Basic Channel Records ... Educate Me, Please.

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What I've heard has been really, really good.

But none of my friends like techno, and I need you to help clue me in.

Where do I start?

Cameron Octigan (Cameron Octigan), Sunday, 26 March 2006 06:39 (twenty years ago)

well ... seeing as there were only eight records ...

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:07 (twenty years ago)

nine

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:10 (twenty years ago)

There must be plenty of BC talk in the archives.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:11 (twenty years ago)

this is excellent.

haitch (haitch), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:13 (twenty years ago)

really really really really reaaaaaaaallly good

bc-02 - phylyps "trak"
bc-03 - lyot "reshape"
bc-07 - "octagon" / "octaedre"


really really really really good

bc-04 - quadrant "1.1"
bc-08 - "radiance"
bc-qd - quadrant "infinition"
bc-cd - CD compilation


really really good but not sure what the point was

bc-01 - cyrus "enforcement"
bc-09 - phylyps "trak ii"
tresor 100 - scion arrange and process basic channel tracks


merely really good though sometimes boring

bc-05 - cyrus "inversion"
bc-06 - quadrant "dub"

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:27 (twenty years ago)

what's the story behind BC? it's two guys, right? they started their own label or something?

any back history?

Cameron Octigan (Cameron Octigan), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:30 (twenty years ago)

i may have under-rated "radiance" ... not sure

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:32 (twenty years ago)

THOSE WHO ASK DON'T KNOW
THOSE WHO KNOW DON'T TELL

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:35 (twenty years ago)


only known photo of the enigmatic duo behind basic channel

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:36 (twenty years ago)

just buy the comp (ESSENTIAL), then buy them all on vinyl. that's less than $100 total, which is a piece of cake unless you're a lightweight.

baby, disco is fuck (yournullfame), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:42 (twenty years ago)

buy the vinyl 1st. 5 to 8 minute edits of 20 minute dub techno epics are for lightweights.

vahid (vahid), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:48 (twenty years ago)

quadrant dub is the best.

Good Dog (Good Dog), Sunday, 26 March 2006 07:56 (twenty years ago)

that photo is mike banks of underground resistance, no?

danny invincible (michael w.), Sunday, 26 March 2006 09:57 (twenty years ago)

Yep.

Why does the birds always shitting on me? (noodle vague), Sunday, 26 March 2006 10:05 (twenty years ago)

listen to haitch!

also *cough* http://www.stylusmagazine.com/feature.php?ID=1669 , http://www.circonium.de/music/index.html (I'm sure there used to be a really great feature on this site too, but it seems to have gone).

file under cozy techno (fandango), Sunday, 26 March 2006 11:42 (twenty years ago)

the lyot reshape is all very well, but really you need the first 12 on M, with the maurizion remixes

actually, you know, the m series was better than basic channel

charltonlido (gareth), Sunday, 26 March 2006 12:00 (twenty years ago)

agreed. domina (esp the c. craig mind mix) is amazing and m4 is a classic.

michael wells (michael w.), Sunday, 26 March 2006 12:22 (twenty years ago)

I like those Round One-Round Five singles they wrote/produced. It was on Main Street Records, part of the BC label umbrella....New Day is a really great single. You can get them all on one CD.

GALKIN (GALKIN), Sunday, 26 March 2006 12:34 (twenty years ago)

Round one to five is one of my favourite CD's.

i wouldn't say the M series was better than basic channel but i've only heard the M compilation CD which is much narrower sonically than the basic channel 12"s. i guess it just depends what you prefer but i don't think they're better.

jed_ (jed), Sunday, 26 March 2006 12:48 (twenty years ago)

yeah, the M stuff doesn't do it for my ears. i've almost sold that metal tin cd of it a dozen times now.

baby, disco is fuck (yournullfame), Sunday, 26 March 2006 14:13 (twenty years ago)

It's all good...just get them all. (don't forget those basic reshapes esp. The Climax.)

Omar (Omar), Sunday, 26 March 2006 15:02 (twenty years ago)

there's a great article by kodwo eshun about chain reaction (published in the wire in 1998) that's worth reading as well. it includes an amazing interview with rené löwe (a.k.a. vainqueur)--including löwe talking about his difficult life growing up in communist GDR, how eddie fowlkes was the one who taught him how to set up a studio, and interesting quotes like "I really like northern territories like Norway. I really like this kind of nature, rough but beautiful, a little bit cold, but in the evening really clear."

geeta (geeta), Sunday, 26 March 2006 17:07 (twenty years ago)

I think the basic channel cd is a good place to start.

Octagon and or Octaedre is a personal favourite

tokyo ghost storiess, Monday, 27 March 2006 15:23 (twenty years ago)

Basic Channel: Quadrant DUB, Climax Basic Reshape
Maruzio: M6
Main Street: Na Fe Throw It
Rhythm & Sound: Mango Drive

Marty Feldmen Books On Tape (sexyDancer), Monday, 27 March 2006 15:39 (twenty years ago)

i think these are my two favorites:

http://basicchannel.com/images/records_297/m-3a.jpg
http://basicchannel.com/images/records_297/bc-07a.jpg

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Monday, 27 March 2006 15:42 (twenty years ago)

I ranked the BC singles on the "rank anything you feel like ranking" thread 16 months ago. I hadn't looked at that thread in ages but I still stand behind my ranking:

BC 05 (cyrus - inversion / presence)
BC 07 (octagon / octaedre)
BC 09 (phylyps trak ii)
BC 06 (quadrant dub)
BC 01 (cyrus - enforcement)
BC 02 (phylyps trak)
BC 03 (vainqueur - lyot reshape)
BC 08 (radiance)
BC 04 (q.1.1)

On second thought, BC01 and BC02 should probably be switched, and BC08 should be bumped up a spot.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 March 2006 18:03 (twenty years ago)

BTW, my BC POO is "Prescence", or maybe "Octaedre".

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 March 2006 18:04 (twenty years ago)

there's a great article by kodwo eshun about chain reaction (published in the wire in 1998)

wtf Porter Ricks is named after the Captain from the Flipper movie?? That is so awesome.

tylero (tylero), Monday, 27 March 2006 19:42 (twenty years ago)

BC1 is my personal favourite. It's got this wonderful shimmering quality to the high frequencies that sets it apart from the other BCs. It's almost a reversal of the usual BC structure, with the treble taking on the role of all-enveloping glue instead of the bass. Vainquer developed this idea to an extreme with his releases on Chain Reaction, which were great too.

I second what people are saying above about the Main Street series. 'New Day' is especially fantastic. It's a shame they we ignored for so long by most of the people splurging over the rest of the BC catalog. Anti-house snobbery maybe?

jng (jng), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:28 (twenty years ago)

erm... I meant "they were ignored" obviously.

jng (jng), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 14:30 (twenty years ago)

New Day even has a thread dedicated to it here - it does get a lot of ILM love.

Michael F Gill (Michael F Gill), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 17:41 (twenty years ago)

I wish Moritz & Co had done more vocal house

Washable School Paste (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 17:58 (twenty years ago)

Get one http://www.discogs.com/release/561441

blunt (blunt), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 20:31 (twenty years ago)

why do i get rhythm & sound and basic channel confused?

harshaw (jube), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 22:34 (twenty years ago)

cuz they're one and the same?

Washable School Paste (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 22:35 (twenty years ago)

oh really

haha

harshaw (jube), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 22:37 (twenty years ago)

jah really.

Washable School Paste (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 28 March 2006 22:38 (twenty years ago)

People also confuse Maurizio as one half of Basic Channel, when it's both of them, just like BC, R&S, or the main street stuff. Chain Reaction and Wackies are another story though...

Michael F Gill (Michael F Gill), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 00:03 (twenty years ago)

i'm not so into the second batch of rhythm and sound see mi yah remixes that just came out! not feelin the francois k remix--so boring!--and the others are pretty good but not mindblowing. i guess the villalobos/delay/tikiman action on smy remixes #1 just blew me out of the water, and now it's tough to settle for less!

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 00:09 (twenty years ago)

nah, the second one is just crap. boring is a very generous assessment of the FK remix! I wonder what they were thinking. very possibly the worst BC family 12" ever.

a, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 06:43 (twenty years ago)

the substance mix is ok but the FK is awful. he's really on a roll with the bad remixes these days.

stirmonster (stirmonster), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 06:48 (twenty years ago)

yeah, the FK remix is so unimaginative and unoriginal--it sounds like he phoned it in. for someone who knows as much about dub and house music as francois k, it seems almost inconceivable that he'd be that perfunctory-sounding with a rhythm and sound remix, of all things. you'd think he'd really put his heart into something like that. but maybe all that encyclopedic knowledge gets in the way.

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 06:49 (twenty years ago)

then again, do the words "francois k remix" really excite anyone in the year 2006?

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 06:50 (twenty years ago)

he has a pretty solid dj night, though. then again, there's not much happening dj-wise on monday nights in new york so maybe he doesn't have much competition. i saw rhythm and sound at francois k's deep space night maybe a year ago and it was great.

geeta (geeta), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 06:53 (twenty years ago)

he def still has a lot of cache as a DJ, headlines the main room of Fabric a couple of times a year. must steer clear of playing his own productions out...

a, Wednesday, 29 March 2006 07:15 (twenty years ago)

http://www.wavemusic.com/wave-label/9
xposts

blunt (blunt), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 15:54 (twenty years ago)

i havent even brought myself to listen to bmx-2

where is the autechre remix for bmx-3
where is the merzbow remix for bmx-28

harshaw (jube), Wednesday, 29 March 2006 23:26 (twenty years ago)

wtf? no need to slag FK, he's done plenty of great work, past and present. perhaps the quality control issue has something to do with the high quantity of jobs he gets (relative to remix work by younger bucks).

meth lab for doug flutie (sanskrit), Thursday, 30 March 2006 02:40 (twenty years ago)

I'm not dissing his past work.
high quantity of jobs regardless, this is a Rhythm and Sound remix, and it's FUCKING AWFUL. no defence.

a, Thursday, 30 March 2006 06:36 (twenty years ago)

Oh fuck, this stuff is incredible.

Dan I. (Dan I.), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:11 (twenty years ago)

where does all the air in the sound come from? Something to do with compression?

Dan I. (Dan I.), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:15 (twenty years ago)

sound is the compression of air, not the other way around.

