Premiere: Hear a Bass-Heavy Minimal Cut From Red Pig Flower

Sound Of Vast will release Thought Crime, the new EP from label co-founder Red Pig Flower, on January 2019.

Thought Crime, which is conceptually based around George Orwell’s classic novel 1984, follows the Berlin-based DJ and producer’s 2017 EP Space Jazz with three originals and a remix from Perlon’s Wareika. 

Like the novel it’s referencing, Thought Crime is full of eerie atmospheres and ethereal textures, from the cavernous grooves of “No Fear” to the haunting piano work of “Since 1984” and the title track’s organic rhythms. On the remix front, Wareika twist the title track into rattling, jazz-tinged dancefloor workout.

Ahead of the release, Red Pig Flower has offered up a full stream of “No Fear,” available via the player below. 

RVNG Intl. Shares Transfixing Oliver Coates Video

RVNG Intl. has shared a transfixing, mind-bending video for Oliver Coates‘ “Norrin Radd Dreaming.”

A track from Coates’ Shelley’s on Zenn-La album, which dropped via RVNG Intl. on September 7, “Norrin Radd Dreaming” was produced as Coates imagined Norrin Radd, Marvel’s Silver Surfer’s name before becoming a superhero, “experiencing wanderlust while at home on his spiritually perfect planet of Zenn-La. His dreams might be of a more exciting life to come as a potential super-being.” 

To further the concept, the video’s director, Yoshi Sodeoka, interprets Norrin Radd’s dreams through the lens of his hometown New York City, making “the most ordinary New York city footage into something experimental and engaging,” says Sodeoka. “I love watching birds in the city…[I] wanted to give them a focus in this video and imagine how birds see the city in a way that we don’t. In a way, this is a video about a day in the life of New York city birds.”

The video, which you can watch via the player below, was shared ahead of Oliver Coates’ US tour with Thom Yorke this fall, and a performance at Utrecht’s Le Guess Who? festival this weekend. You can find Oliver Coates’ tour dates below.

Tour dates:

11/10/18 – Le Guess Who? Festival – Utrecht, NL

11/23/18 – Electric Factory – Philadelphia, PA **

11/24/18 – Boch Center Wang Theatre – Boston, MA **

11/26/18 – Kings Theatre – Brooklyn, NY **

11/27/18 – Kings Theatre – Brooklyn, NY **

11/29/18 – National Sawdust w/ Visible Cloaks – Brooklyn, NY 

11/30/18 – JFK Center for Performing Arts – Washington DC **

12/01/18 – State Theatre – Cleveland, OH **

12/02/18 – Cathedral Theatre at Masonic Temple – Detroit, MI **

12/04/18 – Chicago Theatre – Chicago, IL **

12/05/18 – Riverside Theatre – Milwaukee, WI **

12/06/18 – Northrop Auditorium – University of Minnesota – Minneapolis, MN **

12/08/18 – Peabody Opera House – Saint Louis, MO **

12/09/18 – Arvest Bank Theatre at The Midland – Kansas City, MO **

12/11/18 – Paramount Theatre – Denver, CO **

12/13/18 – The Union – Salt Lake City, UT **

12/15/18 – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium – San Francisco, CA **

12/17/18 – The Observatory – San Diego, CA **

12/19/18 – Orpheum Theatre – Los Angeles, CA **

12/20/18 – Orpheum Theatre – Los Angeles, CA **

12/22/18 – Chelsea Ballroom – Las Vegas, NV **

** In support of Thom Yorke

Watch a Video Detailing Five Key Tips for Mixing on CDJs

Point Blank has released a video featuring a range of CDJ mixing tips from lead DJ instructor Ben Bristow and DJ Ravine.

In the video, Bristow and Ravine discuss and perform their top mixing techniques, including changing the beat value and tempo of certain effects; the roll effect, which, when used on the right settings, can get you out of sticky situations; saving tag lists as new playlists on the fly; instant doubles, which allows you to play the same track on both decks; and the various CDJ modes, which can help you manipulate the jog wheel to your desire.

