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If Not Now When?
Cat: SA 036. Rel: 04 Jun 20
 
Techno
If Not Now When? (6:34)
At The Bottom Of The Sea (6:15)
If Not Me Who? (7:07)
ESRR (6:10)
out of stock $8.76
Enter The Fire
Cat: SA 031. Rel: 06 Dec 17
 
Techno
He Who Harnesses The Soul (7:04)
Rituals (707 EBM version) (6:37)
Rituals (808 original version) (6:48)
Astronomy (8:27)
Review: Alessandro Adriani makes a surprising addition to Berlin techno imprint Stroboscopic Artefacts. The forward thinking label that dwells on the more experimental fringes of dancefloor sounds now taps a fellow Italian and Mannequin Records boss who serves up some fascinating techno derivatives. Harnessed no doubt by his time living in Berlin, but also put in practice as one half of An-I with NYC legend Douglas Lee. Much like Lee, Adriani gives an outsider's perspective on powerful body music by way of industrial sounds and experimentation with analogue electronics. "He Who Harnesses The Soul" opens proceedings in impressive fashion - we've never heard Adriani execute something so direct on this tunnelling and hypnotic stomper that will have huge crossover appeal. It's more like the artist we know on the brooding and powerful stomp of "Rituals" (707 EBM version). Finally we get treated to yet another minimalist and trance inducing number on "Astronomy" reminiscent of Sahko or Sleeparchive's sublime spell casting in the mid noughties.
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out of stock $8.76
Perlude To Dybbuk
Cat: SA 032. Rel: 17 Jan 18
 
Techno
Avka (New Life) (7:14)
Dybbuk (6:03)
Modern Matters (6:20)
Review: Israeli producer Yotam Avni started out only a few years ago, making waves on esteemed tech house imprints such as the local Be As One and Californian deep house institution Seasons. Fast forward to now, he's affiliated with such tastemaker labels as Innervisions and Hotflush - a perfect fit for his new darker, tech-influenced sound. Venturing further down the spiral, his latest offering is for Stroboscopic Artefacts - and it is actually his third release on the Berlin based experimental techno imprint. It follows up his impressive contribution to their esteemed Monad series. The A side features the sweaty Carnival vibes of "Avka" (New Life) featuring intense latin polyrhythms assisted by adrenalising rave horns. The rhythms seem to be a recurring theme here, as "Dybbuk" proves, but this time it's a hybrid of steely machine drums thrown in the mix. Finally "Modern Matters" is the most straight head offering: its austere mechanical swagger supported by hypnotic, ethnic prayer chants - and to quite stunning effect.
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Played by: Yotam Avni
out of stock $9.54
Tehillim
Tehillim (12")
Cat: SA 029. Rel: 12 Dec 16
 
Techno
Tehillim (5:47)
Orma (7:06)
Shtok (6:59)
Even (6:39)
Review: This is the second Stroboscopic Artefacts EP from Yotam Avni and, all things considered, it hasn't taken the artist too long to land on such as class label. Granted, releases for Ovum and Rebirth aren't exactly beneath the Berlin label, but this instantly puts him in a different category as a true resident of the German capital's nightlife. "Tehillim" is a growling, subtle techno pouncer with distant waves of apocryphal hymns, which is followed by the equally moody, grey-scaled techno bleeps and stutters of "Orma". Over on the B-side, "Shtok" dangles its gentle harmonics over a subdued attack of 4/4 drumming, and "Even" takes a turn down a lighter, more positive tonality that is nonetheless weighed down by a tenebrous techno sludge.
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out of stock $9.54
We Want Neither Clean Hands Nor Beautiful Souls
If Nature Is Unjust, Change Nature (6:37)
Globular Hymen (7:48)
Science Is Not An Expression But A Suspension Of Gender (7:22)
And With Fire Came Disparity (7:30)
Played by: Ben Sims, Brian James
out of stock $8.51
One Month Off
Cat: SA 022. Rel: 02 Apr 14
 
