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Last in:16.03.2017
Label:Zehnin
Cat-No:ZEHNIN01
Release-Date:24.03.2017
Genre:House
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4012957360102
1
Lucy - The Hermit
2
Lucy - The High Priestess
Tracklist
A1 The Hermit
B1 The High Priestess
The essential and ever-evolving !K7 collective is adding a new label to its family in the form of Zehnin.
Taking charge of the first release is Lucy, who has evolved his distinct sound signature by reconciling the deeply personal with the esoteric, and by harmonizing the spheres of technology and biology. Whether he is acting in the role of producer, DJ, performer, or Stroboscopic Artefacts' curator, Lucy's clear passion for creative evolution and mutation is something that continues to attract new listeners, and keeps giving his current supporters new reasons to continue tuning in.
EP opener 'The Hermit' is eight minutes of spacious and cerebral techno. Rolling drums are buried deep as little flecks of sound design peel off the groove. Occasional bell hits bring a sombre and languid feel despite the drive of the drums, and it is the sort of perfectly absorbing track that will suck you down a 5am rabbit hole. On the flip, 'The High Priestess' is a similarly mental work out that is empty and eerie, with distant drones and yawning pads outlining a vast underground space. The drums here are again rubbery and rolling, but a little more prominent, and the whole thing manages to be both soothing and unsettling.
After this fine EP starts the label in style, a remix EP from Blawan will follow.
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A1 The Hermit
B1 The High Priestess
The essential and ever-evolving !K7 collective is adding a new label to its family in the form of Zehnin.
Taking charge of the first release is Lucy, who has evolved his distinct sound signature by reconciling the deeply personal with the esoteric, and by harmonizing the spheres of technology and biology. Whether he is acting in the role of producer, DJ, performer, or Stroboscopic Artefacts' curator, Lucy's clear passion for creative evolution and mutation is something that continues to attract new listeners, and keeps giving his current supporters new reasons to continue tuning in.
EP opener 'The Hermit' is eight minutes of spacious and cerebral techno. Rolling drums are buried deep as little flecks of sound design peel off the groove. Occasional bell hits bring a sombre and languid feel despite the drive of the drums, and it is the sort of perfectly absorbing track that will suck you down a 5am rabbit hole. On the flip, 'The High Priestess' is a similarly mental work out that is empty and eerie, with distant drones and yawning pads outlining a vast underground space. The drums here are again rubbery and rolling, but a little more prominent, and the whole thing manages to be both soothing and unsettling.
After this fine EP starts the label in style, a remix EP from Blawan will follow.
More
More records from Lucy
Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:SALP010
Release-Date:11.02.2022
Genre:Techno
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5414165090069
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Last in:15.02.2022
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Last in:15.02.2022
Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:SALP010
Release-Date:11.02.2022
Genre:Techno
Configuration:LP
Barcode:5414165090069
1
Lucy - Wanton Witch 1 (Daddy's Girl)
2
Lucy - Wanton Witch 2 (Do I Pass)
3
Lucy - Wanton Witch 3 (Walking on Moirai)
4
Lucy - Wanton Witch 4 -5 (Lament Ceremony - Looping Projection of You)
5
Lucy - Wanton Witch 6 (Resentment)
6
Lucy - Wanton Witch 7 - 8 (Is This All We Can Do - Unsound Mind)
7
Lucy - Wanton Witch 9 (Nervous Burial)
8
Lucy - Wanton Witch 10 (The Beautiful Trauma of Being)
9
Lucy - Wanton Witch 11 (Grieve)
Serendipities surround the collaboration between Berlin's Stroboscopic Artefacts label founder Lucy and their most recent record with Malaysian Bangkok based emerging artist Wanton Witch. The release culminates in the reimagining of WW debut LP as seen and felt through the lens of Lucy. This is a follow up full-length album by Lucy not approached as a usual remixes record, but instead a fully fleshed out new body of work with the WW material being an integral part of Lucy's sonic palette. Despite the label hiatus during the first year of lockdowns, the isolation of the pandemic helped create a fertile ground for a back and forth between Wanton Witch and Lucy's own distinct sound palettes to collide. With the normal every day pressures of touring lifted and enlightened by WW's sonic world, Lucy has seen this as a positive opportunity to manifest new pathways of connectivity and process a phase of personal growth. Not simply about the breaking of gender lines, but also about the blurring of creative boundaries, especially when making music. Lucy's original patronage of Wanton Witch and her relatively fresh and new voice in the electronic music scene can be seen as a contribution to this idea of dismantling industry norms. In more than a decade of SA operations this is a reset moment for the label's mission focusing on empowering new talent, refreshing and growing with them, presenting a dynamic two-way process bewtween the label as a whole and the individual artists output. Lucy's personal revolution has coincided with Wanton Witch's own discovery of her musical voice and their paths have created a synchronicity. This osmosis of thought and feeling, even through massive distances, can be so real and tangible. Lucy's new album is a testament to the power of connective tissue in collaboration. It is this catalyst of realisation that has allowed the creative work to flourish under the toughest of pandemic conditions.
