
Product Placement

izzy's playlists!
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blake kathryn

Discoholic šŖ©
occasionally subtle
No title available

Janaina Medeiros
trying on a metaphor
Not today Justin
sheepfilms
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
RMH
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

#extradirty
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Cosmic Funnies
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
taylor price
Show & Tell

seen from Australia

seen from France
seen from Malaysia

seen from T1

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Kuwait

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Iraq

seen from Belarus

seen from United States

seen from Kuwait

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Venezuela
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@mubabs
(olssu)
Coming from a DJ background as well, do you feel thereās something to the live set which is more suited to your personality and music?
Iāve DJād for a long time using a computer, and I gradually started getting into more hardware stuff, but I initially intended that for the studio. Then what happens is, if anything is really fun I want to bring it to a gig and use it. As soon as I got the first (eurorack synthesiser) modules I took it to a gig after a month of having it. I ran that alongside the computer and gradually it went further away from DJing, like a Ā hybrid type thing, into live. There was a point I realised the computer was a safety net for me, and that the safety net was the thing getting in the way of the purity of the improvisation.
Itās a thing about risk. I really believe that when a performer takes risks Ā they feel that and they connect with that and they participate with this risk that everyone is taking, thatās what makes it exciting. If everything is all set out and you are doing this perfect live set or DJ-set, itās super boring and there is no risk involved.; That realisation was so important. When I play live it is so imperfect, but it gives a sense of things happening right there, rather than me doing these perfect sequences.
[...]
Do you ever work within a strict conceptual framework when you are working on an album?
I think albums work much better within concepts. On the whole when you talk about the similarities between Communications and Luminosity Device, they work on many different layers on the same time, but maybe Iām exploring some of those layers more than others.
There are a lot of elements thatās within in the framework in Techno, but thatās what keeps it interesting. Itās possibly the most flexible style of music there is, because you can bend and stretch it so much, and you can add other things, Ā and itās still Techno. If you compare it to DrumānāBass, if you alter it too much itās not DrumānāBass anymore. Techno, when you stretch it out, it can incorporate Electro and even Dubstep, but itās still really Techno.
People often ascribe signifiers like dark, sombre or melancholy to the kind of music you make, which is probably the same kind of thing theyād apply to a band like Coil. Listening to a track like āSyllableā, Iāve always been more inclined to think of it as quite upbeat and energetic.
I know no-matter what I do people are always going to say, āo yeah he makes hard, dark musicā. It doesnāt matter what I do, I can release a pop country western album and people will still say he makes hard, dark music. I look at it more as intensity than darkness. Itās fun you can fuck around with people if they have a rigid idea.
The overall idea, when we are talking about concepts, the reason I do a lot of things the way I do, is to hope to show and influence people, and this is the really important thing; that if you think you have to do something a certain way, thatās not true.
Itās about playing and bending rules about everything. It could be about music, it could be about the way you dress, or how you present yourself, just everything. Re-consider everything, thatās the idea, the overall message.
lsd
u obliterate me happy birthday my baby girl šš (at Beautiful BABY)