Techno
One Month Off
The Wall
Cave Dwellings
Marker Shop
Viewpoint
Review: Given the calibre of artists involved in the Monad series from Stroboscopic Artefacts (Perc, Lakker, Rrose, Kangding Ray, Donor) it's easy to forget that the label inaugurated the digital only endeavour with a release from the then-unknown Chevel. Four years on the Treviso-born producer returns to Lucy's label to helm a full 12" release with his reputation on a constant upward spiral, thanks to his releases for Vae Victis, Non Series and his own Enklav label. With recent SA releases from Lakker, Rrose and a Dadub remix EP providing the label with a renewed juncture to the dancefloor, it seems now is a suitable time as any for Chevel to make his return with the One Month Off EP. Five tracks deep, this record is a fine display of Chevel's overtly lo-fi brand of Italian, strictly analogue club music and is apparently "built around the abstract themes of construction, starting with demolition and ending on perspective."
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out of stock $8.76
Blurse Remixed
Cat: SA 025. Rel: 02 Dec 15
 
Techno
Stranded (Paula Temple remix) (4:21)
Watery Drumming (Lee Gamble remix) (5:29)
Heimweh (Perc remix) (6:30)
Loop #42 (Minor Science remix) (6:23)
Review: Italian producer Chevel released his album Blurse earlier this year on Lucy's Stroboscopic Artefact and it now gets a separate remix treatment by some seriously big names on this EP. Starting out with the legendary Paula Temple, who provides another example of how on form she is since her return to the scene with her broken and body bashing take on "Stranded". The always surprising Lee Gamble gets tapped to do a remix of "Watery Drumming". A jagged and disorienting rendition retaining some seriously aquatic aesthetics like the original. On the flip, UK industrial techno don Perc gets stuck into "Heimweh", giving it a haunting and suspenseful injection that's almost cinematic in its presentation. Finally the remix of "Loop #42" by Minor Science is a tripped out and transcendental moment of minimal house with a broken beat.
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Played by: Mathame
out of stock $8.76
Preternity
Cat: SA 016. Rel: 23 Jan 13
 
Techno
Death (Lucy remix)
Path (Lakker remix)
Life (Rrose remix)
Existence (Kangding Ray remix)
Review: In the lead up to Dadub's debut album You Are Eternity, Stroboscopic Artefacts have commissioned remixes from Lakker and Rrose - their first contributions to the label - as well as Kanding Ray and label boss Lucy. All were given the chance to remix their favourite track from the forthcoming album and Lucy chose "Death", a pleasant surprise in its functionality - not commonly associated with the Italian. Lakker's remix to "Path" delivers some spaciousness and industrialism to Dadub's often busy and syncopated arrangements, while Rrose's remix of "Life" could well be touted as one of the years best reworks with a long and drawn out build and big room drop. Kanding Ray counterbalances Rrose's mix with subtle melodies and water drop percussion in his remix to "Existence".
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out of stock $8.24
Terzo Giorno
Cat: SA 023. Rel: 14 May 14
 
Techno
Il Canto Della Maga
Il Canto Della Maga (part 2)
Terzo Giorno
Sotto Ma Sotto
Review: To the casual observer it might seem like we are approaching 'Donatoverload' with numerous Dozzy related projects released recently. Look a bit closer though, and it's either been reissues (like the Aquaplano Sessions) collaborations with Tin Man and Neel or extensive remix packages like Plays Bee Mask. There has been little actual solo Dozzy material since a 2011 release for the Acid Test series, so this release for Lucy's Stroboscopic Artefacts label is most welcome! Translating roughly as "Third Day", the four track Terzo Giorno 12" is typical Dozzy with a fine sense of textural dexterity evident on "Il Canto Della Maga (part 2)" and the title track. The addition of Dozzy makes perfect sense for Stroboscopic Artefacts within the context of their recent releases from Lakker, Rrose and Chevel which have provided the label with a renewed juncture to the dancefloor.
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out of stock $9.27
Wrong Movemnts
Wrong Movemnts (clear vinyl 10")
Cat: SATOTEM 003. Rel: 06 Dec 18
 
Techno
Wrong Movements (Circles) (4:47)
Wrong Movements (Left) (6:25)
Wrong Movements (Right) (3:06)
Review: Stepping up for the third release in the series is Berlin legend Efdemin -- bringing a three-track journey that is unequivocally enduring and flexible for journeys on-and-off the dancefloor.
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Played by: Ben Sims, Brian James
out of stock $9.80
Tempered Inmid
Cat: SA 017. Rel: 17 Apr 13
 
