There are some infos on discogs :
http://www.discogs.com/artist/D-I-E-

And some excerpts on nuloop :
http://www.nuloop.com/Result2_e.php?artistget=&label=&Styl=%&Titre=The+Men+You'll+Never+See
http://www.nuloop.com/Result2_e.php?artistget=D.I.E
http://www.nuloop.com/Result2_e.php?artistget=&label=map



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "kj at technotourist dot org" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ken Odeluga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "313 Mailinglist List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, April 30, 2004 2:47 PM
Subject: Re: (313) Detroit In Effect/Whatever Happened To The Future?


>
> On 30-apr-04, at 14:29, Ken Odeluga wrote:
>
> > This is long so beware:
> >
> >> In a way, their sound is what "techno" would have turned out
> >> to sound like if Techno Kut had had the impact that Metroplex,
> >> Transmat etc ended up having. I'm quite interested in that
> >> parallel 'path' of post-electro stuff and the way that it started
> >> out calling itself "techno" before being superceded by what we
> >> *now* know as "techno"...
> >
> > There's a line in the track 'Men You'll Never See': 'Making techno
> > tracks
> > ...' Which I was bemused by. Incidentally, are these tracks new? Once
> > again
> > we meet that oft-talked about (currently) retro-future/future-retro
> > thing.
> > Are these old tracks released late or new tracks made in such a way
> > that
> > they sound old?
>
> D.I.E.'s the men you will never see is a re-release. I think i bought
> my copy on clone somewhere in the late nineties. Before that they had a
> couple of release on there own label (i can't remember the name of it).
> Also i don't think you can't call D.I.E. retro, they have been living
> isolated from the techno scene :)
>
> KJ


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