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:17 (twenty years ago)

ps basic channel is the VU of dance music and i wish they'd go away forever!

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:19 (twenty years ago)

I'm not too big on the first R&S remix ep ... it's overly murky to the point where all the tracks sound sloppy to me ... I guess this means I shouldn't be in a hurry to hear the second ep.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:36 (twenty years ago)

BTW, my BC POO is "Prescence", or maybe "Octaedre".

Correcting myself -- I meant "Octagon".

VU = BC makes a lot of sense, except for the part about going away forever (on both sides of the equation).

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 30 March 2006 07:39 (twenty years ago)

this is good too

http://www.kompaktkiste.de/cd/tresor/tresor200.jpg

smokemon (eman), Thursday, 30 March 2006 23:16 (twenty years ago)

yes i've listened to that a few times in the last month. it's great.

jed_ (jed), Thursday, 30 March 2006 23:50 (twenty years ago)

Shimmering shimmering air.

It would be nice to have digital versions of the full 12"s.

hector (hector), Thursday, 30 March 2006 23:52 (twenty years ago)

ya it's like hawtin but you can still recognize the bits and morsels

harshaw (jube), Thursday, 30 March 2006 23:53 (twenty years ago)

(speaking about tresor 200)

harshaw (jube), Thursday, 30 March 2006 23:53 (twenty years ago)

http://www.basicchannel.com/

i like their site because of the info on a lot of the wackies / replay releases, which helps since liner notes are non-existent.

smokemon (eman), Friday, 31 March 2006 01:25 (twenty years ago)

I don't know how BC achieved their amazing sound, but years ago a friend told me they transferred each track to analogue tape and overdubbed each new track. Anyone know any better?

Telegram Sam, Friday, 31 March 2006 03:26 (twenty years ago)

I heard years ago from The Advent (remember them?) that one member of the BC crew was related to the Bismarcks and that they were therefore super rich and had used family wealth to accrue a v. large collection of antique analogue synths that explained the amazing warmth of their records. True or not it's a lovely tale.

Treblekicker (treblekicker), Friday, 31 March 2006 12:22 (twenty years ago)

ha! dude has an aristocratic air about definitely.

Good Dog (Good Dog), Friday, 31 March 2006 12:24 (twenty years ago)

...about him.

Good Dog (Good Dog), Friday, 31 March 2006 12:25 (twenty years ago)

I don't think anything is truly known about their production techniques, they are very protective of them. And the one or two interviews they've done in their career they've asked not to be quoted.

Michael F Gill (Michael F Gill), Friday, 31 March 2006 13:27 (twenty years ago)

there've been some more interviews the past few years (i know because i did one of them, with that 'no quotes' rule)...they seemed wary of the mythmaking and wanted to open up a bit.

Omar (Omar), Friday, 31 March 2006 14:33 (twenty years ago)

three weeks pass...
anyone heard this yet?

Burial Mix BMX 3
Rhythm & Sound: SMY Remixes #3 (D 12") @ EUR 8,00 #50885
(3rd in a series of remixes w/ rmxs by Sleeparchive, Vainqueur &
Hallucinator - TIP!)

manuel (manuel), Thursday, 27 April 2006 15:08 (twenty years ago)

This looks fantastic, when does it come out? The Sleeparchive remix is excellent, at least judging by one live version of it I heard online. I have high hopes for the Vainqueur as well.

Jena (JenaP), Thursday, 27 April 2006 15:24 (twenty years ago)

It's hard to get excited about this even though I love this guys. But it has already been established that I am an Old Man.

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 27 April 2006 15:27 (twenty years ago)

oooh vainqueur!

jed_ (jed), Thursday, 27 April 2006 20:13 (twenty years ago)

oh my word!!!!! my prayers have been answered :

http://www.boomkat.com/promotion.cfm?id=16

adam kreisel, Thursday, 27 April 2006 20:22 (twenty years ago)

oh my word!!!!! my prayers have been answered

ILM minimal/dub massive files for bankruptcy. :)

Omar (Omar), Thursday, 27 April 2006 20:26 (twenty years ago)

could someone who is familar with the wackies / basic replay stuff give us a rundown. i got the keith hudson reissue and i wasn't blown away ... in fact, i've barely listened to it and i always reach for "the keith hudson affair" or "rasta communication" first.

but so much of that stuff is sooooo tempting. junior delahaye? african roots? love joys? creation dub? they all look sooooo cooooool.

i guess i should at least get up on horace andy's "dance hall style".

DEEDS NOT WORDS (vahid), Friday, 28 April 2006 05:32 (twenty years ago)

Creation Dub!!! So...cloudy?

Omar (Omar), Friday, 28 April 2006 06:55 (twenty years ago)

Actually I meant Nature's Dub.

Omar (Omar), Friday, 28 April 2006 07:19 (twenty years ago)

Which Keith Hudson did you get? They reissued two of his and the better one is "Playing It Cool, Playing It Right." I also like Jah Batta "Argument" and the Horace Andy you mentioned. What I've heard of the Roots Underground "Tribesman Assault" and Wayne Jarrett "Showcase" was excellent. I need to get on some of those dub albums but theres so many.

/me aaaaaaaaaa (eman), Friday, 28 April 2006 11:55 (twenty years ago)

Wackies - S/D

/me aaaaaaaaaa (eman), Friday, 28 April 2006 11:58 (twenty years ago)

Hudson's Flesh of My Skin Blood of My Blood is now probably somewhere in my favorite 100 albums of all time.

The recently reissued Dub Unlimited is baaaad.

Andy_K (Andy_K), Friday, 28 April 2006 12:17 (twenty years ago)

you have a top 100?

DEEDS NOT WORDS (vahid), Friday, 28 April 2006 12:51 (twenty years ago)

If I had to come up with one today, it would probably be in there.

Andy_K (Andy_K), Friday, 28 April 2006 13:08 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
SMY remixes #4.

TIP!

lil' merzbow wow (haitch), Sunday, 28 May 2006 05:43 (twenty years ago)

I bought that domina 12" 3 days ago, I love it.

Thomas Mehlt (Tokyo Ghost Stories), Sunday, 28 May 2006 13:38 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
MEMO FRANCOIS K

RE: SEE MI YAH REMIX

DEAR SIR,
YOU SUCK

VAHID

JABBA JABBA!! NIB NIB!! (vahid), Saturday, 22 July 2006 06:06 (nineteen years ago)

Oh? What's he done?

Telephonething (Telephonething), Saturday, 22 July 2006 06:09 (nineteen years ago)

vahid you need this

http://www.basicchannel.com/images/records_297/w-1716/1722a.jpg

Lmaoborghini (eman), Saturday, 22 July 2006 12:09 (nineteen years ago)

haha that francois k remix DOES suck

david allen grier (dubplatestyle), Saturday, 22 July 2006 13:53 (nineteen years ago)

SMY Remixes #2 is probably best forgotten.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Saturday, 22 July 2006 14:55 (nineteen years ago)

SMY Remixes #2 is probably best forgotten.

But the soundstream remix!!!!....

tylero (tylero), Saturday, 22 July 2006 15:34 (nineteen years ago)

yeah the soundstream mix is probably my favourite of all. it's really simple but gives the original track alot of space to breathe. very effective.

jed_ (jed), Saturday, 22 July 2006 18:13 (nineteen years ago)

& so great to dance to!!!

jed_ (jed), Saturday, 22 July 2006 18:14 (nineteen years ago)

Damn, I can't even remember the Soundstream mix, I think it was one of the casualties when my hard drive flatlined a few weeks ago. But what could possibly top the Vainqueur and Hallucinator mixes on #3?

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Sunday, 23 July 2006 06:45 (nineteen years ago)

one month passes...
unbelievable

hippo eats dwarlf (lfam), Monday, 28 August 2006 01:12 (nineteen years ago)

three weeks pass...
spain's go mag interviews von oswald and ernestus

(article's in spanish, tho...)


http://www.sufmart.com/index.php/archivos/articulos/basic-channel-rhythm-sound-mira-quien-habla%e2%80%a6-integra/#more-562


manuel (manuel), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:02 (nineteen years ago)

i think that website is broken

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:23 (nineteen years ago)

here's what i extracted from the source code:



Durante trece años, Moritz Von Oswald y Mark Ernestus han vivido y trabajado recluidos en un edificio de Berlín sin dejarse fotografiar, sin conceder apenas entrevistas, envueltos en sombras. En esos trece años de misterio han tenido tiempo para renovar los cimientos del techno, influenciar a toda la escuela minimalista, fusionar sus ritmos abstractos con la sensación de espacio infinito del dub y cartearse con la flor y nata de la escena de Detroit, y todo eso sin acudir a los métodos de promoción habituales; sin imagen ni palabras, sólo música. Hasta hoy. Porque ahora, con motivo de la publicación del disco “See mi Jah (remixes)” (Burial Mix / Red, 2006), Von Oswald y Ernestus han decidido abrir las puertas de la oficina de Basic Channel, mostrar su rostro, sentarse cada uno en una silla y hablar… por fin.


http://sufmart.com/imagenes/basicchannel.jpg




1. El búnker.

En el número 44a de la calle Paul-Lincke-Ufer de Berlín, una vez atravesado un pasaje oscuro y un patio empedrado, y después de subir tres pisos de un inmueble estrecho, bombardeado a grafittis y de escalera de madera carcomida, se llega a Hardwax, la mejor tienda de discos –o mesón de maxis– del mundo para quien busque vinilo de quince quilates. Ahí, entre las últimas novedades llegadas de Detroit, incunables a cincuenta euros que penden de las paredes y una selección abrumadora de dub y reggae, parece que esté condensada y encapsulada la historia del techno. Lo que no sabe el cliente ocasional es que subiendo un tramo de escalera más se alcanza la puerta de Basic Channel. Ahí, en el cuarto piso del edifico Hardwax se esconden las oficinas del sello, el almacén, la puerta que lleva a Dubplates & Mastering y el estudio de grabación en el que estos ermitaños se han consagrado como intocables –a la misma altura que Carl Craig o Aphex Twin, por longevidad, influencia y vigencia de su música anterior y actual– de la música electrónica popular. Ahí también están los mismísimos Moritz Von Oswald y Mark Ernestus en persona, sentados alrededor de un escritorio y alumbrados por un flexo mientras por una ventana se filtran las últimas luces de un atardecer de primavera. Existen. Son ellos. No se van a dejar fotografiar porque nunca lo han hecho ni lo piensan hacer, pero están dispuestos a hablar y contar su historia sin escatimar detalles. Toda la verdad.