You can watch the video below, with more on Point Blank and its courses here.

Influences 11: Pinch

It’s been some time since our last Influences podcast, last coming from Superpitcher. Up next is Rob Ellis, the Bristol-based DJ-producer known more commonly as Pinch and for his exceptional taste in dubstep, a genre that he was instrumental in establishing and fundamental in its continuation during a period when public interest shifted sharply towards house and techno.  

Ellis first appeared in 2005 before dropping 2007’s Underwater Dancehall, an exceptional and pioneering debut album via his Tectonic Recordings, the most consistent of dubstep labels and home for much of his solo and collaborative work, including that with Adrian Sherwood; as Sherwood & Pinch, the duo have two full-length efforts, the latest coming just last year. A quick root through the label’s discography will also reveal high profile compilations and solo contributions from Skream, Flying Lotus, Scientist, 2562, and Peverelist—plus the new Walton LP, chosen as The Guardian’s contemporary LP of the month—the latter of whom Ellis worked on the recent Smith & Mighty compilation. On a collaborative front, Pinch has also worked with Shackleton, releasing via Honest Jon’s in 2011, the same year Pinch delivered the 61st Fabriclive mix; and Jack Adams (a.k.a Mumdance), another symbol of Ellis’ veering away from dubstep towards grime, techno, and, more lately, UK bass, too. Elsewhere, Ellis also heads up Cold Recordings, a vinyl-only label intended as “an outlet for new movements in the ever evolving UK hardcore-continuum.” 

Ellis’ Influences podcast is, arguably, one of the most wild and eclectic podcasts we’ve put out in some time; it’s not often that you hear Technotronic’s “Pump Up The Jam” next to Jimi Hendrix and Rage Against the Machine. It takes a little time to settle in, opening with a cacophony of Ellis’ favorites, all blended together, but from there on in it’s an enjoyable and eye-opening journey through just some of the records that have touched Ellis along the way, conveniently divided into sections—chapters, if you like, of Ellis’ musical development. Whatever your musical preference, you’re sure to discover or rediscover some gems in here. 

“When I was about seven years old, I was given a ghetto blaster for Christmas. It had a twin tape deck and a radio. I got into the habit of recording the Top 40 Sunday night charts on BBC Radio 1 and spending hours re-recording those tapes across to another, creating compilations of my favorite tracks for myself and friends. Some basic level junior DJ business.

“So, this is the sonic story of my musical influences—covering the earliest moments when I first really became aware of music and started to seek it out, leading up to the moments before I started making/DJing dubstep as Pinch back in 2003/4. It’s not all going to fit in there and it’s not all in the right chronological order exactly, but the overall mood and direction feels accurate. 

The jist of this story involves cartoon theme tunes, pop music, soft metal, and early chart rave hits from the late 1980s; discovering and becoming obsessed with Jimi Hendrix; getting into my older brother’s On-U Sound/dub records; buying/swapping/copying hardcore and jungle tape packs; Smith & Mighty, Massive Attack and the whole “Bristol Sound” movement (nobody say “triphop!”); hearing Leftfield play live in 1996 (still the most amazing concert experience of my life!); electronica / Aphex Twin/ Squarepusher; drum & bass tunnel vision (I used to play under the name DJ Fume)—all right up to the moment I walked into my local record shop and heard Rhythm & Sound “King In My Empire,” which changed everything for me. 

That day, around early 2002 I think, I stopped buying drum & bass completely and started exploring Basic Channel and related forms of techno, and mixing them with UK garage and early grime instrumentals, opting on the DJ name Pinch, as I was playing a “pinch” of this and a “pinch” of that! I soon discovered dubstep at FWD>> around late 2003 and set about on the beginnings of my career pathway, fixating entirely on dubstep for the next several years. It’s a similar set of influential ingredients that informed my music in the post-dubstep period of productions, aiming to take those moods and ideas to run at techno tempos. I really enjoyed putting this together, it’s been fun to walk down memory lane.” — Pinch 

Due to temporary issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the podcast here.