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12"
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Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:SA021
Release-Date:14.01.2022
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:12"
Barcode:5050580776036
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Last in:12.01.2015
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Last in:12.01.2015
Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:SA021
Release-Date:14.01.2022
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:12"
Barcode:5050580776036
1
Lucy - Catch Twenty Two (Shapednoise Remix)
2
Lucy - The Illusion of Choice (Donato Dozzy Remix)
3
Lucy - Laws and Habits (Milton Bradley Remix)
4
Lucy - The Self as Another (Eomac Remix)
To start the year 2014, Stroboscopic Artefacts bring you SA021 - a remixes selection of tracks from Lucy's forthcoming LP Churches Schools and Guns. In presenting four of the album cuts in altered impressions, SA021 helps the label keep on re-examining the timbres, tones and textures of techno. First up is the unsettled edit of 'Catch Twenty Two' by the young Italian producer Shapednoise. The infamous Heller novel of the same name (though in numerals rather than letters) was a satirical rampage through the futility and tragedy of conflict; this is also a rampage, littered with opaque utterances of sonic thrust, stood stoutly on an unpredictable and emotional structure of aural dissonance. Following this is the Italian maestro Donato Dozzy and his presentation of 'The Illusion of Choice'. The track bounds along like a train through the jungle, powered by a distant rumble and purring synths. Skittering and melodic percussion sounds a little like birds; the drums are made of rawhide, strong, insistent, controlled. Third in line is the remix of 'Laws and Habits' by Milton Bradley. This cut is hypnosis with little regard - not an accident, but effortless. Metallic distortion buzzes like bees across your head, zipping across the top of delicate hi-hats and an elastic groove. This is a walk through the 4am night, appreciative of the glimmering streetlamps, and fearful of nothing. Last is Eomac's rework of 'The Self As Another', bringing the record to a resonant conclusion. One half of label favourite Lakker, the Irish producer begins with a melody line cut from razor-sharp cloth. The pulsating beat is dressed in metallic shimmer, confidently pursuing a dangerous course. And yet there is a pause amid this brief insistence, a moment of perspective, perspicacity. The record considers its place, and asks for contemplation. With a selection this strong, and of such ideas and identities, this contemplation is surely a worthy vice. This may be a prelude to the full record, but it is a cut made of vehement conviction.
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Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:sa10yearsep
Release-Date:17.01.2020
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12"
Barcode:
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Last in:07.02.2020
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Last in:07.02.2020
Label:Stroboscopic Artefacts
Cat-No:sa10yearsep
Release-Date:17.01.2020
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12"
Barcode:
1
Lucy - No Title
2
Lucy - No Title
3
Lucy - No Title
4
Lucy - No Title
Lucy remixes Donato Dozzy, Caterina Barbieri, Ben Klock, and Xhin for Stroboscopic Artefacts' tenth anniversary
TRACKLIST
A1. Donato Dozzy – Sotto Ma Sotto (Lucy Remix)
A2. Caterian Barbieri – Virgo Rebellion (Lucy Remix)
B1. Lucy & Klock – War Lullaby (Lucy Remix)
B2. Xhin – Link (Lucy Remix) More
TRACKLIST
A1. Donato Dozzy – Sotto Ma Sotto (Lucy Remix)
A2. Caterian Barbieri – Virgo Rebellion (Lucy Remix)
B1. Lucy & Klock – War Lullaby (Lucy Remix)
B2. Xhin – Link (Lucy Remix) More
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:satotem001
Release-Date:22.06.2018
Genre:Techno
Configuration:10"
Barcode:
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Last in:23.08.2018
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Last in:23.08.2018
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:satotem001
Release-Date:22.06.2018
Genre:Techno
Configuration:10"
Barcode:
1
lucy - Tarkomania
2
lucy - Tarkomania Dub
3
lucy - Tarkomania Acapella
(transparent 10-inch vinyl) Stroboscopic Artefacts is releasing its latest addition to the forward leaning edge of electronic music with the Totem series. Unfurling as a chain of transparent 10" vinyl, each of the Totem releases will have a subtly divergent take on the aesthetic space defined by techno and club culture.
