RE: (313) Meanwhile, back in Detroit......

2008-05-22 Thread Odeluga, Ken
Der Zyklus thing on Gigilo from a few weeks back- I'm never quite sure
if he's taking the piss with some of his stuffguess that's half the
fun/frustration! 

Waaaht Jason?!? Unless you're mistaken, I've totally missed the Gigolo
one. I only know this on Frustrated Funk:

http://www.discogs.com/release/1296353

Yep, it's got that GD ambiguity written all over it.

Congrats by the way. One thing about being into music electronic culture
from what I've observed in other friends of mine who've become parents,
you're already primed for lack of sleep! [Easy for me to say I know! :)
]

Ken


Re: (313) Meanwhile, back in Detroit......

2008-05-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Yeah, sorry- must be the lack of sleep throwing my normally razor
sharp intellect off target :)

Jason


2008/5/22 Odeluga, Ken [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Der Zyklus thing on Gigilo from a few weeks back- I'm never quite sure
 if he's taking the piss with some of his stuffguess that's half the
 fun/frustration!

 Waaaht Jason?!? Unless you're mistaken, I've totally missed the Gigolo
 one. I only know this on Frustrated Funk:

 http://www.discogs.com/release/1296353

 Yep, it's got that GD ambiguity written all over it.

 Congrats by the way. One thing about being into music electronic culture
 from what I've observed in other friends of mine who've become parents,
 you're already primed for lack of sleep! [Easy for me to say I know! :)
 ]

 Ken



RE: (313) 313 - T

2008-05-22 Thread Odeluga, Ken
Yep this exchange is now officially dumb in my book.

I'm surprised to come here this morning and see so many posts about
something which started as a joke. Does anyone actually disagree on the
main things? Really?

At least no one's threatened infanticide or something, yet 

-Original Message-
From: Arturo Lopez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2008 12:25 AM
To: 313 Mailing List
Subject: Re: (313) 313 - T


1. It's a stupid argument, I was just giving a little shout-out to ze
germans, wasn't trying to kick over a bee hive.

2. Since I originated this argument (on this latest occasion), my 2
cents:

It's easy to come up with a lot of techno heavyweights who were
influenced by Kraftwerk, we can all agree on that.

I think you'll find it extremely hard to come up with any Detroit folks
that were influences ON early Kraftwerk, or for that matter, any
-other- electronic artists that were influences ON Kraftwerk. They got
the ball rolling, the wellspring if you will. Case Closed. Next!

-Arturo


(313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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


Re: (313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread robin


Blimey, good spot Jason.

Looks very interesting, particularly the SONAR thing

robin...

On 22 May 2008, at 10:56, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


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



...

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.




RE: (313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread Odeluga, Ken
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


RE: (313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread Williams, Graham
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


RE: (313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread Williams, Graham
Yeah that is true, but I'm really only interested in the X-102 gig!
We're going for the whole weekend anyway...


g


-Original Message-
From: Odeluga, Ken [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 22 May 2008 11:23
To: 313 list
Subject: RE: (313) X-102

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


RE: (313) Overseas Inquiries Only

2008-05-22 Thread Dan Bean
Me.

-Original Message-
From: rob theakston [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 21 May 2008 21:24
To: list 313 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: (313) Overseas Inquiries Only

Just out of curiosity, how many people are flying into Detroit this weekend?



RE: (313) Overseas Inquiries Only

2008-05-22 Thread Arturo Lopez
Please take full advantage of our terrible (but good for you Brits)
current exchange rates.  :)

-Arturo


(313) 313 Meet-ups?

2008-05-22 Thread Arturo Lopez
It will be nice to put some faces to some names if anyone wants to say
hi during the weekend. Say hi, or get drunk and listen to techno.

I'll be the white kid with nerd-glass and the black DEMF jacket if
anyone wants to say hi. On second thought, that probably describes a
lot of people on this list

 If anyone wants my cell # just drop me a line and I'll email it to you.

-Arturo


(313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight

Can anyone recommend some newish forward thinking Electro?  Getting tired
of stuff that either sounds like it's stuck back in '84, Robert Smith
rocker wannabes, or is really just nu-school Big Beat breaks in disguise.

MEK



Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread therealmxyzptlk
Howzabout the new Datassette LP on Ai?

   jeff



 -- Original message --
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Can anyone recommend some newish forward thinking Electro?  Getting tired
 of stuff that either sounds like it's stuck back in '84, Robert Smith
 rocker wannabes, or is really just nu-school Big Beat breaks in disguise.
 
 MEK
 



Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread Michael Pujos

[EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :

Can anyone recommend some newish forward thinking Electro?  Getting tired
of stuff that either sounds like it's stuck back in '84, Robert Smith
rocker wannabes, or is really just nu-school Big Beat breaks in disguise.

