On Fri, 3 Feb 1995 gsi2174@gsaix2.cc.GaSoU.EDU wrote:
quoted 16 lines On Thu, 2 Feb 1995, Greg Earle wrote:>
>
> On Thu, 2 Feb 1995, Greg Earle wrote:
> >
> > Anyway, you're thinking of "Evanescence" - the one with "redefining Ambient
> > Dub" on the sticker. Funnily enough, I just heard most of it last weekend.
> > My wife went and promised an old friend (and Industrialist-Without-A-Clue as
> > of yet, alas) that she'd play at his birthday party, so I had to miss the
>
> industrial music is still alive and strong, and quite honestly i would
> rather not see a bunch of industrial artists doing techno. to insult
> them as being without clues only shows your ignorance which is oh so
> typical of the rave/techno scene.
>
> those industrial artists pioneered techno and ambience, so do us a favor
> and shut up and get some knowledge.
Industrial artists pionered techno and ambient? How bout that..
Maybe you should inform the rest of the world of your discovery.
It's prbably even more likely that industrial happened ALONGSIDE techno
and ambient (with barely either ackowledging each other scarce for a few
early crossovers).
As far as industrial's 'ambience' is concerned, it's atmosphere was primarily
miserable and noise oriented. I mean, you've seen one self-indulgent white
guy dressed like a suburban vampire and..well..you've pretty much seen
them all.
And as far as dance-industrial is concerned, well that pretty much ended
'round the time Spin Magazine and MTV bought it out (when NIN became
a top-40 rock band, they're real industrial-didn't you know?) ;)
-implode@ids.net