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12" Excl
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Label:Life and Death
Cat-No:lad029
Release-Date:28.04.2017
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4012957382906
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Last in:26.04.2017
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Last in:26.04.2017
Label:Life and Death
Cat-No:lad029
Release-Date:28.04.2017
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4012957382906
1
Lucy - Cannon Fodder (Original Mix)
2
Lucy - Cannon Fodder (Planetary Assault Systems Rework)
3
Lucy - Cannon Fodder (DJ Sotofett's Sound Clash Mix)
Tracklist
A1 Cannon Fodder (Original Mix)
A2 Cannon Fodder (Planetary Assault Systems Rework)
B1 Cannon Fodder (DJ Sotofett's Sound Clash Mix)
Life and Death welcomes Italian synth wizard Lucy, for the label's inaugural release of 2017.
Luca Mortellaro's cavernous techno offering comes equipped with a DJ Sotofett version and a rendition by Planetary Assault Systems, further cementing the diversity of the label's scope.
DJ Sotofett recalls fine nineties loop techno while Luke Slater once again confirms his pioneer status.
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A1 Cannon Fodder (Original Mix)
A2 Cannon Fodder (Planetary Assault Systems Rework)
B1 Cannon Fodder (DJ Sotofett's Sound Clash Mix)
Life and Death welcomes Italian synth wizard Lucy, for the label's inaugural release of 2017.
Luca Mortellaro's cavernous techno offering comes equipped with a DJ Sotofett version and a rendition by Planetary Assault Systems, further cementing the diversity of the label's scope.
DJ Sotofett recalls fine nineties loop techno while Luke Slater once again confirms his pioneer status.
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Label:stroboscopic artifacts
Cat-No:salp004
Release-Date:28.04.2016
Genre:Techno
Configuration:2LP
Barcode:
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Last in:16.03.2017
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Last in:16.03.2017
Label:stroboscopic artifacts
Cat-No:salp004
Release-Date:28.04.2016
Genre:Techno
Configuration:2LP
Barcode:
(2x180gr vinyl in gatefold cover with luxurious gloss print, free download). Lucy's third solo album is inspired by legends and fairytales.
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3x12" Excl
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Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:salp002
Release-Date:17.02.2014
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:3x12" Excl
Barcode:827170136328
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Last in:26.03.2014
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Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:salp002
Release-Date:17.02.2014
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:3x12" Excl
Barcode:827170136328
UPC 827170136328 Release 17.02.2014
Tracklist 3x12 LP : A1 - The Horror A2 - Leave Us Alone A3 - The Self As Another B1 - Human Triage B2 - Laws and Habits C1 - Follow The Leader C2 - Catch Twenty Two D - The Illusion Of Choice E1 - We Live As We Dream E2 - All That Noise F1 - The Best Selling Show F2 - Falling (feat. Emme)
Churches Schools and Guns. A provocative name for a provocative album of techno from one of the genre's most consistently intriguing producers, Lucy. This, his second solo album, pushes forward from his debut full-length, 2011's Wordplay for Working Bees, and firmly establishes him in a league of his own. Over the past few years Lucy's label, Stroboscopic Artefacts, has became a watchword for techno's vanguard - providing a platform for new artists pushing at the genre's boundaries and a harbor for some of the most experimental work from names you already recognize. Lucy's progress as a producer has followed that same trajectory, moving from relatively straightforward dancefloor-driven material to deeper, murkier places. Churches Schools and Guns continues on, a collection of 12 tracks that sound - more than anything else - like the act of searching.
Vital Sales Points:
- Extensive Global Promo
- The Album will be announced on Resident Advisor on Dec 4th
- Artwork from Oblivious Artefacts
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Tracklist 3x12 LP : A1 - The Horror A2 - Leave Us Alone A3 - The Self As Another B1 - Human Triage B2 - Laws and Habits C1 - Follow The Leader C2 - Catch Twenty Two D - The Illusion Of Choice E1 - We Live As We Dream E2 - All That Noise F1 - The Best Selling Show F2 - Falling (feat. Emme)
Churches Schools and Guns. A provocative name for a provocative album of techno from one of the genre's most consistently intriguing producers, Lucy. This, his second solo album, pushes forward from his debut full-length, 2011's Wordplay for Working Bees, and firmly establishes him in a league of his own. Over the past few years Lucy's label, Stroboscopic Artefacts, has became a watchword for techno's vanguard - providing a platform for new artists pushing at the genre's boundaries and a harbor for some of the most experimental work from names you already recognize. Lucy's progress as a producer has followed that same trajectory, moving from relatively straightforward dancefloor-driven material to deeper, murkier places. Churches Schools and Guns continues on, a collection of 12 tracks that sound - more than anything else - like the act of searching.