Techno
Tempered Inmid
Dimen Andesso
Nuis Octury
Ezerb Altren
Review: Kanding Ray continues his gradual ascendance through the Stroboscopic Artefacts ranks with the Tempered Inmid EP, the Raster Noton regular's first full release for Lucy's label. The producer, real name David Letellier, first appeared in Stroboscopic colours last year with a contribution to the digital only Monad series and has since appeared on a split release, laid down two tracks for the Stellate series and remix Dadub. So the chance to see the Frenchman explore his sound palette in a more expansive release for SA is exciting, and the four tracks on Tempered Inmid represent a further definition of Ray's futuristic and classically informed style of techno-meets-electronica. If you can imagine the fuzzy edged electronica of Clark mixed with Surgeon's precision club tools and brushed with the childlike tones of Aphex Twin then Tempered Inmid will certainly appeal.
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out of stock $9.02
Hyper Opal Mantis
Cat: SACD 008. Rel: 07 Mar 17
 
Techno
Rubi
Lone Pyramids
Epsilon
Purple Phase
Dune
Soul Surfing
Outremer
One Mantis
Saudade
Laniakea
Review: For the first time since establishing the Kangding Ray project back in 2006, David Lettelier appears on the acclaimed Stroboscopic Artefacts imprint. The transfer seems to have inspired him artistically, too. While previous albums for Raster-Norton were principally concerned with blurring the boundaries between club-ready techno, off-kilter IDM and worthy experimentation, Hyper Opal Mantis looks much more closely at ghostly ambient, industrial and Electronic Body Music. Of course, while the influences may be broader, Lettellier's "high definition" approach to sound design and production is still present throughout. In other words, it's very much a Kangding Ray record, he's just moved the goalposts a bit.
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Played by: Ground Loop
out of stock $8.51
Ardent
Ardent (12")
Cat: SA 027. Rel: 16 Mar 16
 
Techno
Ardent (8:54)
Swallows (8:08)
Review: The latest 12" from Lucy's Stroboscopic Artefacts label pits two heavyweights of modern electronics against each other in Kangding Ray and Rrose. The pair may possess strong associations with Raster Noton and Sandwell District respectively, but they've become increasingly part of the Stroboscopic family in the past few years. Ray takes the lead with title track "Ardent" and it's a chance for him to engage in a style of epic techno away from the more conceptual bent of his output for Raster Noton. There's a sensation of magnitude to Rrose's "Swallows" that is apparent as soon as the music begins to swell upwards from the depths of the channels and unfurls into some eight minutes of waveforms that that multiply and disintegrate with a real elegance. Oh to hear this one on an appropriate soundsystem.
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out of stock $8.24
V: 5 Years Of Artefacts Chapter 4
Cat: SA5YEARS 04. Rel: 11 Mar 15
 
Techno
Jonas Kopp - "Shibu" (6:29)
Dadub - "Force Continuum Abuse" (5:49)
Eomac - "I Am Starting To Believe" (5:57)
Chevel - "Alicia" (4:36)
out of stock $7.99
Alkitran
Alkitran (12")
Cat: SA 006. Rel: 06 Oct 10
 
Techno
Jonas Kopp - "Alkitran"
Markus Suckrut - "Vary"
out of stock $9.02
SA 030
SA 030 (12")
Cat: SA 030. Rel: 17 May 17
 
Techno
E12 (5:03)
E3.2 (5:06)
E2.2 (5:46)
F8 (6:11)
out of stock $9.02
Untitled
Untitled (12")
Cat: SA 019. Rel: 16 Oct 13
 
Techno
Harbour
eeAea
Valentina Lane
Review: Responsible for the first Monad release of 2013, Lakker have now become a fully fledged member of the Stroboscopic Artefacts family with their three track Untitled EP. This is something only the label's known residents Dadub, Xhin, Kanding Ray and of course Lucy have provided. Opening the EP is "Harbour" with a synth line that sounds like something between a fog horn bellowing in a misty port and a suspense scene from a horror movie (or both), and it's simply cinematic. "eeAea" sees Lakker return to something shuffly, best heard on their Deathmask EP for Irish imprint Love Love, while "Valentina Lane" is playful in the way Aphex Twin can be. No doubt Stroboscopic Artefacts are happy with this one.
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out of stock $9.54
Roar
Roar (clear vinyl 10")
Cat: SATOTEM 002. Rel: 31 Aug 18
 
