Hey Kent, I don't think there was any intention to present that LP as 'dug up from the vaults' as it were, anyway, was there?
It was just the 'first' EP which Rephlex released which was genuinely vintage stuff (a re-release in fact). I believe that that was the only thing the group ever actually finished. However Bernard Fevre continued to work quietly never releasing anything for decades (like a lot of people we all know!) until Richard D. James and co 'discovered' the original EP and did a deal to have it re-released. Ken -----Original Message----- From: kent williams [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 07 June 2007 08:54 To: list 313 Subject: (313) black devil disco club provenance Having just had a several hour Ableton Live warping party -- including several old Salsoul classics, which I'm sure are hell to beatmatch on vinyl -- I've come to a conclusion about the Black Devil Disco Club '28 After' album: All the tracks are of recent vintage. Why? The tempo is rock solid all the way through. A computer was involved, or at a minimum, the drummer was playing to a very steady click. I'm not sure a drummer was actually used for the tracks at all, based on the regularity of the beats. I don't know which is more impressive -- a drummer that can play for 6 minutes rock steady down to the millesecond, or how carefully they faked a live drummer. Or, for that matter, how organically the live and machine drumming is put together, if both are used. In other words, it's a tremendously well done fake of the sound of 1982, done recently, which incidentally is some of my favorite Italo.