Tracklisting

01. Intro section:

Features Intro theme music from Transformers, He-man, and Thundercats, ‘Under The Bridge’ Flying Pickets (cover version), Jive Bunny & The Mastermixers ‘Swing Time’, Bananman Intro Theme, Kylie Minogue ‘I Should Be So Lucky’, Def Leppard ‘Animal’. Guns N Roses ‘Welcome To The Jungle’, Beavis & Butthead cutup, Prefab Sprout ‘King Of Rock n Roll’

02. M.A.R.R.S “Pump Up The Volume”

03. Blackbox “Ride On Time”

04. Technotronic “Pump Up The Jam”

05. Jimi Hendrix “Have You Ever Been (To Electric Ladyland)”

06. Dub Syndicate “Stoned Immaculate”

07. Peter Gabriel “We Do What We’re Told (Milgram’s 37)”

08. Rage Against The Machine “Killing In The Name”

09. Leftfield “Storm 3000”

10. Squarepusher “Iambic Poetry 5”

11. Scientist “Your Teeth In My Neck”

12. Mad Professor “Cutting Edge Dub”

13. Massive Attack “5 Man Army”

14. Aladdin “So Good”

15. DJ Mayhem “Storm Trooper”

16. Flowers “Bust That Groove”

17. Grooverider “Sinister (Remix)”

18. Aphex Twin “Windowlicker”

19. Smith & Mighty “Closer”

20. DJ Die “Reincarnations”

21. Digital & Spirit “Phantom Force” *with parts from Photek ‘UFO’

22. Dillinja “Silver Blade”

23. Rhythm & Sound “King In My Empire”

24. Basic Channel “Pylyps Trak II/II” with Another Endless Groove “Stone Cold”

25. Wiley “Morgue”

26. Wonder “What”

27. Youngster “Pulse X’/ Youngster ‘Bongo”

28. Cyrus (Basic Channel) “Recall”

10 Discogs Gems of November

In support of XLR8Rplus and independent music, we’re now compiling 10 of our favorite Discogs gems into an easy-to-digest list each month; all submissions come from independent labels. You’ll perhaps know some but you’re unlikely to know them all—but these are some of the tracks that are on repeat week after week in the XLR8R offices. For our third edition of 10 Discogs Gems, we’ve gone for more heavy techno- and house-inspired list. 

XLR8Rplus is a monthly subscription service to complement the main XLR8R site. Each month we share three unreleased tracks from three different artists—both known legends and lesser-known pioneers—that we feel are pushing the scene forward in inspiring ways. These tracks will be available for download in high-quality WAV format for the duration of one month; only subscribers for that particular month will have them. They will not be available anywhere else and there will be no access to archived material. You can find information on the latest edition of XLR8Rplus here. XLR8Rplus 005 features cuts from Scuba, Alex Smoke, and Janeret.

S. Moreira “Clean or High” (2016)

SLOW LIFE

Made up of producer S. Moreira, a cast of diggers Cecilio, DJ Tree, and Laurine, and designer Santi Uribe, Slow Life’s appeal is one drawn from the sum of its parts. Based in Berlin, the grounded success of the label can be charted to its one for all mentality; an ethos that places the project’s steady growth ahead of any personal fame—they’ve let their music and curation reach audiences in an organic way, resulting in a fan base that recognizes the quality in their output and hard-earned skills. “Clean or High,” taken from 2016’s Chromophore compilation, is one of those tracks that is perfect for any time of the day, emotive, relaxing and uplifting; we’ve been playing this on repeat since its release and it’s still as fresh as ever. 

Ron Roland “Nassaur Bassed Party” (1996)

Surreal

Surreal Records, a sub-label of Swag Records, was founded in January 1993 by Mike Parsons and Paul Culver. They also owned a record shop of the same name where Terry Francis used to work. When it was released on the 1996 EP named after the title track, “Nassaur Bassed Party,” it was groundbreaking as it had a “tech house sound” before the term had even been properly coined. Pitched perfectly between acid techno and house, with thumping drums and a punchy bassline, this is an essential record for any fan of acid beats. 