Vital Sales Points:
- Extensive Global Promo
- The Album will be announced on Resident Advisor on Dec 4th
- Artwork from Oblivious Artefacts
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Last in:31.01.2014
Label:Clr
Cat-No:clr073
Release-Date:31.10.2013
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:827170519565
UPC: 827170519565/ Release: 06.12.2013
Tracklist: A1 Lucy - 201 Phasing B1 Lucy - 201 Phasing (Dadub Remix) B2 Lucy - 201 Phasing (Chris Liebing Triple Bell Edit)
Lucy is back on CLR with another one of his mind-bending, deep and hypnotic Techno productions. Those who have already appreciated his unique approach to modern Techno in previous tracks will surely like the "201 Phasing" EP by the Berlin based, Italian DJ/producer. It contains Lucy´s slow burning original version, an excellent remix by Dadub and a skillfully crafted edit by Chris Liebing. The original version is a sonic journey that unfolds progressively over a time-span of more than 10 minutes, making the introduction of each individual element appear even more meaningful, impactful and exciting. The Stroboscopic Artefacts founder has proven over and over - and now once more, that he belongs to the fraction of inspirational artists who are gifted and sensitive enough to do a track of this kind and keep it interesting and absorbing all the way. The present EP is another big step in his personal evolution and a clear proof of his significance in today´s world of electronic music. Dadub consists of Daniele Antezza and Giovanni Conti and is a duo whose output is underpinned by a mutual curiosity and a love for Lee Scratch Perry´s mixboard experiments. The Stroboscopic Artefacts core artists and mastering wizards have gained much praise for their persistent longing for innovation and the unique textures of their productions. Their pleasantly driving remix of Lucy´s "201 Phasing" impressively keeps their promise of building their tracks completely from scratch, without any random or pre-programmed sounds. Chris Liebing´s "Triple Bell Edit" is everything you might expect from one of today´s most restless and acclaimed Techno producers. Powerful, dynamic and reduced to the absolutely essential, the faithful ambassador of uncompromising Techno has taken Lucy´s latest work and has edited and re-worked it into a seriously impactful piece of cutting edge peak time Techno. His intense excursions into the depth of sound, while recently mixing down several CLR artist´s albums and EPs has paid off and can be noticed, heard and eventually felt in the bass-heavy and crispy sound of this edit. The "201 Phasing" EP is a release we can recommend to everyone who is into up to date, open-minded Techno. All of the three mixes represent a certain stylistic niche in the ever-expanding field of electronic music without limiting themselves to any predetermined pattern. CLR adds another faultless release to the label catalogue and we hope you will enjoy it as much as we do!
More
Tracklist: A1 Lucy - 201 Phasing B1 Lucy - 201 Phasing (Dadub Remix) B2 Lucy - 201 Phasing (Chris Liebing Triple Bell Edit)
Lucy is back on CLR with another one of his mind-bending, deep and hypnotic Techno productions. Those who have already appreciated his unique approach to modern Techno in previous tracks will surely like the "201 Phasing" EP by the Berlin based, Italian DJ/producer. It contains Lucy´s slow burning original version, an excellent remix by Dadub and a skillfully crafted edit by Chris Liebing. The original version is a sonic journey that unfolds progressively over a time-span of more than 10 minutes, making the introduction of each individual element appear even more meaningful, impactful and exciting. The Stroboscopic Artefacts founder has proven over and over - and now once more, that he belongs to the fraction of inspirational artists who are gifted and sensitive enough to do a track of this kind and keep it interesting and absorbing all the way. The present EP is another big step in his personal evolution and a clear proof of his significance in today´s world of electronic music. Dadub consists of Daniele Antezza and Giovanni Conti and is a duo whose output is underpinned by a mutual curiosity and a love for Lee Scratch Perry´s mixboard experiments. The Stroboscopic Artefacts core artists and mastering wizards have gained much praise for their persistent longing for innovation and the unique textures of their productions. Their pleasantly driving remix of Lucy´s "201 Phasing" impressively keeps their promise of building their tracks completely from scratch, without any random or pre-programmed sounds. Chris Liebing´s "Triple Bell Edit" is everything you might expect from one of today´s most restless and acclaimed Techno producers. Powerful, dynamic and reduced to the absolutely essential, the faithful ambassador of uncompromising Techno has taken Lucy´s latest work and has edited and re-worked it into a seriously impactful piece of cutting edge peak time Techno. His intense excursions into the depth of sound, while recently mixing down several CLR artist´s albums and EPs has paid off and can be noticed, heard and eventually felt in the bass-heavy and crispy sound of this edit. The "201 Phasing" EP is a release we can recommend to everyone who is into up to date, open-minded Techno. All of the three mixes represent a certain stylistic niche in the ever-expanding field of electronic music without limiting themselves to any predetermined pattern. CLR adds another faultless release to the label catalogue and we hope you will enjoy it as much as we do!