Techno
Roar (8:25)
Hard Wax (6:04)
Step Sure Dub (5:30)
Played by: Skudge, Philippe Petit
out of stock $8.76
Desatura
Cat: SACD 010. Rel: 09 Oct 18
 
Techno
Anchor
Marrow
Diamond
Decanter
Eat Eat Eat
The Idea Of North
Under The Benches
Foul Winds
A Third Man
And Then There Were None
Review: Stroboscopic Artefacts chief Lucy teams up with Rrose (Eaux) as The Lotus Eaters, which sees the two visionary techno artists collaborate for the first time. Although they had previously remixed each other's work, the idea of working together became inevitable. Several intense sessions in Lucy's Berlin studio, using mainly analogue hardware, resulted in a new project starting with two EPs released on their respective imprints. Desatura features a diverse array of powerful and innovative sonic perspectives: the highly engineered tunnelling techno that you've come to expect from either artist is finely displayed on tracks like "Decanter" or "A Third Man", between moments of slow motion hypnotism ("Eat Eat Eat") and droning/textural soundscapes like "The Idea Of North" and "Under The Benches".
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 in stock $8.51
Banality Of Evil
Cat: SA 013. Rel: 18 Apr 12
 
Techno
Superior Orders (feat Roll The Dice)
Stanford Prison
Milgram Experiment
Asch Paradigm
out of stock $7.74
Why Don't You Change
Cat: SA 001. Rel: 19 Sep 09
 
Minimal/Tech House
Why Don't You Change (Krishamurti acappella extended)
Why Don't You Change (Krishamurti acappella extended)
Dub Man Walking
out of stock $7.99
Beelines For Working Bees
Cat: SA 008. Rel: 08 Feb 11
 
Techno
Tof (Tommy Four Seven remix)
Bein (James Ruskin remix)
Lav (Peter Van Hoesen remix)
Eon (Truss remix)
Review: Luca Mortellaro's Berlin-based label Stroboscopic Artefacts rose to prominence in 2010, with the coining of the term 'compressed dub' to describe SA's unique mastering process becoming a talking point among the heads down techno fraternity. Here we see the label chief, operating under his Lucy pseudonym, release a remix 12" in anticipation of his debut album due out in March. Beelines For Working Bees sees a nice mix of established and nascent techno talent - namely James Ruskin, Tommy Four Seven, Peter Van Hoesen and Truss - rework four album tracks with considerable aplomb. Ruskin turns the album's most epic moment, "Bein", into a deeper, more sedate roller, while Truss and Van Hoesen offer bruising takes on "Eon" and "Lav" over on the flip.
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out of stock $8.51
Tarkomania
Tarkomania (clear vinyl 10")
Cat: SATOTEM 001. Rel: 28 Jun 18
 
Techno
Tarkomania (5:25)
Tarkomania (dub) (3:21)
Tarkomania (acappella) (3:38)
out of stock $9.80
Dyscamupia
Cat: SA 034. Rel: 20 Mar 19
 
Techno
Dyscamupia (Forward) (12:39)
Dyscamupia (Paused) (5:44)
Dyscamupia (Backward) (7:44)
Review: Lucy is back on his esteemed Stroboscopic Artefacts imprint with "Dyscamupia", based on Albert Camus' classic existentialist novel "The Stranger". Here, it is reinterpreted through these three techno variations, all narrated by American Jason Snell (aka Bombardier). It begins with "Forward", a deep, hypnotic slow burner where binaural microphone technology was used to record the vocal recording process, perfectly complimenting the atmosphere of Lucy's composition. "Paused" is definitely the most dancefloor ready version - a tunnelling cut that will sound great under the strobe light, while the barrelling and broken intensity of "Backward" goes for a more contorted take on things.
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Played by: Brian James, Wasserfall
out of stock $8.76
Churches Schools & Guns Remixed
Cat: SA 021. Rel: 29 Jan 14
 