“Es curioso, porque durante años nos hemos mantenido en silencio para evitar que se hablara de nosotros o se dijeran cosas que no eran ciertas, y al final el debate se ha desarrollado por sí mismo”, explica un Moritz Von Oswald que recuerda vagamente al Roger Moore que en los años ochenta interpretó al agente James Bond. Su imagen no se corresponde con la del mito: calza zapatillas de deporte de marca incierta, tejanos deslavazados y polo a rayas azules y blancas; huele a dinero. A su lado, Ernestus ofrece una imagen de antiguo punk superado por el tiempo, pantalones anchos de estilo militar, cabello corto y botas duras. “Nunca nos hemos hecho fotos porque siempre hemos pensado que no era necesario vivir con ellas, y lo mismo pasó con las entrevistas. No buscábamos que se generaran rumores ni dar una imagen de misterio. No era una estrategia de márketing. No nos apetecía, no lo veíamos como algo prioritario. Todo el culto y el aura de misterio se han desarrollado solos, nosotros nunca lo hemos alimentado queriendo”.


2. Breve introducción a Basic Channel.

La obra de Von Oswald y Ernestus se puede resumir, en líneas generales, en los nueve maxis publicados por el sello Basic Channel entre 1993 y 1995 bajo alias como Cyrus, Phylyps o Quadrant, los siete maxis grabados como Maurizio, los cinco maxis de la serie Round One to Round Five del subsello Main Street y todo el material dub y reggae publicado en Burial Mix bajo el alias de Rhythm & Sound. Basic Channel fue la primera piedra en la edificación de un conglomerado de sellos e identidades que hoy sigue siendo el resumen de toda una saga de techno líquido y electrónica fría surgida de Berlín a la que habría que añadir más nombres de aliados –Monolake, Porter Ricks, Scion, Vladislav Delay, Tikiman, Soundhack, Sleeparchive– y sellos discográficos surgidos de su disciplina o hermanados en estética como Imbalance Computer Music, Tresor o Chain Reaction. Sobre todo Chain Reaction, allí donde los discípulos de Basic Channel prosiguieron el camino de los maestros cuando Moritz y Mark emprendieron nuevas direcciones.


Ahora, Basic Channel como tal no existe, pero sí su influencia y su peso. Asegura Von Oswald que ya no es un proyecto activo, “aunque de vez en cuando usemos la expresión ‘basic reshape’ para identificar un remix o una producción como nuestra; Maurizio tampoco es un proyecto en funcionamiento, no podemos descartar que vuelva algún día, pero ahora mismo no hay ninguna intención de rescatarlo. Así que nuestro nombre artístico es Rhythm & Sound, es el único que tenemos en marcha”. Esta refundación de su identidad en varias fases –entre 1993 y 1995 fueron Basic Channel, de 1995 a 1997 el nombre principal pasó a ser Maurizio, y desde entonces hasta ahora Rhythm & Sound– responde a diversas mutaciones estéticas que han creado escuela. Al principio, Basic Channel se correspondía con el techno de vanguardia que llegaba de Detroit, con el material más abstracto y duro que estaban produciendo Robert Hood –fue su sello Hardwax quien dio posteriormente el nombre a la tienda de Basic Channel en Berlín–, Underground Resistance, Jeff Mills y Carl Craig. La primera referencia de la marca, el “Enforcement” de Cyrus, era un techno violento e irreal que posteriormente fue dando paso a un mayor grado de abstracción y sensación líquida, una maraña hipnótica de ritmos contundentes y ambientaciones espectrales en las que se filtraban el dub, la música electroacústica, las atmósferas del deep house de Chicago y el ruido estático según el maxi: “Quadrant dubs” era techno en versión krautrock, una masa gaseosa de texturas intangibles, los 12”s “Octagon / Octaedre” y “Radiance” absoluta abstracción en un limbo cargado de electricidad estática, y el fundamental “Phylyps track I” el antepasado de toda esta explosión techno alemana en la que actualmente andamos.


Maurizio ahondó en la línea dub de Basic Channel y le dio forma al techno-dub moderno, solapando beats pausados y firmes con líneas de bajo retumbantes: una vez más, la música de Von Oswald y Ernestus se hacía fluída, como un río de mercurio, tan dispuesta a mover los pies como a rodear el cuerpo de capas de ruido sutiles. En realidad, Maurizio había sido un alias nacido incluso antes de Basic Channel, en 1992 y con el maxi “Ploy” –que recibió remezclas de Undergroud Resistance y The Orb–, pero se reactivó con fuera a partir de la cuarta referencia y hasta la séptima y última, todas ellas recogidas en un CD recopilatorio, “Maurizio” (M, 97), que sigue siendo uno de los mejores manjares electrónicos a los que uno puede arrimar la oreja. Con Rhythm & Sound se despejó el 4×4 y se quedó el dub a solas, futurista a la vez que enraizado en el Caribe gracias a la voz del toaster Tikiman, y hoy ésta es la línea en la que se mueven sin renunciar a todo lo demás.


“Pudimos haber seguido con Basic Channel y seguir grabando todo lo que hacíamos con ese nombre”, explica Von Oswald mientras juguetea con su anillo de casado. “Pero nunca decidimos de antemano lo que vamos a hacer. ¿Un disco de club? ¿Algo experimental? ¿Un tema vocal? Y pensamos que lo podíamos ir haciendo todo en diferentes momentos bajo diferentes nombres según nos surgiera la necesidad o la inspiración. Nunca se puede predecir lo que vamos a hacer. No calculamos con anticipación. Cuando nos sale algo nuevo, cambiamos de identidad”.


3. Rhythm & Sound.

Estamos en Berlín con Von Oswald y Ernestus porque acaba de completarse el último gran proyecto de la familia Basic Channel y desean hablar de ello. Se trata de los remixes de “See mi yah” (Burial Mix / Red, 2006), una serie de cuatro maxis ahora recopilada en CD en la que amigos y vecinos de la casa se ponen manos a la obra para darle la vuelta a los temas reggae de “See mi yah” (2005), un disco de un solo riddim versionado por diferentes vocalistas, entre ellos los habituales Tikiman y Willi Williams. Los remixes de “See mi yah” recaen en valores seguros y por eso el resultado, salvo dos ocasionales bajones –Tikiman y François K no convencen–, está a la altura del prestigio de la marca. Sleeparchive, Hallucinator, Carl Craig, Ricardo Villalobos o Vladislav Delay están entre los elegidos. “Los hemos pedido por amistad”, asegura Moritz. “No hay ninguna otra intención detrás de la elección de los nombres, sólo reforzar lazos de amistad y corresponder favores. Nosotros queríamos que cada tema del disco pudiera sonar de otra manera, porque en el CD original el ritmo siempre era el mismo y sólo cambiaba el cantante. Le pedimos un remix a Ricardo Villalobos porque nos fascina lo que hace, y a François K porque fue el primer artista que nos invitó a tocar fuera de Alemania, en aquella época en la que aún existía el directo de Basic Channel. El resto son todo amigos o parte de la familia”.


Basic Channel no son Los Soprano, pero para ellos la familia es lo primero. A lo largo de los años han seguido manteniendo relación estrecha con quienes al principio estuvieron a su lado. Carl Craig, en ese sentido, ha sido desde el primer momento el mayor respaldo de Von Oswald y Ernestus y el auténtico activador de su respeto posterior. Una vez más, Moritz toma la palabra. “Hemos estado mucho tiempo sin dejarnos remezclar, pero eso no significa que nos hubiéramos cerrado en banda a la colaboración con otros artistas. Los remixes que pedimos a Carl Craig o UR al principio de todo pensamos que era una buena forma de trabajar juntos. Nos gustaba lo que hacían, y siempre hemos creído en el intercambio de ideas”. Para sustentar esta afirmación, acude al ejemplo de “Domina”, el segundo maxi grabado bajo el alias de Maurizio. “Nosotros éramos muy fans de Manuel Göttsching [nota: el líder del grupo krautrock Ash Ra Tempel], y él produjo un tema que nos encantaba, muy minimalista, que se llamaba ‘The domina’. Hasta cierto punto, fue una inspiración para nosotros y así fue como hicimos nuestro ‘Domina’, y como sabíamos que Carl Craig era fan de Manuel le pedimos que hiciera el remix. Y más tarde conocimos al propio Göttschning, se confesó fan nuestro y nos pidió que le hiciéramos un remix de su obra maestra ‘E2-E4’… Como ves, todo va hacia atrás y hacia delante, nunca sabes por dónde te llevará la música, y creemos en el intercambio de ideas. Así ha sido siempre”. Ni qué decir tiene que “Domina” posiblemente sea uno de los mejores trabajos de una trayectoria sin fisuras.


4. Futuro.

Sin Basic Channel, la música electrónica de club de hoy no existiría como la conocemos. Luciano estaría trabajando de guardia de seguridad y Dominik Eulberg de recolector de setas. Ricardo Villalobos habría puesto una farmacia en Berlín y Richie Hawtin seguiría yendo al supermercado cada semana a comprar cuchillas de afeitar. Pero los nueve maxis de Basic Channel y los siete de Maurizio son tan importantes como los seis de Derrick May en Transmat o los discos de Kraftwerk que van de “Autobahn” a “Computer world”. Entonces, es cuando tenemos que dar una buena y una mala noticia. La mala es que no habrá más techno en la esfera de Von Oswald y Ernestus. “Yo no diría que nos aburrimos del techno en cierto momento”, asegura Moritz, “pero sí es cierto que nos interesa mucho más desarrollar las ideas que nos salen como Rhythm & Sound. Este es un proyecto vivo, que nos sorprende, que cambia en todo momento. Hemos probado muchas cosas: riddims, temas vocales, temas abstractos, y cada vez que cambiábamos nos sentíamos cómodos. Con el techno ahora no tenemos conexión; con el dub sí. También ha cambiado el momento. Cuando empezamos con Maurizio me acuerdo que había más gente produciendo este techno más sencillo y denso, estaba Jeff Mills, estaba Robert Hood. La situación era explosiva. Y en cierto momento, todo dejó de ser como era”. Mark le releva. “Yo empecé a decepcionarme con la dirección que tomaba el techno en 1995, cuando publicamos el último maxi de Basic Channel. Hubo una serie de gente que inventó muchas cosas en poco tiempo y la siguiente generación no supo desarrollar algo original a partir de eso. Nosotros tardamos años en dar con una fórmula que rápidamente se estancó porque la gente que vino después a tomar la escena techno no supo llevarla a ningún lugar nuevo”.