Tonica & Dominante “Cicogna” (1979)

Dominant

“Cicogna” is a great entry-point for those not so well informed when it comes to Italian soul, disco, and funk. With the single demanding an extortionate £260 ($340) on Discogs, it goes without saying that the 2018 Napoli Segreta Volume 1 compilation album that features the track was a hugely welcomed release. With beautiful vocals, a distinct saxophone hook, and catchy piano chords, it’s a jazz-infused Italo-disco gem.

Janeret “Solstice” (2016)

D.KO Records

We could have picked a host of French producer Janeret’s tracks, most of which fall within the sphere of minimal techno and deep house. But we love the versatility on display with “Solstice,” a jazzy, early liquid drum & bass cut released on 2016’s Coeur De Palmier. His recent release with XLR8Rplus is a driving after-hours house track; listen to a snippet here and subscribe to XLR8Rplus to download the full track.

BRS “You Know Why” (2002)

Friends & Families

BRS, meaning “British Rhythm Services,” formed during 1998 and consists of DJ Ben Vacara, Rob “Twin” Evans, and Mr. Mulatto. They consistently released a range of different styles within dance music, continually showcasing the scope in talent. In 2002, they released “You Know Why” on the Get Together EP, a deep house/garage classic guaranteed to get you moving. 

Alex Smoke “Pingu” (2004)

Vakant

A master producer and one of the most exhilarating live performers around (though touring very infrequently now), Alex Smoke is known for his unique style of brooding techno. The Glaswegian artist is one of those names who has long operated on the peripheries of club culture; refusing to conform to the industry, he opts to share the music he makes with minimal promotion or media engagement. “Pingu” is a dark, melodic, dancefloor builder with a pulsating bassline, found on Simple Things, the first release from  Vakant. Listen to a snippet of his recent release for XLR8Rplus here and subscribe to download the full track.

Move D / Thomas Meinecke “Norfolk” (2017)

Ominira

Move D and Thomas Meinecke have a lengthy history of working together: since their first collaboration back in 2000, Tomboy / Freud’s Baby, they have put out several other releases on the likes of Workshop and Intermedium. “Norfolk” is a song of beauty which opens the On The Map album, incorporating elements of hip-hop and downtempo beats on Kassem Mosse’s Ominira imprint. It’s not just a great track but also a powerful political message more relevant now than ever before. The sample centre’s around police brutality and striving for justice and peace, significant themes in the world today. A must have. 

100 Hz “Warp” (1996)

Pacific Records

100 Hz has been releasing music since 1989, always one step ahead of the curve. His forward-thinking style is evident on all of his tracks and you could spend ages digging through his back catalogue unearthing gems that remain timeless to this day. With releases on labels such as SLOW LIFE, Imprints, Bosconi Records, and many more, he is one of those rare artists who keeps producing quality tracks evolving with the times yet never changing his musical soul. “Warp” was 100 Hz’ second release on the iconic Pacific records, a hard-hitting driving techno cut. 

Scuba “Klinik” (2009)

Hotflush Recordings 

Scuba has shaped the direction of the electronic music scene’s bass-heavy landscape more than most. Starting with the underground garage sound that became dubstep, the pioneering DJ-producer has gone on to release an array of 12”s and five artist albums since first appearing with 2005 single “Timba/Sleepa,” released via his own Hotflush Recordings imprint. It was on this label that he released “Klinik,” a deep and dark dubstep/techno hybrid. Ahead of his forthcoming album, Scuba has released new material for the first time in two years with an exclusive track for XLR8Rplus; listen to the snippet here and subscribe to download the full track.

Enrico Mantini “The Creator” (Domenica Rosa Remix) (2017)

Veniceberg Records

Domenica Rosa founded the hugely respected Imprints label together with Riccardo in 2012, with their mix of styles ranging from deep and minimal house to UK garage and breakbeat. In this track, Rosa remixed deep house legend Enrico Mantini’s “The Creator,” a great punchy house gem in its own right. In this edit, Rosa has created a deep house melodic masterpiece, the type of track to fit any mood and setting. One to play your friends at an after-party but also your parents in and around the house; it’s a tune for all ages and generations. 

