Hi Steven, we have a Neil Landstrumm podcast up here - do you mean that one? https://soundcloud.com/killekill/killekill-podcast-2-neil-landstrumm?in=killekill/sets/killekill-podcasts
way more good podcasts, getting updated every month ; ) https://soundcloud.com/killekill/sets/killekill-podcasts Best Silvio Am 26.04.2013 um 14:44 schrieb Steven Robertson <[email protected]>: > Just read the Neil Landstrumm interview on Cognition Audioworks. Thanks > Andrew for alerting me to the additional features/interviews archive page - > http://cognitionaudioworks.com/read.html > > I read & listened to the Drexciya interview a few weeks ago. I'd never seen > anything like it, and very interesting insight into some thoughts, > particularly with regard to it being a big world, big enough for all music - > and not to worry when people don't like your music as there'll be someone out > there that does. I've experienced this with things I make because someone can > really dislike one track that another person can give a big thumbs up for. > Interestingly, a few people here in Aberdeen have said they really like my > Polar Expedition track, which is dark and I wonder if that's an Aberdeen > techno kind of thing. > > I collected a whole lot of Drexciya releases around 1998 as I was blown away > with the strength of the sound. It was proper electro. I hadn't heard enough > of it. He says something about people doing more of the trance-like electro, > and he sets himself apart from that. There's a strong Detroit techno > influence to it. I look at stuff by Anthony Rother and tend to agree with > that point, but I love the Hacker album. The ringtone on my phone is the > beginning of Datenbits. That's all heavily influenced by Kraftwerk, and > Drexciya is much more unique. > > Drexciya: http://cognitionaudioworks.com/drexciya.html > > That interview with Neil Landstrumm is very interesting. Reading it I > couldn't help but feel Burial could have been beaten to that whole cut & > paste and degrading images concept that's also popular in techno these days. > A truly artistic musician, thinker and pathfinder. I was interested to here a > more recent interview with him on a podcast by Sunil Sharpe recently. At > least I think it was that podcast but I couldn't find it when I looked for it > again - as if it had been deleted. Maybe I got that mixed up. > > Neil Landstrum: http://cognitionaudioworks.com/nl.htm