La buena noticia es que pasan los años, pasan las modas, el techno cambia, Berlín se hace más caro, el reggae se vuelve electrónico y, como si el tiempo no fuera con ellos y las ideas de los demás tampoco, Basic Channel, o Rhythm & Sound, o como se les quiera llamar, siguen haciendo una música increible. El nuevo CD es la prueba. El próximo, sea el que sea, seguro que también.


El árbol genealógico de Moritz von Oswald: momento Jaime Peñafiel

Otto von Bismarck, el llamado ‘canciller de hierro’, fue el responsable de la campaña militar, en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, que unificó toda la Alemania actual bajo el dominio de Prusia. Su mandato duró hasta 1890 –en el ínterin fue coronado Príncipe Von Bismarck por el Rey Guillermo I–, y ha pasado a la historia como el estadista más decisivo de la historia alemana con permiso de Adolfo. Von Bismarck contrajo nupcias con Johanna von Puttkamer y tuvieron tres hijos: Marie, Herbert y Wilhelm, siendo el segundo, por ser el primer varón aunque no el primogénito, el que heredó el título de Príncipe. Del matromonio entre Herbert von Bismarck y la condesa Margarita Hoyos nacieron a su vez cuatro hijos: Hannah, Goedela, Otto y Gottfried, y una vez más fue Otto quien, al ser el primer barón, heredó el título de Príncipe von Bismarck y, en casándose con Ann-Mari Tengbom, engendró seis hijos: Mari Ann, Ferdinand, Carl Alexander, Maximilian, Gunilla y Leopold. De esta generación Ferdinand heredaría el título de Príncipe y Gunilla von Bismarck acabaría en Marbella formando parte de la jet set, casándose con Luis Ortiz –no confundir con el dueño del sello español Klitekture–, divorciándose de él, juntándose después con Don Jaime de Mora y Aragón (hermano de la difunta reina Fabiola de Bélgica, casada con el Rey Balduino I) y montando fiestas con Yeyo Llagostera, Adnan Khashoggi, Jesús Gil, Cachuli y demás gente ‘guapa’. Pero quien nos interesa es la primogénita Mari Ann, que daría a luz fruto de su matrimonio con el noble Egbert von Oswald a cuatro rechonchas criaturas: Clemens, Alexander, Daniela y, en 1962 el hijo menor, Moritz. Sí: Moritz von Oswald, tataranieto por línea directa de Otto von Bismarck de la misma forma en que nuestro ibicenco Pocholo Martínez Bordíu es sobrino –no biológico– de Francisco Franco Bahamonde y ex yerno de Adolfo Suárez. ¿Acojonadísimos? No nos extraña.


La otra descendencia: Chain Reaction

Cajas metálicas que han acabado oxidándose con el tiempo. CDs que si no se guardan en una bolsita de plástico incrustada contra la pared anterior de la tapa de hierro acabarán partiéndose por la mitad. Maxis enfundados en un cartón marrón gastado. Galletas diseñadas con un toque gris sucio. En Chain Reaction importaba tanto lo que se escuchaba dentro como lo que se veía fuera, y a fuerza de imagen (post-industrial y minimalista) y contenido radical se fue labrando la otra gran leyenda del techno alemán de vanguardia. “Si volviera a caer en nuestras manos material inédito e interesante, quizá volveríamos a activar Chain Reaction”, asegura Mark. “El sello está en standby, y si se reactivara tendría que ser de la misma forma en que nació: por necesidad de dar voz a gente que nos traía música increible. En los comienzos, Chain Reaction se alimentó de gente cercana. Pete y René [nota: Peter Kuschnereit y René Löwe, juntos son Scion, por separado Substance y Vainqueur] trabajaban en Hardwax y nos pasaron sus temas; Andy Mellwig de Porter Ricks trabajaba en Dubplates & Mastering… Ellos hacían techno como el nuestro de otra forma. Porter Ricks venían de un entorno académico, de hacer música con computadoras y complicados cálculos matemáticos. Fue una contaminación interesante. Como Basic Channel éramos nosotros, su música no podía salir en Basic Channel. Pero lo merecía. Por eso creamos Chain Reaction”.


Nuestra visita de sábado por la tarde a Hardwax tiene regalo: además de Moritz y Mark, por las oficinas de Basic Channel se pasean algunos de los artistas que han remezclado los temas de “See mi yah” o han formado parte de la historia de esta saga. Hablamos unos breves minutos con René Löwe. “En la década de los ochenta me aficioné a la música de baile y compraba los discos que llegaban de Detroit. Y entonces empecé a escuchar la música de Basic Channel. Trabajar detrás del mostrador de Hardwax hace que te pique el gusanillo, y en cierto momento me puse a hacer música, a solas o con Pete. Y me la publicaron. Fue así de fácil”. A su lado está Peter Kuschnereit separado por una estatua fumada llamada Tikiman. Tikiman no habla, y cuando lo intenta no se le entiende. Lía otro cigarro de marihuana mientras el 50% de Scion prosigue con su relato. “Chain Reaction se acabó porque no había manera de garantizar una continuidad en la calidad de los lanzamientos. Mucha gente se fue. Nosotros, además, estábamos siempre de gira con Tikiman, siendo los embajadores de Basic Channel por el mundo. Yo también estudiaba, y nunca tenía tiempo para hacer música. La cosa se fue muriendo poco a poco”.


René Löwe y Peter Kuschnereit fueron los encargados de firmar el testamento de Basic Channel con un disco para Tresor que firmaron con su alias Scion. La primera referencia de Chain Reaction fue de ellos –“Emerge”, 1995–, y siete años después, asistidos por el software Ableton Live –diseñado, porque todo queda en casa, por el ex Monolake Gerhard Behles–, entregaron el megamix de Basic Channel, “Scion arrange and process Basic Channel tracks” (Tresor, 2002). “Hemos pinchado los discos de Mark y Moritz durante años, y nos los conocemos de principio a fin. Hacer ese disco para Tresor fue fácil: sin Tikiman, sin una voz, había más espacio para coser todos los temas de una manera más profunda”.


En el otro extremo de la mesa está Vladislav Delay comiendo galletas y sorbiendo té de una taza. “No sé si considerarme un hijo de Chain Reaction, pero lo cierto es que comencé con ellos y he vuelto sin dudarlo en cuanto me lo han pedido. Me acuerdo de cuando les mandé mi primera maqueta y recibí la respuesta de que me la querían publicar. Yo estaba flipando. De todos modos, hay que reconocer que llegué a Chain Reaction cuando el impacto mayor del sello ya se había producido. Vainqueur, Monolake, Porter Ricks… ellos fueron los primeros. Ellos fueron una influencia para mí. Y son mis amigos”. No opina lo mismo Delay de su otro protector en aquellos años en los que se multiplicaron alias como Luomo, Uusitalo o Sistol: Achim Szepanski, el dueño de Mille Plateaux o Force Inc. “Achim quemaba a la gente que grababa para él. Nos estafó, se aprovechó de nosotros. No puedo decir demasiadas cosas buenas. En cambio, el trato con Chain Reaction siempre ha sido justo. Yo lo tengo que agradecer”. Prosigue. “Lo que me gustaba de ellos era la conexión con el reggae que siempre han mantenido. Para mí ha sido difícil remezclarles, porque su sonido es tan perfecto que me ha asustado siempre tocarlo. Por eso evité hacer un remix dub o un remix ambient, habría sido lo fácil. Preferí un tema más subido de tempo que no sonara a Luomo. Lo último que quiero hacer es destrozar su música de una forma poco elegante”.


Basic Channel es una oficina que no sólo edita música: también la distribuye. Sellos-autor como Errorsmith, Soundhack, MMM o Sleeparchive han recibido la bendición de una casa que concibe el techno como aventura. En las escaleras, fumando, espera Frank Timm, más conocido como Soundhack, Sound Stream o como mitad de Smith N Hack junto con Errorsmith. “A mí me empezó a gustar Basic Channel cuando comenzaron a sonar en clubes. Al principio de todo yo compraba techno, pero rápidamente me pasé al house y me tiré con ese sonido mucho tiempo, sin salir de él. Iba a Hardwax a comprar y me pillaba todo lo de Chicago. El sonido de Soundhack sale de ahí: pocos medios, mi sampler y mi Atari, y un sonido barato. Me planché mi primer disco porque nadie quería sacar mi música, lo llevé a Hardwax, a ellos les encantó y quisieron encargarse de la distribución”. La familia: no sólo hijos; aquí, los amigos, reciben el mismo trato especial si su música lo vale. Y por muchos años.


Homenaje versus plagio: la influencia de Basic Channel

Un topicazo para empezar: si a los que escribimos de música nos hubieran dado un euro cada vez que hemos abusado de la expresión ‘recuerda a Basic Channel’, hoy en vez de nadar en la playa de Gavá lo haríamos en la piscina de Tío Gilito. Extrapolación del tópico: el sonido característico de Von Oswald y Ernestus ha sido reciclado, copiado, homenajeado y sugerido en infinidad de ocasiones hasta el punto de poder afirmar no sólo que se ha creado un estilo reconocible y canónico, sino que además de seguidores de su estética también hay oportunistas que plagian sin compasión (y poca gracia). Este tema, en particular, a Mark Ernestus le molesta un poco. “Hay una fina línea que separa lo que sería un homenaje de una copia descarada”. El gesto de su cara revela que, si por él fuera, todo se reduciría al concepto plagio. “Imitar a alguien no resulta demasiado interesante. Al principio a mí me resultó divertido, me sorprendió que hubiera gente que se tomara este sonido tan en serio, pero llega un momento en que te puede molestar de verdad. Sobre todo cuando es gente que se aproxima a la música con mentalidad de DJ, para que su música se pinche, y sólo trabajan con cuatro loops. Por eso preferimos no pensar en ese tema”. Moritz añade: “hemos cerrado los ojos a lo que sucede a nuestro alrededor. Nos han copiado tanto fuera de nuestro círculo que no queremos saber nada más sobre el tema. No nos vamos a poner a perseguir a cualquiera que supuestamente nos plagie… mejor no perder el tiempo así. Preferimos no saberlo y no enfadarnos, porque todo esto puede comprometer nuestra música futura”.