Spazio Disponibile Welcomes Valentino Mora

Next up on Donato Dozzy and Neel’s Spazio Disponible is IDO label boss Valentino Mora with Transmagnetic

We’re told to expect “four tracks of rhythmic explorations,” featuring “moody atmospheres” and “exquisite sound design colouring in the grooves which range from dark and eerie to more subtly uplifting and enlightened.”

Mora’s previous work has come through IDO and Dement3d Records. 

This will be the label’s 16th release. 

Tracklisting

1. Yant Suea

2. Hualien

3. Transmagnetic

4. Second Skin

Transmagnetic EP will arrive on December 2, with clips below. 

1921 Share Haunting Live Video and Track Download

1921—the collaborative project between David Åhlén (vocals) and Andreas Eklöf (synthesizers and electronics)—have shared a haunting live video and a track download of “Always,” a cut from their forthcoming In My Veins LP, to be released via Compunctio on November 9.

The LP finds the pair working with producer Andreas Runeson to craft 11 tracks that perfectly fuse Åhlén’s achingly beautiful falsetto voice with Eklöf’s haunting electronic arrangements—it’s an affecting combination that rattles the listener, wringing out heavy emotions and pure wonderment.

As we approach the release of the album, the duo have shared a live performance of LP cut “Always,” recorded live in Sofia Kyrka, Stockholm, and a download of the Red Idiot remix, which refits the original with a chugging low-end. 

You can find the album here, with the Red Idiot remix of “Always” available via WeTransfer below. 

Due to temporary issues regarding the GDPR, EU readers can download the track here.

Lawrence English and William Basinski to Perform World Premiere of ‘Selva Oscura’ Tonight in LA

Tonight, as part of the Fulcrum Arts Annual Benefit fundraiser—which itself sits within Fulcrum Arts’ A×S Festival: City as Wunderkammer—Lawrence English and William Basinski will present the world premiere performance of their collaborative album Selva Oscura.

The fundraiser will go towards funding Fulcrum Arts and its mission to advance the fields of art and science, and will honor experimental composer William Basinski and LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory).

The duo’s collaborative album Selva Oscura was recently released on October 12 via Temporary Residence Ltd and will be presented tonight with a special live performance—there will be subsequent performances at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney—as English explains: 

“The piece we’re performing is an expanded version of what people might encounter on the record. We’ve been rehearsing the past few days and William has some new material on tape we’ll be using. We’re excited to experience how the work translates beyond the recorded piece.”

At dusk on every day of the festival, English is also utilizing the topography of the decommissioned Los Angeles Civil Defense System in an installation called Seirá, which is presented citywide and features a piece recorded with the Brisbane choir Australian Voices.

You can find more information on tonight’s performance here, with further festival info here.

A snippet from Selva Oscura can be streamed below.

RRUCCULLA “Icy Blue Coral”

Under the moniker RRUCCULLA hides the elusive young Spanish music producer and drummer Izaskun González. Her music is a genre-blending of energetic compositions, jazz-influenced experimentalism, pop-infused melodies, abstract beats, synthetic textures, squeezed and deformed noises, rampaging drums, and infinite layers of vivid imaginary sounds, with which she builds up coloured artificial places to sense unpredictable emotions. This approach has taken her to play at renowned Spanish music festivals and venues such as Primavera Sound, BBK Live, Lapsus Festival, and LEV Festival, as well as supporting international acts like American Football, Iglooghost, and Superorganism.

González won ever prize at a 2016 national Spanish music contest, garnering acclaim as one of the most promising young artists of the Spanish scene. Before that first public appearance, she claims having done almost a dozen of albums, which are secretly scattered online as various different aliases. 

As RRUCCULLA, she has released ​six albums between 2015 and 2017, each one from different music approaches.  

