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From:
Kent williams
To:
intelligent dance music
Date:
Mon, 10 Jul 2000 11:13:28 -0500 (CDT)
Subject:
[idm] all time top ten idm for me...
Msg-Id:
<Pine.HPP.3.96.1000710102617.24548A-100000@arthur.avalon.net>
Mbox:
idm.0007.gz
In no particular order... 1. "Quoth EP" Polygon Window along with Spastik, and Dusk by Aquarius Project, one of the seminal all-percussion tracks. 2. "On Remixes" Aphex Twin Lovely stuff, including Muziq mix that was among his first appearances on record... 3. "Tango n Vectif" Muziq No one realizes any more how completely fresh this sounded when it first came out. Still one of the best ways to spend an hour with the headphones. 4. "Bluff Limbo" Muziq Victim of one of the most screwy marketing schemes ever (drop 100 test presses and then wait 3 years to release) extends and deepens what he started on Tango n Vectif. 5. "A Collection of Short Stories" Reload This may well be one of the most elaborately produced records of it's time. It included a booklet containing stories to accompany the music, that may best be ignored. But the music is occasionally sublime, especially "le soleil et la mere" 6. "76:14" Global Communications An extension of the Reload record, with the spooky ambient bits less in evidence. 7. "Spanners" Black Dog. A load of really off kilter and endearing tracks, and the magnificant "Chesh" which is ineffably wonderful. 8. "Music for Adverts" -- Black Dog. Really underappreciated, due in large part to the "short attention span theatre" strategy Ken Downie uses. But probably the best CD ever to put on infinite shuffle... 9. "Envane" Autechre 4 tracks and none of them prone to the excesses that occasionally show up on their full lengths. 10. "Music has the Right to Children" Boards of Canada. Perhaps the most sublime expression of the British love of hip hop. Melodic, funky, introspective with really effective use of vocal samples. I don't have that many different artists on the list, and they're pretty obvious names. But each of the records are the kind that bear repeated listening, are musically challenging, and remain fresh years after the fact. They're also each unique artists -- there aren't really cases where you could mistake one for the other. I also am consciously trying to be true to what have been the most enduring subjects of the IDM mailing list. For better or worse this is the music upon which the mailing list was founded, and I think that even as people dismiss the idea that there is a genre, and the IDM list fills up with contentious weasels, there really was a 'there' there when we started out. kent williams -- kent@avalon.net --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org