En efecto, la línea que separa el homenaje del plagio es más delgada que la silueta de Victoria Beckham. Normalmente, son los productores con categoría y amplio conocimiento de las fuentes del techno contemporáneo los que, al atacar una producción con reminiscencias mauriziescas, con mayor respeto la resuelven. No hace mucho, los elegantísimos Âme, guardianes del canon que pone a Chicago y Detroit en un altar, plancharon en la cara B de su maxi “Rej” –el tema del 2005 que más se pincha en el 2006– una producción titulada “Basic track”: tan bien hecha, tan respetuosa, y la vez tan sugestiva que podría haber sido la décima referencia del sello diez años después de su defunción. Por otro lado, Luciano tituló la cara B de su maxi “Bombero’s” en Cadenza como “Octogonal”: techno-dub acuoso que hacía mención de manera poco disimulada al “Octagon” original, allí donde Basic Channel empezaron a bucear en aguas limosas y turbulentas. Estos dos ejemplos son los que dan la medida de cómo Von Oswald y Ernestus son un estandar en sí mismos, tan reivindicables y homenajeables como Underground Resistance, Derrick May o Larry Heard.


La escuela de los clicks’n’cuts, y en especial la facción bailable de la estética popularizada por el sello Mille Plateaux, fue la que con mayor ánimo y determinación tomó el testigo de Basic Channel y Chain Reaction, sobre todo cuando este segundo cerró sus puertas en el año 2000. La diferencia es que ahí ya no había una continuación auspiciada por Von Oswald y Ernestus, sino un lenguaje codificado que, pese a lo que puedan sugerir sus primeros autores, ha quedado en el imaginario colectivo del techno como de dominio público y garantía de calidad. La diáspora post-Basic Channel, alimentada a partir de los sellos Force Inc. y Force Tracks –de la Islandia de Exos, Ozy y Yagya (mucha atención al segundo disco de éste, “Will I dream during the process?” en Sending Orbs, pura réplica del mejor Vainqueur) a la norteamérica de Sutekh, Stewart S. Walker o Twerk, pasando por el Canadá microhouse de Jetone, Mike Shannon y Deadbeat, sin olvidarnos del dub crujiente y subterráneo de Pole y todos los cachorros de su sello ~scape, es sólo la punta de un iceberg que nos lleva simultáneamente al momento presente y atrás en el tiempo, a toda la historia inmediata del techno: del “Consumed” y el “Closer” de Plastikman –y por extensión la filosofía original del sello M_nus– al house envolvente e interminable de Ricardo Villalobos, por no hablar de todo el sonido Colonia posterior a Mike Ink y los sellos Profan y Auftrieb; del nuevo Detroit de Matthew Dear al trance de Kaito. Y así hasta completar decenas de nombres más que podríamos poner aquí pero no caben. Basic Channel son como un rastro de migas de pan que se prolonga durante más de diez años de evolución de la música de máquinas. Nadie más en este mundo –ni siquiera Autechre– ha influenciado tanto a los demás.


La saga Basic Channel: discografía básica


Basic Channel

“Basic Channel”

Basic Channel / Red, 1995

La historia de estas páginas resumida en un solo CD al que no le sobra ni una línea del código de barras: el ADN del techno minimalista infectado de dub y del Detroit que miraba al espacio exterior convive con influencias de Stockhausen, Brian Eno, Xenakis y a la vez comparte espacio con el deep house de Ron Trent y Chez Damier y el krautrock cósmico. En versiones extractadas –un tema normal de Basic Channel suele alargarse hasta los diez minutos, pero podrían durar dos días y nadie interpondría ninguna queja–, “Basic Channel” hace el trabajo fácil para quien no quiera completar los nueve maxis. Si prefieren esta obra de arte en versión mezclada, acudan a “Scion arrange and process Basic Channel tracks” (Tresor, 2002).

Basic Channel. Maxis esenciales: “Phylyps trak” (1993) / “Quadrant dubs” (1994) / “Octagon / Octaedre” (1994) / “Radiance I / II / III” (1994)


Maurizio

“Maurizio”

M / Red, 1997

La otra historia de estas páginas resumida en otro CD por el que habría que remover cielo y tierra. Por suerte, tanto éste como el recopilatorio de BC no se han dejado de reprensar a lo largo de estos años, y aunque sólo incluya los maxis del 4 al 7 de la serie –se quedan fuera “Ploy”, “Domina” y el “Lyot” de Vainqueur, y ni siquiera es tan bonito como las reediciones de los 12”s en vinilo transparente– y un contenido que deja chafado, techno de cambios imperceptibles y fluidez eterna cuyos bombos hacen temblar el cristal de la ventana y cuyo bajo late como un corazón de vaca. Esto es como un bote de detergente Ariel: si te ofrecen dos de otro grupo, ni se te ocurra cambiarlo.

Maurizio. Maxis esenciales: “Domina” (1993) / “M-4.5” (1995) / “M-5” (1995) / “M-7” (1997)


Rhythm & Sound

“Rhythm & Sound”

Rhythm & Sound / Red, 2001

Sin voces, pero con toda la sensación de amplitud del reggae: este es el único disco instrumental de Rhythm & Sound –ni siquiera el otro proyecto, Round One to Round Five, evitaba la faringe de Tikiman– y también el mejor porque al suprimir lo más reconocible de cualquier influencia jamaicana abría la posibilidad de llevar la abstracción lo más lejos posible. Por aquel entonces Pole ya había publicado su “1” y su “2” en Kiff SM y la misma idea de ‘sub dub’ ya no era revolucionaria, pero la concisión, el magnetismo y la profundidad de estos temas son de las que le dicen al alumno Stefan Betke ‘aparta, que aquí estamos nosotros’. Y apartan con delicadeza, con un imperceptible toque en el hombro. Sensacional.

Rhythm & Sound. Discos esenciales: “Showcase feat. Tikiman” (1998) / “w/ The Artists / The versions” (2003) / “See mi jah” (2005) / “See mi jah (remixes)” (2006)


Monolake

“Hongkong”

Chain Reaction / Red, 1997

El “Let’s get killed” (David Holmes) del techno-dub: un audiodocumental en clave concrète en el que el habitual sonido 4×4 de Chain Reaction –bombos que pegan, pero sumergidos en un espesísimo sonido ambiental líquido– también está rodeado de ruidos ambientales grabados en las calles y mercados de Hong Kong, una postal desde el lejano oriente en la que se superpone una escritura redonda y perfeccionista con imágenes de una poesía narcótica. Poco después vendría un retrato ambiental del desierto centroasiático –“Gobi. The desert Ep” (1998)– y una serie de discos en los que los alumnos se querían erigir en maestros.

Monolake. Discos esenciales: “Async Sense” (grabado como Async Sense, 1995), “Interstate” (1999), “Gravity” (2001), “Plumbicon versions” (2006), “Alaska melting” (maxi, 2006)



Vainqueur

“Elevations”

Chain Reaction / Red, 1997

Decía un amigo del instituto al que conocíamos como ‘El Basura’ que el disco de Vainqueur sonaba como “el ruido que hacen las máquinas de cortar chorizo”. Al chaval le gustaba bailar salsa y Héroes del Silencio, así que es lógico que no entendiera la renovación espectacular que de las fuentes del ambient hiciera René Löwe en la segunda referencia en CD de Chain Reaction. Su techno bascula entre los ritmos quedos y dictados por la oscilación lentísima del reloj de un hipnotista –un tic tac tic tac que entra dentro del cerebro– y una abstracción atmosférica en la que los temas suenan como una nube de tormenta rebosante de carga eléctrica, máquinas ionizadas que anticipan la tempestad. El disco se llama “Elevations” porque te suspende tres mil metros por encima del suelo, no por nada más.

Chain Reaction. Discos esenciales: Porter Ricks (“Biokinetics”, 1996) / Various Artists (“Decay product”, 1997) / Substance (“Session elements”, 1998) / “…compiled” (1998) / Vladislav Delay (“Multila”, 2000) / Fluxion (“Vibrant forms II”, 2000)


Texto: Javier Blánquez para Go Mag (septiembre 06)




a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:25 (nineteen years ago)

sorry dudes no wrap! mods feel free to clean up

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:26 (nineteen years ago)

site works fine for me

señor citizen (eman), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:32 (nineteen years ago)

lucky

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 18 September 2006 04:55 (nineteen years ago)

Works for me and I can read spanish. I'm on a roll!

struttin' with some barbecue (jimnaseum), Monday, 18 September 2006 16:04 (nineteen years ago)

Listening to the remixes again ... the Soundstream remix is crap (vocals don't mesh with the beats *at all*, the murky qualities of the original are completely lost), so Remixes #2 can be essentially tossed.

The Carl Craig mix on #4 is pretty cool, it definitely beats the Basic Reshape By Numbers A-side.

The Hallucinator remix on #3 is still the greatest thing ever.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 19 September 2006 05:44 (nineteen years ago)

you are so wrong about the soundstream remix

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Friday, 22 September 2006 14:25 (nineteen years ago)

when the horn stabs pick up!

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Friday, 22 September 2006 14:27 (nineteen years ago)

yeah that's the pick of the bunch, IMO.

jed_ (jed), Friday, 22 September 2006 14:39 (nineteen years ago)

who wants to email both versions of Domina? I had the 12" but lost it years ago and need to hear it again asap for something I'm writing.

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Friday, 22 September 2006 15:33 (nineteen years ago)

carl craig mix & maurizio mix? i have them but they're both over 12mb - can yahoo take that?

jed_ (jed), Friday, 22 September 2006 15:50 (nineteen years ago)

in fact they are both 15mb+

dan, check Leonardo thread later.

jed_ (jed), Friday, 22 September 2006 15:55 (nineteen years ago)

can i just say

1) not getting the soundstream hate. that track is fresh

2) i can actually listen to the francois k mix all the way through now w/o recoiling in horror or leaping up to change the track. it's not terrible, merely totally insipid and uninspired. and completely lacking in bass or dynamics. i'd rather listen to just about ANYBODY from nu-drum'n'bass do a version ... why not get a german, like pieter k??