Next, she’ll release SHo͝oSH, an album about “weird multi-colored fish stories in an aquarium.” She describes it as a “cute and fierce album,” influenced by lots of jazz, Aphex Twin, and Flying Lotus.  “In the album I wanted to project my musical spontaneity and creativity with musical richness, it sounds melodic and energetic yet it also has some wild parts,” she explains. “At first, I started making this album wondering how a free-jazz album would sound if kids had composed it. I experimented with sounds and song structures, building soundscapes, and in the end some melodies or noises end up sounding like if they were characters living inside the album.”

SHo͝oSH will land on November 30 via BIIPBIIP, with information here; meanwhile, you can download “Icy Blue Coral” in full via the button below, or here for EU readers due to temporary GDPR restrictions. 

Review: Aphex Twin at Funkhaus Berlin

It’s so tempting to write about Aphex Twin’s return to Berlin after 15 years with only admiration. How many of you have defining moments in your lives revolving around a Richard D. James track? How many times in a row did I listen to Selected Ambient Works after I discovered it in a stack of burnt CDs in my high school art class? The seeds of much of our excitement to see Aphex Twin in this rare Berlin performance, moreover at the fabled Funkhaus venue, had likely been planted long ago. Needless to say, the hype in the weeks leading up to the show, both online and off, was tremendous. And the quick sell-out of tickets prompted an increasingly inflated resale market. Despite the vagaries and premiums for the show, I kept hearing Berliners say it was the first show they were excited to see in years. Aphex fever had infiltrated Berlin.

I won’t spend much time writing about resale tickets soaring past €300, the ambiguous information around where exactly the show would take place (see the venue photo on the first tickets for where the show did not take place), the sudden second round of €70 ticket sales oddly available for weeks prompting concern about over-selling, or the cacophony of online chatter around whether he was playing live or DJing. If you wish to know more about all this, the internet has plenty to offer. The takeaway is that Funkhaus could certainly have been more upfront about their changes without having to sacrifice any pre-show allure. But I suspect that if the tickets had been something like €15, there would be a whole lot less demand for detailed information. It was a steep price to expect fans to buy purely on name alone, which of course most of us would happily do to see Aphex Twin. But it also likely wouldn’t have been as grand a production without the premium, one that included support from Luca Lozano, Dopplereffekt, Paradox, Luke Vibert, and Skee Mask.

After a sweaty tram ride to Funkhaus and a quick frisk, I walked in to find Dopplereffekt in a mid-set jam, their two masked forms facing each other, accenting a steady electro beat with off-kilter snare echoes and live synth rolls. The music and the room felt understated yet focused. Paradox came on next and the energy shifted from cosmic reflectiveness to playful exuberance. Suddenly breakbeats fluttered around the room and Paradox laughed and shouted heartily to the crowd along with his set. It was a sudden but welcomed energy spike, and a proper warm-up for Aphex Twin. I remember thinking it was perhaps a little prematurely warmed up before the main event had begun. How unknowingly I awaited the atomic maelstrom that was about to descend on us.

Everything about Aphex Twin feels both precisely thought out yet wondrously chaotic. It’s part of what makes him such a true artist. And this show was no exception. Even before Richard started playing, distant ambient soundscapes carried out samples of old kitschy science fiction films, faux-scary phrases drifting along like, “…and then the Blob came!” or references to the end of times from an old-fashioned narrator. It struck me as a perfectly self-deprecating kind of introduction, repurposing out-dated depictions of the future to have the following experience hit that much harder.  It felt subtle and purposeful, a combined quality that was surprisingly consistent in a performance otherwise  bursting with maximalism. After a few modular bloops and the Aphex logo pulsing on the screens, Richard opened with a sample informing us that, “we are about to take LSD.” And off we went.