Techno
Catch Twenty Two (Shapednoise remix)
The Illusion Of Choice (Donato Dozzy remix)
Laws & Habits (Milton Bradley remix)
The Self As Another (Eomac remix)
Review: In advance of Lucy's second album arriving, the Berlin-based producer opens up tracks from Churches Schools and Guns for reinterpretation with a roll call of producers on board representative of the standing Stroboscopic Artefacts now has within the techno community. Donato Dozzy, Shapednoise, Eomac, and Milton Bradley all contribute and do a fine job in teasing interested parties with how the original material from Lucy sounds. Shapednoise calls shotgun, twisting the Joseph Heller inspired "Catch Twenty Two" into a hellish soundscape of feedback and ghoulish texture with a sole clacking drum beat to cling onto, which is complemented nicely by a suitably hypnotic take on "The Illusion Of Choice" from Donato Dozzy - a man clearly in something of a remix purple patch. Milton Bradley offers a moment of serenity with his version of "Laws & Habits" before proceedings head towards the post-apocalyptic on Eomac's excellent rework of "The Self As Another". Remix EPs might not be the most rewarding of concepts but this 12" belongs amongst the exceptions.
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out of stock $8.76
Churches Schools & Guns
Cat: SACD 005. Rel: 12 Feb 14
 
Techno
The Horror
Leave Us Alone
The Self As Another
Human Triage
Laws & Habits
Follow The Leader
Catch Twenty Two
The Illusion Of Choice
We Live As We Dream
All That Noise
The Best Selling Show
Falling (feat Emme)
Review: Whether or not Berlin-based Italian Luca Montellaro's sophomore album, Churches Schools & Guns is a concept album (we have no idea, to be honest), there's a definite connection between the evocative, uneasy title and the clastrophobic, paranoid music contained within. "The Horror", a decidedly unsettling foray into nightmarish ambience, sets the tone. The maudlin but strangely involving music which follows shuffles between ethereal, post-dubstep tech-scapes ("The Self as Another", "Human Triage"), druggy hypnotism ("Follow the Leader"), sludgy downtempo oddness ("Catch 22") and tumbling, monastic ambience ("Falling"). Throughout, there's an uneasy sense of a bleak, other-wordly story unfolding.
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out of stock $9.80
War Lullaby
Cat: SAO 24. Rel: 06 May 15
 
Techno
Bliss (3:07)
War Lullaby (9:24)
Santeria (6:39)
A Ghost Lovestory (6:00)
Review: War Lullaby sees Ben Klock and Lucy pair up for a four track exercise in modern techno excellence on the latter's Stroboscopic Artefacts label. Collaborating with fellow techno heavyweights is nothing new for either artist; Lucy has teamed up with Jochem Papp, aka Speedy J, for the 2013 Zeitgeber project, while Ben Klock and Marcel Dettmann's mid-2000s Dawning / Dead Man Watches The Clock and Scenario 12?s are subject to a growing cult appeal. Both producers's sound come through on this four-track EP, with Lucy's hissy noisefloor and percussive techniques nestling up alongside the big room arpeggios of the title-track, with Klock's signature pulse at the forefront of "Santeria".
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Played by: Edit select
out of stock $8.51
Lucy Reworks
Cat: SA 10YEARSEP. Rel: 22 Jan 20
 
Techno
Donato Dozzy - "Sotto Ma Sotto" (Lucy remix) (6:13)
Caterian Barbieri - "Virgo Rebellion" (Lucy remix) (6:15)
Lucy & Klock - "War Lullaby" (Lucy remix) (6:31)
Xhin - "Link" (Lucy remix) (7:01)
Review: With the 'Lucy Reworks' EP, label head Lucy, nom de techno of Luca Mortellaro, revisits four pivotal tracks from his label's peerless catalogue. In their original form, these tracks from Donato Dozzy, Caterina Barbieri, Lucy & Klock and Xhin each represent significant and deeply personal moments for Mortellaro in Stroboscopic Artefacts' history. And like the recent 'Ten Years Of Artefacts' album and the currently ongoing tour, this EP is a chance for Mortellaro to look back fondly at the label's past while closely considering its present and its future.
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out of stock $8.76
V: 5 Years Of Artefacts Chapter 5
Cat: SA5YEARS 05. Rel: 11 Mar 15
 