3) really really really really feeling vladislav delay's version. SO DOPE.

POX^3 (let x=2) (vahid), Monday, 25 September 2006 04:51 (nineteen years ago)

i think calling the basic see mi version "by the numbers" is kind of missing the point...

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 25 September 2006 05:08 (nineteen years ago)

doing a very basic dub recording of their own rhythm is exactly what we would have expected them to do

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 25 September 2006 05:11 (nineteen years ago)

vainqueur did the same thing but i think that his, the reshape, and the soundstream remix are the best. carl craig and vlad delay a close second tier.

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 25 September 2006 05:13 (nineteen years ago)

no no no delay is just as good as the others

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Monday, 25 September 2006 05:14 (nineteen years ago)

I adore the Vladislav Delay mix - I wish the new Luomo album was as good (perhaps it would have been if he'd played with some reggae vocals rather than the same fucking vocalist over and over again). Love the way it finishes off Jeffery Mac's 'Meditations in Dub' set as well.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Monday, 25 September 2006 05:45 (nineteen years ago)

three months pass...
so, q 1.1. perfectly melancholy. i love the keys in the first track. i think that quadrant might be my favorite BC project. it's just so simple and easy to listen to. i love the whole series but there are moments when i do not want to hear enforcement or octaedre, but the quadrant records always hit the spot.

and inversion! damn you vahid! it took me so long to hear this song because i followed your advice. i love that high-tuned kick, just banging out the time among all the reverbed chords. it sounds like it's in a completely different space than the rest of the track.

friday on the porch (lfam), Friday, 12 January 2007 06:45 (nineteen years ago)

Soundstream remix = my #1 track of 2006. My favorite group remixed by my second favorite group! I wish I knew how to write becaus I feel like there is so much going on in that track that I can't really express.

tylero (tylero), Friday, 12 January 2007 07:14 (nineteen years ago)

tell me about it

friday on the porch (lfam), Friday, 12 January 2007 07:19 (nineteen years ago)

two weeks pass...
he never told me about it ;_;

friday on the porch (lfam), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:00 (nineteen years ago)

you have not heard the Soundstream remix? that is odd. i got a Fluxion record ("Largo") that is fucking tight shit, do you like their mainstreet stuffs?

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:05 (nineteen years ago)

no, i love the soundstream remix! i just wanted him to talk about it more because it seemed like he really loved it, too. i love main street, but i've yet to explore chain reaction.

friday on the porch (lfam), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:10 (nineteen years ago)

i will ss the Fluxion to you-- the b2 is like BC on waves of ambient noise.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:17 (nineteen years ago)

buy this instead

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:30 (nineteen years ago)

THIS THREAD IS FOR DUBBY GERMAN MINIMALISM, NOT FUCKING NORWEGIANS.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:35 (nineteen years ago)

ah sorry RONG MUSIC

that's not dubby at all, don't buy that

i meant buy this and this instead ... that's the proper dub house stuff

oh and this too

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:36 (nineteen years ago)

thx for clarification. though tussle? really?

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:38 (nineteen years ago)

as MAN LIKE MIKE TAYLOR once said

Seasons Recordings is like the underground techno label that that separates the men from the boys; every corny indie fuck in the world has the BC catalogue in a silver EFA tin, but not too many people know about DJ Spun. Hyper minimal difficult electronics, not for tourists or the faint of heart.

-- The Rebukes of Hazard (current31...), April 15th, 2004 2:52 AM. (mjt)

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:38 (nineteen years ago)

maybe the last tussle i heard was not the tussle you are speaking of.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:39 (nineteen years ago)

nah, i'm sure it was. just saying, at some point people gotta move on from cavernous synthy german dub house.

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:44 (nineteen years ago)

at some point

friday on the porch (lfam), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:46 (nineteen years ago)

well, the last tussle i heard was about four years ago, so maybe it's time to revisit. it was okay then, but i was really into grime and devendra banhart then, so i wasn't paying much attention. *urgh*

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 04:55 (nineteen years ago)

the last time i heard tussle was at a tiny houseparty in the basement and they were doing ESG with drum circle interludes. but this kid i know that used to work at amoeba told me recently he's been playing drums for them and they've gotten a bit more experimental, a bit more This Heat-ish. i'm definitely intrigued. i also might ask him to give me drum lessons.

jaxon (jaxon), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 06:11 (nineteen years ago)

house party was like 4 yrs ago

jaxon (jaxon), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 06:12 (nineteen years ago)

Soundstream remix = my #1 track of 2006. My favorite group remixed by my second favorite group! I wish I knew how to write becaus I feel like there is so much going on in that track that I can't really express. I'm dumb I guess

tylero (tylero), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 06:32 (nineteen years ago)

My favorite Seasons nee Earthtones record: http://www.discogs.com/release/1277

I bought so much west-coast house in 1998 and 1999

tylero (tylero), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 06:36 (nineteen years ago)

wh3rd to 2004.

This is my favorite cr 12":
http://www.discogs.com/release/25934

Apparently the guy only made one record. A real shame, as his record is one of the best things that came out of a relatively mediocre label.

If you condense Fluxion's Vibrant Forms I&II into a single cd you get some of the best dubby minimalism of the 90's.

http://www.discogs.com/release/650
http://www.discogs.com/release/706

I went into a trance state while driving through a snow storm with a cdr comp of these two albums. It was 11am on a Saturday and I was completely sober. It was a 45 minute drive, but I felt like I was in the car for about 3 hours. When I parked my car at home it was like I came to; I wasn't quite sure how I got there. It was one of the strangest experiences of my life. Vahid will probably make fun of me endlessly, but I have to give Fluxion props. You don't come across records like that every day.

This was a great label for this kind of music, especially DC10-14:
http://www.discogs.com/label/Deepchord

But the funny thing is that this guy went on to do these records for Octal and they are the best thing he ever did. I got these as promos back in the day and packed them away back in Michigan. I brought them back to Texas this summer, fucking amazing records:

http://www.discogs.com/release/45234
http://www.discogs.com/release/126958

This Man-Like man needs to go to bed. Good night fellas.

Disco Nihilist (mjt), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 08:45 (nineteen years ago)

one more thing...

It is more on the ambient tip, but it is absolutely breathtaking:
http://www.discogs.com/release/584472

Disco Nihilist (mjt), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 08:47 (nineteen years ago)

doing a very basic dub recording of their own rhythm is exactly what we would have expected them to do

... in 1997. They've learned a few new tricks since then and I didn't feel the need to hear Maurizio M remake #4839B

(I am aware that the Vainqueur remix, which I love, is also stuck in 1997 so feel free to rebut my shaky logic along these lines)

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 09:59 (nineteen years ago)

no need ;)

friday on the porch (lfam), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 18:53 (nineteen years ago)

disco n, thxxxxxxx!!

i is listening to Scion.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Wednesday, 31 January 2007 22:43 (nineteen years ago)

the Bipolar Defect 2LP is like water slowly flowing down a valley on a frozen steppe.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 04:27 (nineteen years ago)

forgot to bid on a whole bunch of OOP CR 12"s last week which subsequently went for 1.50 euros each. fuck.

a (rslvd), Thursday, 1 February 2007 08:41 (nineteen years ago)

also has no-one repped for this yet? total classic

a (rslvd), Thursday, 1 February 2007 10:41 (nineteen years ago)

i'm still pissed off at Basic Channel Dude for the shitty show he put on in New York four years ago with um, not Tikiman but somebody else. first he did a "DJ set" which turned out to be bog-standard roots reggae for two straight hours. even after they started doing live stuff they never got up to house tempo that i recall. why did he think people were there????

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 1 February 2007 11:41 (nineteen years ago)

lol "house tempo". it was probably rhythm & sound

am0n (am0n), Thursday, 1 February 2007 14:24 (nineteen years ago)

yes exactly. i have many rhythm and sound records and like them all. they are all at something like 130-140 bpm. OK maybe that's more techno tempo. everything they played was like half that. which is fine i guess, but not why i like them.

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 1 February 2007 14:42 (nineteen years ago)

i don't understand the tussle/basic channel connection here

cutty (mcutt), Thursday, 1 February 2007 14:47 (nineteen years ago)

i think vahid's message is "omg noobs"

friday on the porch (lfam), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:20 (nineteen years ago)

All the Melvins records I have are fast, but I saw them live and it was slow. WOT GIVES.

sexyDancer (sexyDancer), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:27 (nineteen years ago)

Surely it was billed as a 45" session?

jimn (jimnaseum), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:32 (nineteen years ago)

don't worry, I fixed it in ProTools

sexyDancer (sexyDancer), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:37 (nineteen years ago)

the rhythm and sound records i have are reggae tempo and sound like reggae and have reggae singers occasionally. also i think the two guys like roots reggae

am0n (am0n), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:45 (nineteen years ago)

Yeah obv a little.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:48 (nineteen years ago)

i have many rhythm and sound records and like them all. they are all at something like 130-140 bpm.

i think that you and i are listening to different r & s records.

also, vahid is pretty much always 'omg noobs.' which is at times refreshing and at times pure arrogance. (and in this case, after an investigation, Tussle are none too good. in fact, i'd venture to say Tussle kinda sucks.)

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 15:57 (nineteen years ago)

really really really really reaaaaaaaallly good

bc-02 - phylyps "trak"
bc-03 - lyot "reshape"
bc-07 - "octagon" / "octaedre"


really really really really good

bc-04 - quadrant "1.1"
bc-08 - "radiance"
bc-qd - quadrant "infinition"
bc-cd - CD compilation


really really good but not sure what the point was

bc-01 - cyrus "enforcement"
bc-09 - phylyps "trak ii"
tresor 100 - scion arrange and process basic channel tracks


merely really good though sometimes boring

bc-05 - cyrus "inversion"
bc-06 - quadrant "dub"

-- vahid (vfoz...) (webmail), March 26th, 2006 3:27 AM. (vahid)

am0n (am0n), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:01 (nineteen years ago)

i really like that Scion record. otherwise, he's sort of right on.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:05 (nineteen years ago)

The Scion mix CD is a better introduction to BC than the BC comp. It's become one of my all-time fave mixes.

NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:15 (nineteen years ago)

i would agree there.

it's funny that vahid doesn't mention any maurizio, tho i guess that isn't strictly 'bc', just bc-associated.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:18 (nineteen years ago)

Trak II underrated there

a (rslvd), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:19 (nineteen years ago)

DUB is number one

sexyDancer (sexyDancer), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:26 (nineteen years ago)

huh, that's funny, i thought all rhythm and sound records were fast, i.e. chain reaction i.e. basic channel, etc. oh well!

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:39 (nineteen years ago)

some of the remixes are. the originals are very much dubby reggae.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:47 (nineteen years ago)

yeah, it was seriously zzzzzzzzzzzzz. for like $20, too.

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Thursday, 1 February 2007 16:49 (nineteen years ago)

i am less interested in which ones people think i underrated (i get the sense many people would give all nine records 10/10 scores) and more interested in which ones you think i overrated.

the tussle+dj spun/BC connection is that there are more interesting things going on w/ dub vs electronic music these days than basic channel. i just wanted to get that out there, but if i were to start a thread on west coast house = I GET NO HITS, so i troll these threads.

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 1 February 2007 19:55 (nineteen years ago)

if you want me to justify my list i will post capsule reviews later

vahid (vahid), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:09 (nineteen years ago)

give us a rundown of the BPMs too, dog

sexyDancer (sexyDancer), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:14 (nineteen years ago)

justify my love

am0n (am0n), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:24 (nineteen years ago)

I'll second Tussle as quite nice, if not very Basic Channel-y, dub.

matt2 (matt2), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:25 (nineteen years ago)

the underground techno label that that separates the men from the boys

gayrainbowPLUR.gif

am0n (am0n), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:29 (nineteen years ago)

i guess i didn't find the Tussle stuff very dubby at all? maybe i'm listening to the wrong stuff.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:45 (nineteen years ago)

Go here and download "Elephant." Kinda drum-circle dub or something but it qualifies for me. I love this particular track.

http://sixeyes.blogspot.com/2006/11/sixeyes-friday-mix-whats-hot-at-hype.html

matt2 (matt2), Thursday, 1 February 2007 20:52 (nineteen years ago)

i would like a capsule review vahid! i might even attempt my own.

friday on the porch (lfam), Thursday, 1 February 2007 21:00 (nineteen years ago)

i'd like to read a lenghty critical appraisal of the basic channel series. are there any?

friday on the porch (lfam), Thursday, 1 February 2007 21:03 (nineteen years ago)

ps vahid write a book

friday on the porch (lfam), Thursday, 1 February 2007 21:17 (nineteen years ago)

pps-but can you tone the 'omg noobs' type commentary down a bit, especially where it isn't needed?

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 21:57 (nineteen years ago)

though i would like capsule reviews too.

i think you overrated phylyps trak, but i need to listen to it a few more times before i get into specifics as to why.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 21:59 (nineteen years ago)

also, 'Elephants' is pretty awesome. thx for the tip.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 22:00 (nineteen years ago)

also, 'Elephants' is prettyFUCKING awesome. thx for the tip.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 22:01 (nineteen years ago)

No problem. I agree, it's awesome. And I can't listen here at work but their myspace has a Dennis Young (of Liquid Liquid) remix of "Elephants" up. That should be quite nice. It's here: http://www.myspace.com/tusslers

Also, you can download two choice cuts they've released on Rong at their website here: http://www.tussle.org/music.html

matt2 (matt2), Thursday, 1 February 2007 22:15 (nineteen years ago)

okay, so now i understand the Tussle love. weird that the tracks i slsk'ed don't impress me in the same way.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Thursday, 1 February 2007 22:23 (nineteen years ago)

I've always considered them a bit undeservedly ignored.

matt2 (matt2), Thursday, 1 February 2007 22:25 (nineteen years ago)

someone please please please help me find the german dub-techno 12" that i once listened to at a store in san diego ... i don't remember ANYTHING about it except it was either from berlin or detroit, it was full of scary pinging sonar sounds and hard acid, it sounded a LOT like phylyps "trak" except rougher and nastier and more aggro, and it had a picture of the bow of a submarine plowing straight at you on the cover.

95% sure it was NOT drexciya or UR

vahid (vahid), Friday, 2 February 2007 06:19 (nineteen years ago)

was that at Elevator records? Mark was always trying to get me to buy that record but it was way to hard for me. I can clearly picture it in my mind...

tylero (tylero), Friday, 2 February 2007 06:48 (nineteen years ago)

not clear enough to remember the name, alas.

tylero (tylero), Friday, 2 February 2007 06:49 (nineteen years ago)

oh wait...was it one of these records: http://www.discogs.com/label/Surface

tylero (tylero), Friday, 2 February 2007 07:30 (nineteen years ago)

HAHA YES ... WE HAVE TOUCHED THE SAME VINYL (no brokeback)

MYSTERY SOLVED ... now we know why i always thought it was a chain reaction related project!!

vahid (vahid), Friday, 2 February 2007 07:55 (nineteen years ago)

so anyway, yeah that shit was astoundingly rugged but i think not an entirely illogical progression from something like "enforcement" or "trak"

vahid (vahid), Friday, 2 February 2007 08:01 (nineteen years ago)

listen to the label here and be sure to check the paul mac eps!

vahid (vahid), Friday, 2 February 2007 08:22 (nineteen years ago)

does anyone here like PUB?

the one on orange vinyl is very very good

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Friday, 2 February 2007 09:49 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.discogs.com/release/25759

Euai Kapaui (tracerhand), Friday, 2 February 2007 09:50 (nineteen years ago)

xpost: Wow, I wish I had that Paul Mac ep! It's really good!

tylero (tylero), Friday, 2 February 2007 19:20 (nineteen years ago)

it's all about e2-e4 basic reshape. a shame it's only 6 minutes long.

rio natsume (rio natsume), Saturday, 3 February 2007 03:29 (nineteen years ago)

i've yet to explore chain reaction.
-- friday on the porch (l...), January 30th, 2007. (lfam) (link)

i have wrapped my life in chain reaction. the records keep destroying me. hallucinator "morpheus" and fluxion "prospect I/II."

the table is the table (treesessplode), Sunday, 4 February 2007 21:42 (nineteen years ago)

On the speed thing, this thread inspired me to give Octagon another listen, and I cued it up as an mp3 since I don't have a turntable at the moment - and I was shocked by how fast it is at +/-0! (Octaedre is even faster, IIRC) I don't think I've EVER heard it that fast before, because I've never listened to it unmixed before, and it tends to get mixed with stuff that's more normal-ish kinds of tempos, at least in my experience. The standard tempo of a track is a great insight into what the context its creators imagine for it, and it's kind of blowing my mind they imagine it sitting next to the kind of brutal (and usually minimal, if punishing) techno that sits at that speed.

Elsa Svitborg (tracerhand), Monday, 5 February 2007 20:49 (nineteen years ago)

Moritz's mix of Tony Allen is pretty much the only thing that's keeping me alive today

a (rslvd), Tuesday, 6 February 2007 16:04 (nineteen years ago)

yeah, the speed is what makes octaedre for me. it's so fast but so skeletal... just a few elements in a huge space. i think the slight delay on the snare's reverb is what keeps the rhythm tight enough to work at the speed. it's like the track is just keeping time until that comes in.

friday on the porch (lfam), Tuesday, 6 February 2007 18:28 (nineteen years ago)

it's also noteworthy that the speed is there, but the BOOM BOOM is not. the beat is buried in this really nice way. once in a while i can hardly remember it is there.

also, i know i keep on saying this, but CHAIN FUCKING REACTION.

the table is the table (treesessplode), Tuesday, 6 February 2007 20:35 (nineteen years ago)

two months pass...
omg n00bz

i FINALLY bought "pole 3" this past weekend, after all these years ...

moonship journey to baja, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 04:26 (nineteen years ago)

Weird, I was thinking about these records today. I always used to play them at -16% at 33rpm. I have the first three of them in a record box in my parents basement back home. #4 was kinda sketchy, he wore the formula a little thin by then. They are keeping my Gas double packs company. I haven't heard any of this stuff in years.

I had the day off and decided to play though some of the old M records and BC stuff. I need to pick up more stuff like this. I think it is getting to be time to revisit shuffled 909 hi hats and chord stabs.

Display Name, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 05:29 (nineteen years ago)

pole fucking sux vahid looooo-l

am0n, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:36 (nineteen years ago)

;-)

moonship journey to baja, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 06:43 (nineteen years ago)

sorry that was very snrub of me

am0n, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 13:33 (nineteen years ago)

There's no need for us to fight, we're sister and brother.

sexyDancer, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 14:26 (nineteen years ago)

i miss porter ricks so much.

and yes, chain reaction is totally classic, especially when it shows up in a tribal set!

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 15:17 (nineteen years ago)

Pole has a new album out on Scape, saw it at the store today. It isn't very good.

Display Name, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 07:19 (nineteen years ago)

nine years pass...

classic post

really really really really reaaaaaaaallly good
bc-02 - phylyps "trak"
bc-03 - lyot "reshape"
bc-07 - "octagon" / "octaedre"

really really really really good

bc-04 - quadrant "1.1"
bc-08 - "radiance"
bc-qd - quadrant "infinition"
bc-cd - CD compilation

really really good but not sure what the point was

bc-01 - cyrus "enforcement"
bc-09 - phylyps "trak ii"
tresor 100 - scion arrange and process basic channel tracks

merely really good though sometimes boring

bc-05 - cyrus "inversion"
bc-06 - quadrant "dub"

― vahid (vahid), Sunday, March 26, 2006 2:27 AM (ten years ago)

I look forward to hearing from you shortly, (Karl Malone), Sunday, 4 September 2016 04:37 (nine years ago)

Do Various Artists fit into this somewhere? Decay Product is a fantastic record.

Sunn O))) Brother Where Art Thou? (Chinaski), Sunday, 4 September 2016 09:17 (nine years ago)

Are these the same versions as on the 12"s or edited versions? www.discogs.com/Basic-Channel-BCD-2/release/1345423

Wimmels, Sunday, 4 September 2016 14:57 (nine years ago)

bc2's tracks are unedited

who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Sunday, 4 September 2016 15:03 (nine years ago)

thanks!

