you see the rest of the
line-up?

-----Original Message-----
From: Williams, Graham [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2008 11:08 AM
To: 313 list
Subject: RE: (313) X-102


The Sonar gig is a one off, not to be repeated!

Is anyone going to Sonar this year?


g

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 22 May 2008 10:57
To: 313 list
Subject: (313) X-102

Haven't seen any mention of this on the list (unless I missed it):

"X-102 (aka Jeff Mills & Mike Banks)
artists

X-102 re-discovers the Rings Of Saturn
title

Tresor
label

tresor234cd/tresor234
cat#

CD / 12"
format

In 1992 Jeff Mills, Mike Banks and Robert Hood - still known at that
time as Underground Resistance - released what was probably the most
futuristic album in modern electronic music: "X-102 discovers The Rings
Of Saturn" (Tresor.004/UR), as part of their X-10... series. The tracks
on X-102 were reduced to minimal levels, looping with a marginal BMP
rate, spacey and sometimes entirely without beats. This was
revolutionary: listeners had just become accustomed to the
uncompromising Detroit techno sound that the three of them had produced
so far. Thus on the way to Saturn they surpassed even themselves, if not
a decade jump then at least 15 years ahead of their time.

The transition phase between former recording techniques and the
computer age resounded on the album, and seemed as if it had been
recorded with computers that had not yet been invented. In fact, the
unconventional tracks resulted from a process of cutting up the taped
material and then pasting together again. The album has not been
available since the end of the last century and thus it's become
difficult for the new generation to appreciate the work. One also tends
to forget that very little was known at that time about the second
largest planet in our solar system.

Only since the Cassini/Huygen missions have we been able to gather
images and awareness about Saturn, its moons, and the consistency of its
rings. Jeff Mills' fascination for the planet remained intact but to
reanimate the project he had but one requirement: only together with
Mike Banks. Until now this hasn't been possible because since the 1990's
both co-founding members of UR have gone their separate musical ways.

But finally they've again joined forces to activate together their
second Saturn mission. Indeed this alone makes "X-102 rediscovers The
Rings Of Saturn" a milestone. But the innovators wouldn't be such if
they didn't rediscover the tracks from the first mission (which
therefore again indirectly involves Robert Hood) and on that base
produce new, unreleased tracks reflecting their personal development and
the knowledge gained through modern space research. 20 tracks of pure
techno magic, a return to the interstellar probing that brings some of
the original abstraction to skillful levels of contemporary electronic
music. This is not old-meets-new: this is innovation restructured with
masterly polishing - timeless.

So far one singe audiovisual live performance of "X-102 rediscovers The
Rings Of Saturn" will take place: on June 21st, 2008 at the SONAR
Festival in Barcelona."

Surely this must get some juices flowing with y'all??  I swore off Sonar
a few years ago but if I didn't have a new arrival to deal with I'd make
an exception for this

Jason

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