Techno
Lucy - "Rema Rema Canoero" (11:27)
Donato Dozzy - "OZ Taped" (5:09)
Sendai - "Inverse Array 1" (5:52)
Review: The series of 12"s to celebrate Lucy's Stroboscopic Artefacts surpassing its fifth year in the upper echelons of the techno community has served up some great music so far from Rrose, Perc, LB Dub Corp and more. Yet with a final chapter that features the collective talents of Dozzy, Van Hoesen, De Mey, and Lucy himself, it's tempting to suggest they have saved the best for last! Lucy hogs proceedings with an undeniably epic 12 minute production "Rema Rema Canoero" that commences with what sounds like Satan's laugh sampled processed into the backbone of a rhythm. From here the Italian simply excels himself with a track that builds and builds with churning intensity. Dozzy casts aside any sense of subtlety on the brilliant "OZ Taped" whilst Sendai veer off into broken acid territory with "Inverse Array 1". A fine end to the series.
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out of stock $8.76
The Lotus Eaters
Cat: SA 028. Rel: 20 Oct 16
 
Techno
Chloroform (9:46)
Peeling (8:08)
Stained Glass (5:44)
Foil Gardens (12:08)
out of stock $9.54
Ma
Ma (12")
Cat: SA 026. Rel: 10 Feb 16
 
Techno
The Death Of Rebirth (6:21)
Negative Space (5:28)
Ma (12:21)
Review: By now, we should know what to expect from Alistair "Perc" Wells. The no-holds-barred techno maestro has been providing DJs with murky, clandestine workouts for the best part of 15 years, and shows no signs of slowing down. Here he returns to Lucy's Stroboscopic Artefacts label with three more tracks of apocalyptic dancefloor creepiness. While the title track flips the script by blending industrial IDM hits with clanging, metallic textures, the EP's other two cuts are spooky, concrete-clad, brutalist techno shufflers. Of these, it's the broken clocks, panicked noises and thumping bottom-end of "The Death of Rebirth" that stands out.
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out of stock $8.24
Universe
Universe (12")
Cat: SA 009. Rel: 25 May 11
 
Techno
Universe
Metropolis
out of stock $8.76
Caos Y Orden Superior
Cat: SA 015. Rel: 01 Nov 12
 
Techno
Pfirter - "Caos Y Orden Superior" (feat Xiantek)
Kangding Ray - "Wars"
Review: Juan Pablo Pfirter has garnered a reputation for big-room techno through a slew of peak time releases via CLR, Stockholm LTD, Figure and his own MindTrip Music. But his Stroboscopic Artefacts releases have - by Pfirter standards - remained a little more restrained. "Caos Y Orden Superior" featuring the so far unknown Xiantek, maintains Pfirter's trademark low end, but the Argentinean opts for a locked groove over peaks and troughs, and although synths, white-noise and crunched hi-hats still feature, it's more likely to be played by Marcel Dettmann than Len Faki. Kanding Ray's emotive "Wars" incorporates Moderat styled guitars, industrial-tinged white noise and dissonant synths; all of which are at the mercy of a hoovering sidechain.
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out of stock $8.24
Manifesto
Manifesto (clear vinyl 10")
Cat: SATOTEM 005. Rel: 04 Sep 19
 
Techno
Manifesto (5:57)
Don't Leave (6:07)
Clouds (5:05)
Review: Berlin-based DJ and producer Denise Rabe has become something of a cult heroine since her first releases in 2015. The years since have found her operate in her own parallel techno world, where psychoactive sounds and heavy drones permeate your ears, then your brain, then your whole being. Now she steps away from her own Rabe label for a debut on Stroboscopic Artefacts, which finds her take charge of the Totem series. Opener "Manifesto" is a driving techno groover with ghoulish synth designs and keys from the 5th dimension, then "Don't Leave" will utterly trip you out with its panning pads and mysterious leads. "Clouds" completes the journey with doom laden and wide spread kick drums that lurch over and over through some ruined post-human world. Tip!
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Played by: Brian James
out of stock $8.76
V: Five Years Of Artefacts Chapter One
Cat: SA5YEARS 01. Rel: 01 Oct 14
 