Wimmels, Sunday, 4 September 2016 15:26 (nine years ago)

Various Artists is Torsten Pröfrock, some stuff under T++ and was part of Robert Henke's Monolake stuff for a few releases.

afaik this thread is mostly basic channel the artists/label but the chain reaction stuff was what they published from others

dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Sunday, 4 September 2016 19:04 (nine years ago)

btw saw moritz dj this year, it was good

dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Sunday, 4 September 2016 19:10 (nine years ago)

Destroy "radiance" for inspiring all that shitty echo cord emo dub shit

brimstead, Sunday, 4 September 2016 22:48 (nine years ago)

enforcement is maybe the best for me. a brutal hypnosis.

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Sunday, 4 September 2016 23:22 (nine years ago)

enforcement, phylyps trak ii, quadrant 1.1 and octaedre (though it is way too fast) are the ones that i still play out. phylyps trak ii still way, way out in front of all the others for me.

stirmonster, Monday, 5 September 2016 00:37 (nine years ago)

my favorites are probably

enforcement
q 1.1 b1
infinition

brimstead, Monday, 5 September 2016 00:44 (nine years ago)

All the 12"s were released digitally a while back - I got them from the Amazon MP3 store.

Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 5 September 2016 01:02 (nine years ago)

six years pass...

classic post

really really really really reaaaaaaaallly good
bc-02 - phylyps "trak"
bc-03 - lyot "reshape"
bc-07 - "octagon" / "octaedre"

really really really really good

bc-04 - quadrant "1.1"
bc-08 - "radiance"
bc-qd - quadrant "infinition"
bc-cd - CD compilation

really really good but not sure what the point was

bc-01 - cyrus "enforcement"
bc-09 - phylyps "trak ii"
tresor 100 - scion arrange and process basic channel tracks

merely really good though sometimes boring

bc-05 - cyrus "inversion"
bc-06 - quadrant "dub"

― vahid (vahid), Sunday, March 26, 2006 2:27 AM (ten years ago)

― I look forward to hearing from you shortly, (Karl Malone), Saturday, September 3, 2016 9:37 PM (six years ago)

i would like to revise these rankings

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 16:05 (three years ago)

at the time i was listening to a lot of hard techno, so probably overrated these two:

bc-02 phylyps trak
bc-03 octagon / octaedre

of the two i think octagon holds up better as a “basic channel track”. i like the weird blippy noises on octagon that skitter across the sound field like drops of water dancing around a hot skillet. octaedre is not so exciting for me, it’s like they tacked the maurizio dub house beat onto the a-side, doesn’t quite work for me

phylyps trak also sounds (to me anyway) a lot like octagon with a beat tacked but it’s that insane barreling early 90s german techno beat. there’s a mills mix on one side and that’s how i think of the whole ep, as the most “techno compatible” of the series. i have to admit i can’t really tell the three mixes apart. maybe phylyps base emphasizes the kick (phylyps bass?) and i think at one point mills adds some choppy transmat type snares and hats? i usually just pick one randomly when i play it

people complain about these being too fast, and yeah like a lot of the series they’re 140+ bpm! but i guess with the rise of new “copenhagen techno” stuff and current interest in juke tempo music maybe it’s their time now

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 16:28 (three years ago)

if it’s too fast you’re too old

brimstead, Saturday, 20 May 2023 16:51 (three years ago)

bc-03 lyot reshape

here’s an embarrassing confession, i think i was confusing this one with the maurizio lyot remix, which is part of m series not bc series. that one is obviously eternal. i like how submerged and spacey this mix is.

the phylyps mix on the other side is as indistinguishable to me as the others. at 10 mins long it might be the most functional one from a dj perspective? i feel like i discover something new each time i listen to a different mix … and then promptly forget whatever i discovered. maybe that’s a feature not a bug woth the phylyps traks

bc-05 cyrus inversion / presence

i never listen to inversion. i’m not sure what the appeal is. i guess maybe the unique synth notes over the top? those notes sound vaguely middle eastern to me (like some sort of zither) maybe that’s why it says “cyrus” on the label? but i find the thick high frequency hiss maddening

presence reminds me of lyot reshape, as spacey as this set gets. it’s like listening to a glacier, or glimpsing an iceberg in the fog, a vague impression of something distant and massive that goes on almost forever and you’re only seeing the barest outlines. one of my favorite chain reaction tracks (ridis “foto”) pulls a similar trick ... but as as i love staring into the void, i’m not always in the mood for staring into void. sometimes it’s like sinking into an amniotic bath, sometimes it’s just too distant, too cold and forbidding. idk how it manages to be both, probably just had to do with my moods?

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 16:58 (three years ago)

xp TRUE!

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 16:59 (three years ago)

classic post revision

z_tbd, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:02 (three years ago)

It’s Saturday afternoon, it’s beautiful, it’s a clear and pleasant day outside, we’re out here revising the classics

z_tbd, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:03 (three years ago)

bc-08 radiance

someone on discogs called this “the most broken” of the series and yes i agree. similar vibe imo as presence and the phylyps track reshape, but formless to the point of evoking anxiety. thirty years on most of these records just sound like techno / house to me (testament to their influence over the genre and also how well they understood what came before them) but this is the one that still matches what was written about them in the wire (biba kopf?) … you’re never sure where the music ends and the static begins. the “radiance” of the title always made me think of the aura you see before a migraine, or maybe ghosts. maybe that was in the wire article too

as before, sometimes i don’t want to get quite so deep in the zone

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:08 (three years ago)

it’s cold af here (63F) and completely cloudy, i want to die

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:09 (three years ago)

perfect bc weather imo

z_tbd, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:14 (three years ago)

25 years ago I was really into this stuff but always preferred the Chain Reaction side of things. And of that, only still listen today to the Porter Ricks Biokinetics album. When I sold the bulk of my CD collection the buyer didn’t want my BC or Chain Reaction CDs so I have it for free to Wonder Book in Frederick Maryland for some lucky person to find.

Every post of mine is an expression of eternity (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:15 (three years ago)

“I gave it for free”

Every post of mine is an expression of eternity (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:16 (three years ago)

bc-04 quadrant

i think of this one as the pop one now. partly because it’s the sampler, short tracks for diverse moods. classic dub techno (1.1.i) broken chain reaction stuff (1.1.iii) total zonk (1.1.iiii). but also because it has the funkiest track of the whole series (1.1.iii) ultimate dj weapon for any club, warehouse, party, wine bar, video stream, whatever

bc-09 phylyps trak ii

like m-04, m-05, m-06 and maybe m-07 this one is also in the pop category because if the tempo is right you can magically make it work in just about any house / techno set, you can pop in and out at any point or play the whole damn thing and it will sound good. absolutely perfect record.

and that’s just the b-side! the a-side is maybe just another mix of phylyps trak but with this relentless chord hit that pushes it to the edge of hysteria. not quite as versatile plus there’s a break you got to look out for at 8 mins that stops things dead in their tracks

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:21 (three years ago)

you’re missing out, you should revisit these

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:22 (three years ago)

bc-06 quadrant dub

okay so this one is the whole reason i revisited this thread. idk why but i never really gave this one a good listen. in my mind it sits very much in the middle of the series. it’s not as immediate as the club bangers (quadrant iii, phylyps trak ii, octagon, phylyps trak i) and it’s not meditative as the deep space drifters (presence, radiance, lyot reshape)

on the other hand there’s a few in the series that for whatever reason make no impression on me, either too monotonously tracky (enforcement), too big room trancey (hyperprism / infinition), too billowy and formless inna echocord stylee (basic reshape), too much a rehash / retread of what was done before (q “loop”)

unlike those, something kept bringing me back to quadrant dub. the warmth, maybe? so when the recently repressed most of these, i grabbed fresh copies of 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 (for some reason “radiance” was not repressed, but this is the other reason i am revisiting this) … i put on and … there’s voices? is that singing?

when i first put it on i’d had the windows down, there were kids leaving a game at the high school across the street (lacross playoffs maybe?) and i thought it was the music from their cars maybe mixing with my music? but no, there’s definitely a male diva down in the mix below the chords.

this is a revelation! how did i never notice this? has this always been here? obviously it has, but who is this singning? is it from a chez damier track? is it andy caine? was i only ever hearing the a side and ignoring the b side? or was i only ever hearing the b side (the vinyl sides i/ii seem reversed compared to how they’re presented on apple music)

anyway wow. just goes to show never know when you’re going to be surprised by something you never noticed in a track you’ve thought you’ve “known” for 25+ years

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:46 (three years ago)

really really really really reaaaaaaaallly good

bc04 q1.1
bc06 quadrant dub
bc09 phylyps trak ii

really really really really good but sometimes not in the mood

bc03 lyot rmx
bc05 inversion / presence
bc08 radiance

merely really really really good

bc02 phylyps track
bc07 octagon / octaedre

i never listen to these

bc01 enforcement
bcbr basic reshape
bccd q loop
bcqd hyperprism / infinition
cd compilations and mixes

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:56 (three years ago)

to sum up, i would say my respect for the classics has only increased and although on balance i still probably love maurizio singles and select chain reaction singles more i am ashamed for ever having criticized any aspect of basic channel releases #2-9

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 17:58 (three years ago)

M series is so timeless, I was bumping those in the car really loudly during the last winter time

brimstead, Saturday, 20 May 2023 18:09 (three years ago)

i am never not in the mood for m4, m5, m6

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 18:12 (three years ago)

Great (re)assessments of BC tracks! Quadrant dub: there really are vocals among the haze, as the 12" is versioning Round One's "I'm Your Brother" 12" on Main Street, another BC offshoot label, that has vocals by Andy Caine.

jvc, Saturday, 20 May 2023 20:57 (three years ago)

ah excellent thx. i actually have that one and always play the ron & chez “chicago twisted mix”, must be why i figured it was either a chez damier track or an andy caine track (it was both!)

the late great, Saturday, 20 May 2023 22:30 (three years ago)

It's been a long, long time since I listened to the entire BC series (or the M-series for that matter). I think that Octagon/Octaedre would still be my jam (as it was 16!?! years ago), but I guess I should hear everything again to be sure.

I always thought that Phylyps Trak was overrated. I assume they wanted at least one, no doubt, peak-time club banger to come out of this project, just to prove they could do it while being faithful (kind of) to their overall aesthetic. Phylyps Trak II is much better.

Re: Presence and not always being in the mood to stare into the void: I totally get it. These days, I feel that way about some of these tracks too.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Sunday, 21 May 2023 14:21 (three years ago)


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