More
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sacd005
Release-Date:17.02.2013
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:CD Excl
Barcode:827170136229
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Last in:27.02.2014
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Last in:27.02.2014
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sacd005
Release-Date:17.02.2013
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:CD Excl
Barcode:827170136229
UPC: 827170136229 Release: 17.02.2014
Tracklist: 1 - The Horror 2 - Leave Us Alone 3 - The Self As Another 4 - Human Triage 5 - Laws and Habits 6 - Follow The Leader 7 - Catch Twenty Two 8 - The Illusion Of Choice 9 - We Live As We Dream 10 - All That Noise 11 - The Best Selling Show 12 - Falling (feat. Emme)
Churches Schools and Guns. A provocative name for a provocative album of techno from one of the genre's most consistently intriguing producers, Lucy. This, his second solo album, pushes forward from his debut full-length, 2011's Wordplay for Working Bees, and firmly establishes him in a league of his own. Over the past few years Lucy's label, Stroboscopic Artefacts, has became a watchword for techno's vanguard - providing a platform for new artists pushing at the genre's boundaries and a harbor for some of the most experimental work from names you already recognize. Lucy's progress as a producer has followed that same trajectory, moving from relatively straightforward dancefloor-driven material to deeper, murkier places. Churches Schools and Guns continues on, a collection of 12 tracks that sound - more than anything else - like the act of searching.
More
Tracklist: 1 - The Horror 2 - Leave Us Alone 3 - The Self As Another 4 - Human Triage 5 - Laws and Habits 6 - Follow The Leader 7 - Catch Twenty Two 8 - The Illusion Of Choice 9 - We Live As We Dream 10 - All That Noise 11 - The Best Selling Show 12 - Falling (feat. Emme)
Churches Schools and Guns. A provocative name for a provocative album of techno from one of the genre's most consistently intriguing producers, Lucy. This, his second solo album, pushes forward from his debut full-length, 2011's Wordplay for Working Bees, and firmly establishes him in a league of his own. Over the past few years Lucy's label, Stroboscopic Artefacts, has became a watchword for techno's vanguard - providing a platform for new artists pushing at the genre's boundaries and a harbor for some of the most experimental work from names you already recognize. Lucy's progress as a producer has followed that same trajectory, moving from relatively straightforward dancefloor-driven material to deeper, murkier places. Churches Schools and Guns continues on, a collection of 12 tracks that sound - more than anything else - like the act of searching.
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Last in:22.05.2013
Label:curle
Cat-No:curle041
Release-Date:16.11.2012
Genre:Techno
Configuration:12"
Barcode:
Lucy made his debut on Curle in 2007 together with Rone. Last year he did some great remix work for our Darko Esser release, but we're really happy to finally have the Stroboscopic Artefacts boss back now with a new killer! Supported by everyone!
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Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sacd001
Release-Date:13.09.2012
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:CD Excl
Barcode:0609728429782
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Last in:05.04.2013
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Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sacd001
Release-Date:13.09.2012
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:CD Excl
Barcode:0609728429782
With Lucy creates a blueprint, not just the departure point for the full length format according to Stroboscopic Artefacts, but he also lays down new possibilities for the techno album. Refusing the obvious 4/4 route, Lucy traverses the widest possibilities of electronic music. ‘Wordplay for
Working Bees’ encompasses IDM that leans towards drone, puckering, dub-filled techno and ambient in its most oblique forms. The beloved character of Lucy’s DJ sets, the way he layers tracks to find unique timbre and tone, is reflected in his studio approach. Lucy’s debut album results in the most delicate and delicious
juxtapositions, as the unexplained and unexpected tangle together in the ear. The search for hybrid structures begins with ‘Thear’. Through Stockhausen’s words Lucy hints at a manifesto: Whenever we hear sounds we are changed, no longer the same. The record is textured with riddling vocals –be it the slither of a UN summit speech to heard on ‘Eon’ or the wisps of Le Corbusier on ‘Gas’— and none are used with idle intent. Just as on ‘Eis’, where the samples appear to be engaged in discussion but the thread of their argument is lost in the granular synthesis, the tracks are abstracted enough to provoke your own interpretations and critical judgements. The vocals’ inclusion gives rise to questions, and the ambiguity of ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ creates an architecture that facilitates debate.
