Well, it couldn't be Ministry, RevCo or Front 242, so who else??? (jk)
I will always love early MLWTTKK, but for me, it was Front 242 who turned
me on to Wax Trax, although I was made aware of F242 releases because of
Coil WT release.
WT just released so much great stuff in the late 80s - 90s.
On Thu, Oct 10, 2019 at 4:36 PM Clint Anderson <clinta@gmail.com> wrote:
quoted 50 lines what about MLWTTKK?
> what about MLWTTKK?
> who claim to be responsible for all the success of wax trax in the early
> days (or are just trolling everyone)
>
> Clint Anderson
> Systems Engineer
> "Freedom -- paint me a picture!" -- Burton Cummings
>
>
>
> On Thu, Oct 10, 2019 at 4:28 PM Chris Bellevie <c.bellevie@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> I will second recommending Industrial Accident, and if this is your
>> thing, definitely get the edition with the bonus interview disc, as I
>> enjoyed that as much as the actual documentary.
>>
>> On Thu, Oct 10, 2019 at 2:21 PM Brian Behlendorf <brian@behlendorf.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, 10 Oct 2019, Clint Anderson wrote:
>>> > https://kmfdm.bandcamp.com/album/paradise
>>> > not really idm per se
>>>
>>> No, but there's so much shared history it's worth bringing up.
>>>
>>> I recently watched the documentary "Industrial Accident" on the
>>> rise/fall
>>> of Wax Trax:
>>>
>>> https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6181974/
>>>
>>> I highly recommend it for this crowd, especially those wondering how EBM
>>> crossed over to the US midwest and influenced not just the obvious folks
>>> like NiN but grunge, etc. Lots of footage of KMFDM, Front 242 and
>>> Ministry, not as much as I would have liked of Meat Beat, Coil, PTV or
>>> other parts of the story that led to IDM, but still worth a watch.
>>>
>>> Brian
>>>
>>> >
>>> > Clint Anderson
>>> > Systems Engineer
>>> > "Freedom -- paint me a picture!" -- Burton Cummings
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>>
>>