MEK



  
have a look at this therad @ littledetroit.net, that should keep you 
busy for a while!


http://www.littledetroit.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=24178

And if you haven't done so, listen to the fantastic convextion live set 
posted on the list


Re: (313) mix: acid/electro/b-more/detroit

2008-05-22 Thread Baby Daddy
thanks for the compliment.  I did this one using ableton live.  not the funnest 
way to mix, I'm learning, but it obviously allows for ridiculously precise 
blend work (perhaps indulgently so).

try d/l'ing again. sometimes our ISP acts janky.  please let me know if you 
still have a problem - I'll figure out somewhere to host this thing.

 Original Message 
 From: Kowalsky [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2008 8:06 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: (313) mix: acid/electro/b-more/detroit
 
 Quite good mix, with some very good blending moments. What gear did  
 you use?
 And... the mix ends abruptly or my file didn't download entirely?
 
 Kw
 
 On 15/05/2008, at 16:48, BD wrote:
 
  http://bfamilyrecords.com/mixes/comments.php?nav=0id=205
 
  Party In Your Ear Hole, Part 2
 
  trax:
  1. Bebe Dada Intro
  2. Ark - Punkadelic (Mr. Oizo Remix)
  3. ZZT - Lower State Of Consciousness
  4. DJ Nasty - Buttons
  5. Simian Mobile Disco - Tits  Acid
  6. CSS - Alala (Bonde De Role Remix)
  7. DJ Technics - Computer Doo Doo
  8. DBX - Super Phreak
  9. Dopplereffekt - Cellular Phone
  10. Takkyu Ishino - Ghost In The Shell
  11. Bobmo - Home Alone
  12. Blaq Starr - Check Me Out Like
  13. Mr. Oizo - Ovoma
  14. Acen - Trip II The Moon - Part 2
  15. TNT - L8
  16. Detroit Grand Pubahs - Nurse Hurse Jack Move
  17. Egg Foo Young - Up It
  18. Tittsworth - Dawn
  19. New Young Pony Club - Ice Cream (Herve Goes Bananas Remix)
  20. DJ Skurge - Slide Skate
  21. Body Code - Equidistant
  22. i f - Theme from PACK
  23. Egyptian Lover - I Cry
  24. Mr. Oizo - Half an Edit
  25. Wee Papa Girls - Heat It Up
  26. Psyche - From Beyond
  27. Diplo - Thingamajawn Pt. 3
  28. Aphex Twin - Ageispolis
  29. OutKast - Spottieottiedopaliscious
  30. Outputmessage - Bernard's Song
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  __
  D O T E A S Y - Join the web hosting revolution!
   http://www.doteasy.com
  




__
D O T E A S Y - Join the web hosting revolution!
 http://www.doteasy.com


Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
yeah, I like parts of that, mainly these tracks:
Vapour Trails
Box - is alright but so similar to other high tempo electro tunes
Pluck
Fallblattanzeige - really dig this
Remains - and this too
Melting Faces - and this

most things on Ai rock my world - anything else along these lines?
stuff that's a little more IDM or leftfield but has Electro roots
seeping through the cracks?

really trying to steer clear of the electro clichés: robots, androids,
Kraftwerk/Egyptian Lover rip-offs
I think vocoders are still worth hearing as long as what's being said
hasn't already been said half a gazillion times (or is in a non-English
language)

MEK

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 05/22/2008 02:10:54 PM:

 Howzabout the new Datassette LP on Ai?

jeff



  -- Original message --
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
  Can anyone recommend some newish forward thinking Electro?  Getting
tired
  of stuff that either sounds like it's stuck back in '84, Robert Smith
  rocker wannabes, or is really just nu-school Big Beat breaks in
disguise.
 
  MEK
 




(313) 313 shirts!

2008-05-22 Thread Todd Sines

hello all,

here's a sample photo of the shirts.
http://www.scale.gs/client/313/313_shirt_proof.jpg

Getting them in 2 hours.

if you want one, but haven't paid / ordered / were skeptical, email me  
and I'll give you the lowdown..


I arrive Saturday morning - those who requested pickup in Detroit -  
will be at the festival by 2 PM - I recommend we meet out front or  
something. It will be more at the fest if you haven't already emailed  
me.


Those that requested they be shipped - I won't be able to mail them  
until Tuesday. Hope that doesn't wreck your weekend plans!




+odd


(313) X-102

2008-05-22 Thread Mark S . Krüx

There's a cool related video thing on the main page of the Axis site:

http://www.axisrecords.com/



-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























































































































































































(313) Have fun everyone

2008-05-22 Thread Greg Earle

As someone forced to stay home this year, sit at work and watch
as the Martian Air Force tries to shoot down our latest NASA/JPL
space probe this Sunday afternoon (7:26 PM EDT/4:26 PM PDT),
I just wanted to extend my hopes for safe travels to everyone
flying or driving in to tha D this weekend, and to all of you
festival-goers my best wishes for good weather and fun times.

Have a blast for me.