It’s not just escapist or hedonistic dance music, but a concerted, dissonant effort to challenge the listener’s preconceptions. David Toop’s Sinister Resonances can certainly be heard. This mood of provocation with no certain resolutions is a fitting description of ‘Es’. It’s a track with a long half life; it resonates, poised and pertinent. ‘Es’, the German for ‘it’, is an apt title for the indescribable mood where the ecstatic meets the melancholic. It’s hard to know what this ‘it’ is, but ‘Es’ transposes it perfectly. Amid these ambient, dubby tracks it’s rare and also somehow exotic when the 4/4 techno of ‘Bein’ does emerge. Equally ‘Torul’, which sounds as if it samples the swinging of a meat hook, has the potential to be devastating on a big sound system. To close the record ‘Ter’, with its pattering percussive-line full of hypnotic persistence, is a stunning ending. It seems to be the sound of melting ballerinas. As a body of work it’s cohesive and impressive, a result of Lucy’s process. With the release of the very first vinyl on Stroboscopic Artefacts he began laying down the inital sounds for the album. Over the label’s first year he worked across all eleven tracks. In a way the record charts the development of his sound and the strengthening identity of his record label. It’s certainly not a portrait of the artist, it’s a landscape. Composed as it is of field recordings from parks, streets and Lucy’s apartment, it’s difficult not to see this as --at least in
part-- a depiction of Berlin. ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ is certainly influenced by the sounds coming from Berlin’s clubs, galleries and forgotten pockets. Lucy holds a mirror up to the Hauptstadt, only to distort and redefine its reflection. The abstraction and processing of the album’s subject matter has a painterly quality
and it’s evident that in creating ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ Lucy slaved with technology to master it so brilliantly.
Tracklisting:
1- thear
2- tof
3- bein
4- gas
5- lav
6- eis
7- torul
8- eon
9- es
10- mas
11- ter
More
Working Bees’ encompasses IDM that leans towards drone, puckering, dub-filled techno and ambient in its most oblique forms. The beloved character of Lucy’s DJ sets, the way he layers tracks to find unique timbre and tone, is reflected in his studio approach. Lucy’s debut album results in the most delicate and delicious
juxtapositions, as the unexplained and unexpected tangle together in the ear. The search for hybrid structures begins with ‘Thear’. Through Stockhausen’s words Lucy hints at a manifesto: Whenever we hear sounds we are changed, no longer the same. The record is textured with riddling vocals –be it the slither of a UN summit speech to heard on ‘Eon’ or the wisps of Le Corbusier on ‘Gas’— and none are used with idle intent. Just as on ‘Eis’, where the samples appear to be engaged in discussion but the thread of their argument is lost in the granular synthesis, the tracks are abstracted enough to provoke your own interpretations and critical judgements. The vocals’ inclusion gives rise to questions, and the ambiguity of ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ creates an architecture that facilitates debate.
It’s not just escapist or hedonistic dance music, but a concerted, dissonant effort to challenge the listener’s preconceptions. David Toop’s Sinister Resonances can certainly be heard. This mood of provocation with no certain resolutions is a fitting description of ‘Es’. It’s a track with a long half life; it resonates, poised and pertinent. ‘Es’, the German for ‘it’, is an apt title for the indescribable mood where the ecstatic meets the melancholic. It’s hard to know what this ‘it’ is, but ‘Es’ transposes it perfectly. Amid these ambient, dubby tracks it’s rare and also somehow exotic when the 4/4 techno of ‘Bein’ does emerge. Equally ‘Torul’, which sounds as if it samples the swinging of a meat hook, has the potential to be devastating on a big sound system. To close the record ‘Ter’, with its pattering percussive-line full of hypnotic persistence, is a stunning ending. It seems to be the sound of melting ballerinas. As a body of work it’s cohesive and impressive, a result of Lucy’s process. With the release of the very first vinyl on Stroboscopic Artefacts he began laying down the inital sounds for the album. Over the label’s first year he worked across all eleven tracks. In a way the record charts the development of his sound and the strengthening identity of his record label. It’s certainly not a portrait of the artist, it’s a landscape. Composed as it is of field recordings from parks, streets and Lucy’s apartment, it’s difficult not to see this as --at least in
part-- a depiction of Berlin. ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ is certainly influenced by the sounds coming from Berlin’s clubs, galleries and forgotten pockets. Lucy holds a mirror up to the Hauptstadt, only to distort and redefine its reflection. The abstraction and processing of the album’s subject matter has a painterly quality
and it’s evident that in creating ‘Wordplay for Working Bees’ Lucy slaved with technology to master it so brilliantly.