Techno
Rrose - "Drowned By Sight"
Perc - "Tri-City"
Pfirter - "Atman"
Lakker - "Pier"
Review: Has it been five years already? In 2009 Stroboscopic Artefacts revealed itself with label founder Lucy's Why Don't You Change // Dub Man Walking release. In the following years artists like Xhin and Dadub became label faithfuls while others like Perc, Pfirter and Donor helped Stroboscopic Artefacts develop into the techno power house it now is. The recent introduction of artists like Rrose, Lakker (and Eomac), Sendai and Donato Dozzy have further established the label's dominance. This first chapter of various artist EPs Stroboscopic Artefacts will release to celebrate five years of existence brings together the old with the new. Rrose delivers a typically droning "Drowned By Sight" which fans of Sandwell District will love, while Perc's "Tri-City" is a rolling barrage of stiff and rigid drums and industrial atmospheres. Pfirter delivers something more subdued and dubby than his normal peak time fare while Lakker's "Pier" is haunting as always.
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out of stock $8.76
Cutlass
Cutlass (12")
Cat: SA 011. Rel: 31 Oct 11
 
Techno
Teeth (Surgeon remix)
Foreshadowed (Dadub remix)
Vent (Pfirter remix)
Insides (Perc remix)
Review: Off the back of the lauded album for Stroboscopic Artefacts, Xhin enlists four malevolent reworkings from equally uncompromising artists. Surgeon takes the mantle first, with a cacophony of sheet-metal noise scraping over a militant techno pulse. Dadub meanwhile live up to their name with a broken take that maximises on delay and reverb to create its own kind of immersion. Pfirter is no less gentle with his panic-striken thumper, while Perc bats the ball straight out of the park with a slow and spacious freak-out rich in audible morsels for your ears to feast on. Essential.
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out of stock $9.80
Untitled
Untitled (12")
Cat: SA 014. Rel: 21 May 12
 
Techno
Xhin - "She's The Disease"
Xhin - "Blinding Truth"
Perc - "Forge"
Perc - "Kater"
Played by: Edit select
out of stock $8.76
V: Five Years Of Artefacts Chapter Three
Cat: SA 5YEARS03. Rel: 10 Dec 14
 
Techno
Xhin - "Blade Moth"
Tommy Four Seven - "Fffff"
Kangding Ray - "Luna"
DSCRD - "Apparition Hill"
out of stock $9.27
Zeitgeber
Cat: SACD 004. Rel: 31 Jul 13
 
Experimental/Electronic
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None Of Their Defects
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Before They Wake
Display 24
Review: On first glance, this seems like another slab of faceless drone and experimental techno. There is, though, more to it than that. For starters, it's the work of two acclaimed techno producers; Dutch veteran Jochem Paap (AKA Speedy J) and Stroboscopic Artefacts boss Luca Mortellaro (AKA Lucy). Then there's the music itself, which veers from paranoid, abstract sound design (see "Display 24" and "Skin"), to pulsating, out-there micro-techno ("These Rhythms", "Now Imagine" and "Body Out"), via the kind of curious, leftfield IDM that was once the preserve of the Skam label ("Before They Wake"). It's hardly cosy home listening, but it was never designed that way. It's certainly worthy of your attention.
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out of stock $9.27
V: Five Years Of Artefacts Chapter Two
Cat: SA5YEARS 02. Rel: 05 Nov 14
 
Techno
Zeitgeber - "Totemism"
LB Dub Corp - "Take It Down Again" (in dub)
Review: Three of techno's biggest names under different alias appear on this second release Stroboscopic Artefacts have put out to celebrate their five year tenure of abstract techno. "Totemism" may well be an off-cut from Zeitgeber's debut and self-titled album, a collaboration between Speedy J and SA label boss Lucy. It's reminiscent of the early, rhythmically dubby productions of the label's earlier releases, while L.B. Dub Corp (aka Luke Slater) provides a reduction of his thunderous Ostgut Ton mega-storm "Take It Down In Dub". With more five year celebrations on the way, this adds to the unexplainable tone of a label that's now firmly fixed in Berlin club culture.
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Played by: Gary Beck
out of stock $8.76
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