- Greg


(313) Have a good time @ the fest

2008-05-22 Thread Thor Teague
Wish I could be there, but yet again I am trapped in the twisted
pipeline of corporate Chicago this weekend. I will try to make it next
year. Someone have a beer for me and rock out to Phylypstrack. :)


Re: (313) DEMF afterparty list

2008-05-22 Thread David Powers
Speaking of which, someone may be interested in checking out the
afterparty that I'm playing at:

THE OTHER 9 TO 5

Featuring --

Adultnapper (NY), Camea (Brooklyn/Berlin), Miss Fitz v. K.atou B2B
(Berlin), Kate Simko LIVE (Chicago), [a]pendics Shuffle LIVE (Los
Angeles), Lunatik LIVE (Omaha), Tony Kasper (Chicago), Dave Powers
LIVE (Chicago), Jason Patrick LIVE (Detroit/Chicago), Dirtybird
(Chicago), Josh Surma (Detroit), Hac Le v. Nikita (Chicago,SF), Philip
Stone (Chicago)

Bert's on Broadway
1315 Broadway
Detroit, MI
9 pm - 5 am

www.volatl.com
www.myspace.com/volatl

Spectral will be giving away free copies of Death is Nothing to Fear
and She Said, Kate Simko's highly acclaimed EP, plus Klectik Vinyl
Giveaways, VOLATL promo cd's. Also, the event will serve to launch
Dave Powers very anticipated Into the Twilight EP, featuring Camea's
remix of Mr. Monster!!


Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread JT Stewart
since it didn't get a mention in that topic on little detroit:
http://www.discogs.com/release/1138359

otherwise, e.r.p., dynarec (now on puzzlebox), gosup, plant43,
arpanet/der zyklus...and that's about all i can think of that i really
got into in the past year or so


Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread JT Stewart
oh yeah, and point.one stuff, especially for bumper

and anything by dj overdose

(pauli from bumper + overdose = the novamen from viewlexx/murdercapital)

On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 7:29 PM, JT Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 since it didn't get a mention in that topic on little detroit:
 http://www.discogs.com/release/1138359

 otherwise, e.r.p., dynarec (now on puzzlebox), gosup, plant43,
 arpanet/der zyklus...and that's about all i can think of that i really
 got into in the past year or so



Re: (313) Electro Recommends?

2008-05-22 Thread Southern Outpost
I have to second that on the e.r.p, his stuff is amazing!

Also the tracks coming out on Kust are pretty nice too... there are a
few up on Clone atm.

Peace,
P.

On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 4:32 PM, JT Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 oh yeah, and point.one stuff, especially for bumper

 and anything by dj overdose

 (pauli from bumper + overdose = the novamen from viewlexx/murdercapital)

 On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 7:29 PM, JT Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 since it didn't get a mention in that topic on little detroit:
 http://www.discogs.com/release/1138359

 otherwise, e.r.p., dynarec (now on puzzlebox), gosup, plant43,
 arpanet/der zyklus...and that's about all i can think of that i really
 got into in the past year or so





-- 
--
Southern Outpost
Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
http://www.southernoutpost.com
--


Re: (313) DEMF party MAY 23rd SCIENCE CENTER event has MOVED

2008-05-22 Thread UI Design
The May 23rd event at the Science Center celebrating the Founders of
Techno has been moved to the Majestic Theater.

The price has been lowered to $15 entry, the line-up remains the same.

Juan Atkins-Metroplex Records
Eddie 'Flashin' Fowlkes-Detroit Wax
T Linder-Detroit Techno Militia
Mike Grant-Big 50 Entertainment
DJ Body Mechanic-H3O Music
Beatdown Sounds-Mick 'Agent X' Clark, Delano Smith, Norm Talley
Terrance Parker-TP Music
John Collins-Detroit Wax
Scan 7-Crate Saves Records
Bruce Bailey-The Tandem
Minx-Women on Wax
Alton Miller-Muse Records
Reggie 'Hot Mix' Harrell- FM 98 WJLB
DJ Seoul-Detroit Techno Militia
3 Chairs-Rick Wilhite, Kenny Dixon Jr., Theo Parrish
And introducing…Super Mario 'The Brother'

Doors open at 5:30pm. Free entry until 6:30pm.  Reduced price to $15 entry.




On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 7:13 PM, David Powers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Speaking of which, someone may be interested in checking out the
 afterparty that I'm playing at:

 THE OTHER 9 TO 5

 Featuring --

 Adultnapper (NY), Camea (Brooklyn/Berlin), Miss Fitz v. K.atou B2B
 (Berlin), Kate Simko LIVE (Chicago), [a]pendics Shuffle LIVE (Los
 Angeles), Lunatik LIVE (Omaha), Tony Kasper (Chicago), Dave Powers
 LIVE (Chicago), Jason Patrick LIVE (Detroit/Chicago), Dirtybird
 (Chicago), Josh Surma (Detroit), Hac Le v. Nikita (Chicago,SF), Philip
 Stone (Chicago)

 Bert's on Broadway
 1315 Broadway
 Detroit, MI
 9 pm - 5 am

 www.volatl.com
 www.myspace.com/volatl

 Spectral will be giving away free copies of Death is Nothing to Fear
 and She Said, Kate Simko's highly acclaimed EP, plus Klectik Vinyl
 Giveaways, VOLATL promo cd's. Also, the event will serve to launch
 Dave Powers very anticipated Into the Twilight EP, featuring Camea's
 remix of Mr. Monster!!