Tracklisting:
1- thear
2- tof
3- bein
4- gas
5- lav
6- eis
7- torul
8- eon
9- es
10- mas
11- ter
More
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sa013
Release-Date:13.04.2012
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4025858064444
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Last in:04.03.2014
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Last in:04.03.2014
Label:stroboscopic artefacts
Cat-No:sa013
Release-Date:13.04.2012
Genre:techno / minimal
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4025858064444
1
Lucy, - Stanford Prison
2
Lucy, - Milgram Experiment
3
Lucy, - Asch Paradigm
4
Lucy, - Superior Orders feat. Roll The Dice
Lucy’s ‘Banality of Evil’ EP teases apart the dark sides of human psychology and lays them down as fractured, angular tracks. Inspired by Hannah Arendt’s writings on conformity and totalitarianism SA013 makes for provocative listening. ‘Superior Orders’ is an off kilter introduction: Lucy took synth lines that Roll The Dice crafted in Stockholm and broke them down, buckling the lines and revealing their malevolence. ‘Stanford Prison’ layers wistful top lines over driving base creating a fluid, transitory atmosphere. ‘Milgram Experiment’ opens with a beautifully simple sequence and splinters into deep, warm dub. The track includes voices, but these are not catchy euphoric vocals, instead a voice repeats: ‘I began to feel that I was losing my identity’. The tracks don’t aim to soundtrack the experiments and theories of their titles, instead they act as a point in case.
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Last in:12.06.2017
Label:Zehnin
Cat-No:ZEHNIN03lp
Release-Date:16.06.2017
Genre:House
Configuration:LP Excl
Barcode:4012957360317
1 Track LP Album
Tracklist A - Part 1 28:54 / B - Part 2 27:18
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
Built on a chassis of pure analog electronics, unaided by computers, "Petites Madeleines" presents a single sprawling track whose immersive, meditative quality initiates participants into a realm of reversed energy currents. Using a sonic technique which, for example, drapes the listener in darkness until it becomes light (and vice versa), this piece provides a pervasive feeling of other realities opening up that complement the already familiar. The looped pulses and frequency sweeps hover and expand with all the assuredness of, say, early-'70s Cluster, but without anything consciously "retro" or overtly referential in their presentation.
Though the project is as opposed to the current trend of distortion overload as it is opposed to cults of personality, "Petites Madeleines" occasionally bristles with an abrasiveness that separates it from more patronizing experiments in raising / altering consciousness. As feedback drones and anxious percolations snake their way around the base structure of pulses and subterranean thumps, there is a feeling of challenge or self-confrontation that should be a component of any truly serious spiritual quest. As listeners successfully confront and assimilate these somewhat harsher moments, the cosmic tapestry being woven by Roots in Heaven becomes all the more vibrant and charged with deeply personalized meaning (which again makes the purpose of the mask clear: focusing attention away from the creator in order to fully develop the listeners' spiritual faculties). By the time this hour-long excursion ends, all the constituent sound elements seem to hum and vibrate in unison, allowing listeners to find a whole world within this recording just as Proust found a world within his tea and madeleines.
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Tracklist A - Part 1 28:54 / B - Part 2 27:18
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
Built on a chassis of pure analog electronics, unaided by computers, "Petites Madeleines" presents a single sprawling track whose immersive, meditative quality initiates participants into a realm of reversed energy currents. Using a sonic technique which, for example, drapes the listener in darkness until it becomes light (and vice versa), this piece provides a pervasive feeling of other realities opening up that complement the already familiar. The looped pulses and frequency sweeps hover and expand with all the assuredness of, say, early-'70s Cluster, but without anything consciously "retro" or overtly referential in their presentation.
Though the project is as opposed to the current trend of distortion overload as it is opposed to cults of personality, "Petites Madeleines" occasionally bristles with an abrasiveness that separates it from more patronizing experiments in raising / altering consciousness. As feedback drones and anxious percolations snake their way around the base structure of pulses and subterranean thumps, there is a feeling of challenge or self-confrontation that should be a component of any truly serious spiritual quest. As listeners successfully confront and assimilate these somewhat harsher moments, the cosmic tapestry being woven by Roots in Heaven becomes all the more vibrant and charged with deeply personalized meaning (which again makes the purpose of the mask clear: focusing attention away from the creator in order to fully develop the listeners' spiritual faculties). By the time this hour-long excursion ends, all the constituent sound elements seem to hum and vibrate in unison, allowing listeners to find a whole world within this recording just as Proust found a world within his tea and madeleines.
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Last in:18.09.2017
Label:Zehnin
Cat-No:ZEHNIN03cd
Release-Date:16.06.2017
Genre:House
Configuration:CD Excl
Barcode:4012957360324
LP Album!
Tracklist 1. Petites Madeleines, 55:58 min
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
Built on a chassis of pure analog electronics, unaided by computers, "Petites Madeleines" presents a single sprawling track whose immersive, meditative quality initiates participants into a realm of reversed energy currents. Using a sonic technique which, for example, drapes the listener in darkness until it becomes light (and vice versa), this piece provides a pervasive feeling of other realities opening up that complement the already familiar. The looped pulses and frequency sweeps hover and expand with all the assuredness of, say, early-'70s Cluster, but without anything consciously "retro" or overtly referential in their presentation.