In only the first 10 minutes, Aphex Twin had taken us through a hyper-speed tunnel of electronic music history, from drum & bass to hip-hop to dub to ambient to deconstructed pop to jungle to house to hardcore and back again. It was a dizzying introduction of splintered beats, cut up vocals, oddly tuned synths, and an incessant restlessness that demanded full attention. Even when the music eventually turned into more driving 4/4 techno and the crowd responded energetically, Richard never became too comfortable. I was repeatedly reminded of the genius of Aphex Twin in his ability to effortlessly create an environment that is simultaneously violent and caring. His signature engine-revving hi-hats and snares cut through the air like a swarm of metal bees while puffs of soft cloud synth lines hovered around the lofted ceiling. The sound system was certainly capable, but the massive concrete space was not particularly conducive to clear acoustics. It really all depended where you were standing. Up front on the ground floor the bass was chest-filling and the thousands of bodies standing shoulder to shoulder acted as efficient acoustic absorption. We were truly enveloped in Richard’s storm. The further out you went from the middle, especially when standing to the sides, the sound started to get a bit soupy. Though there is a special kind of joy in coming back from outside to slowly be greeted by a reverberated wash of Aphex Twin slowly forming into coherence.

The visuals by Weirdcore, who described his work with Aphex Twin in an interview with It’s Nice That as “a psychological overload,” were as essential to the experience as the music. The mutated imagery, splattered across a constellation of screens, flashed combinations of the Aphex Twin logo, pulsing under a live audience feed that occasionally mapped Richard’s own distorted face onto the crowd. As the tempo started crossing 130, strobes and green lasers spazzed around, cycling through an array of rave references. During one particularly moment, images of well-known German electronic artists such as Ricardo Villalobos, Conny Plank, and Kraftwerk appeared with collaged muppet-like features, standing as a reminder that Aphex Twin, despite drawing thousands of people, is still taking an all-inclusive piss. It’s this commitment to smashing all idols, even himself, that has kept Aphex Twin free from stagnancy throughout his career. And here at Funkhaus in 2018 we found the totality of his creative anarchy in full, glorious effect. 

In the final five minutes, Richard cranked his drums to what seemed like 1000 BPM, pulled out all the stops, and covered the audience in a tsunami of glitched-out noise that could have been the soundtrack to the world being sucked through a small vacuum hole in space. Accompanied by a barrage of strobes, it was the first time I’ve ever seen so many people all standing still, as if in a frozen stupor. My heart went out to anyone who didn’t have earplugs. And then suddenly, the vacuum closed, the lights turned off, and the crowd erupted. At this point, I needed to sit outside and digest. Though I was eager to check Luke Vibert and Skee Mask, in all honesty, I’m still digesting Aphex Twin’s set two days later. So while I was drawn to the dancefloor out of curiosity, I found myself feeling it more as a distraction from basking in the afterglow of Aphex Twin’s shock therapy. Too bad, because Luke Vibert and Skee Mask were playing some damn good tunes. 

Despite the wonder of the whole event, I couldn’t help but think that we were somehow all caught in a Twilight Zone episode living as if it were 1993 while all the newspapers date us 25 years in the future. So much has happened musically and culturally in 25 years, but somehow much of techno stays firmly planted in idealizing the past. Seeing Aphex Twin in the concrete Shedhalle of Funkhaus, a venue clearly picked for its history and industrial authenticity, naturally evokes a sense of ‘90s raves. But with a €70 ticket, a clever yet problematic cashless system, and a production value many times that of any illegal rave, the event lent itself to be more like a vintage-branded lemon soda rather than real, fresh lemonade. 

Ultimately, it comes down to expectations. For newcomers to Richard’s hybrid DJ-with-modular-rig set, it was an undeniably impressive show, whether technically a live performance or not. Those without any prior experience of the days from which all of this was birthed (writer’s confession: I was one year old when Richard put out his debut record), it may seem all very fresh and new. And of course it’s a testament to the genius of Richard’s music that it still feels this way. But the reality is that a large portion of his set was comprised of other people’s music. Scatter in some standout reworks of his own productions along with some live synths and effects and you get a clearer picture of what was being served up. Whether this justified a €70 ticket, or whether you didn’t care and were happy to see Aphex Twin in any capacity, is something the message boards can chew on. For those who grew up with Aphex Twin, the show was likely a highly moving nostalgia trip and maybe even slightly bittersweet. Either way, what everyone was presented with on Thursday night was nothing short of an exhilarating assault on the senses. 

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