Though the project is as opposed to the current trend of distortion overload as it is opposed to cults of personality, "Petites Madeleines" occasionally bristles with an abrasiveness that separates it from more patronizing experiments in raising / altering consciousness. As feedback drones and anxious percolations snake their way around the base structure of pulses and subterranean thumps, there is a feeling of challenge or self-confrontation that should be a component of any truly serious spiritual quest. As listeners successfully confront and assimilate these somewhat harsher moments, the cosmic tapestry being woven by Roots in Heaven becomes all the more vibrant and charged with deeply personalized meaning (which again makes the purpose of the mask clear: focusing attention away from the creator in order to fully develop the listeners' spiritual faculties). By the time this hour-long excursion ends, all the constituent sound elements seem to hum and vibrate in unison, allowing listeners to find a whole world within this recording just as Proust found a world within his tea and madeleines.
More
Tracklist 1. Petites Madeleines, 55:58 min
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
Built on a chassis of pure analog electronics, unaided by computers, "Petites Madeleines" presents a single sprawling track whose immersive, meditative quality initiates participants into a realm of reversed energy currents. Using a sonic technique which, for example, drapes the listener in darkness until it becomes light (and vice versa), this piece provides a pervasive feeling of other realities opening up that complement the already familiar. The looped pulses and frequency sweeps hover and expand with all the assuredness of, say, early-'70s Cluster, but without anything consciously "retro" or overtly referential in their presentation.
Though the project is as opposed to the current trend of distortion overload as it is opposed to cults of personality, "Petites Madeleines" occasionally bristles with an abrasiveness that separates it from more patronizing experiments in raising / altering consciousness. As feedback drones and anxious percolations snake their way around the base structure of pulses and subterranean thumps, there is a feeling of challenge or self-confrontation that should be a component of any truly serious spiritual quest. As listeners successfully confront and assimilate these somewhat harsher moments, the cosmic tapestry being woven by Roots in Heaven becomes all the more vibrant and charged with deeply personalized meaning (which again makes the purpose of the mask clear: focusing attention away from the creator in order to fully develop the listeners' spiritual faculties). By the time this hour-long excursion ends, all the constituent sound elements seem to hum and vibrate in unison, allowing listeners to find a whole world within this recording just as Proust found a world within his tea and madeleines.
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12" Excl
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Last in:07.06.2017
Label:Zehnin
Cat-No:ZEHNIN02
Release-Date:02.06.2017
Genre:House
Configuration:12" Excl
Barcode:4012957360201
Tracklist
A1 Sang des Betes
B1 Affaire des Rats
info:
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
As a prelude to the first full-length, Roots In Heaven has issued an untitled EP as a resounding 'shot across the bow'. However, this record is no half-conceived experiment to see what works and what doesn't, nor does it even feel like an "EP" (in the traditional meaning of being a précis whose full report is available elsewhere). Attentive listening to its contents can cause a kind of time dilation, and a mysterious feeling of entering a world where familiar dualities (nature vs. technology, action vs. contemplation) are replaced by a feeling of total immanence. The A-side, "Sang des Betes", accomplishes this with cascading, viscous layers of electronic tones that narrow and widen, rise and fall like the breath of some ancient entity. Periodically, bright flashes of tone arc across the horizon of the sound space, emphatically present but also elusive.
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A1 Sang des Betes
B1 Affaire des Rats
info:
Roots In Heaven is a Berlin-based act that could very easily capitalize on his past accomplishments within the world of intrepid electronic music. As a label owner, resident DJ at cutting-edge clubs, and accomplished solo artist behind a number of conceptually unique full-length albums, the conceiver of this project won't likely need any introduction to the intrepid fans of electronic music. As an extension of this artist's already solid commitment to deep sound, Roots in Heaven represents a new voyage without the help of biographical cues to his listeners: hidden behind an evocative mesh mask lined with obsidian feathers, Roots in Heaven ignores the need to provide "social proof" or self-justification. He communicates purely through the language of concentrated sensory impression, for which reason he has titled his debut, "Petites Madeleines," after one of the most memorable descriptive sequences in literary history (the famous meditation on the madeleine from Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu).
As a prelude to the first full-length, Roots In Heaven has issued an untitled EP as a resounding 'shot across the bow'. However, this record is no half-conceived experiment to see what works and what doesn't, nor does it even feel like an "EP" (in the traditional meaning of being a précis whose full report is available elsewhere). Attentive listening to its contents can cause a kind of time dilation, and a mysterious feeling of entering a world where familiar dualities (nature vs. technology, action vs. contemplation) are replaced by a feeling of total immanence. The A-side, "Sang des Betes", accomplishes this with cascading, viscous layers of electronic tones that narrow and widen, rise and fall like the breath of some ancient entity. Periodically, bright flashes of tone arc across the horizon of the sound space, emphatically present but also elusive.
More