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Joyrex

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Files posted by Joyrex

  1. Aphex Twin Dublin 1993.avi

    vimeo.com/31458261

    28 downloads

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  2. Aphex Twin Germany Cologne 1992.mp3

    Digeridoo
    Polynomial-C
    Fantasia (Caustic Window cover)
    Metapharstic

    21 downloads

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  3. Aphex Twin & Chris Cunningham - Flex @ Royal Academy of the Arts 2000.mp3

    Chris Cunningham's debut at the Royal Academy of Arts of his short film/video Flex, with music by Aphex Twin. This was part of the exhibition, Apocalypse: Beauty and Horror in Contemporary Art.
     

    28 downloads

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  4. Aphex Twin & Mad Dog Wallace - Rephlex Records Special on One World.mp3

    Notes & Tracklist

    Cylob - Majorette
    Global Goon - Business Man
    Dmx Krew - Bump To The Beat / Honey
    Dmx Krew - I'm All Alone (Cylob Remix)
    Dmx Krew - Emerging Technology
    Dmx Krew - Denki No Merodie
    Dmx Krew - The Glass Room
    The Railway Raver - Big Thorax At Dawn
    Humanoid - Motion Static
    K-Rock - Ride (The Groove)
    PP Roy - One Step
    808 State - Flow Coma (Afx Remix)
    Pop Device - Black
    Headcleaner - The Ginger Ninja
    Cylob - Cut The Midrange Drop The Bass
    Agent 30 - 5l45h! 4tt4ck! 3nt3r K3y!
    Pierre Bastien - Avid Diva
    Peter Green - Shipmeadow
    Robert Normandeau - Bede
    µ-Ziq - Iesope
    Bogdan Raczynski - Myloveilove Track 16
    Astrobotnia - Lightworks
    Astrobotnia - Hallo
    Astrobotnia - Everyone
    Astrobotnia - Sweden
    Astrobotnia - B
    Astrobotnia - Thoarse
    Astrobotnia - Esther Calling Jennifer
    Astrobotnia - Leftovers
    Astrobotnia - I Am Mr. P

    26 downloads

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  5. Muziq on Boombox 1997.mp3

    File imported by an administrator

    27 downloads

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  6. Muziq, Shitmat and DJ Scotch Egg on Keep It Peel.mp3

    further details about the show http://peel.wikia.com/wiki/16_December_2004
     
    µ-ziq - intellitag
     
    3:42

    Digital Mystikz - John Peel Tribute show 16 Dec 200434:32

    µ-Ziq - Phiesope6:04

    Mike Paradinas - Hi-Q4:26

    µ Ziq - Phiesope6:04

    Shitmat - There's No Business Like Propa' Rungleclotted Mashup Bizznizz5:17

    Scotch Egg live at Gogbot23:36

    DJ Scotch Egg Boiler Room Berlin Live Set34:03

    Mike Paradinas - wywiad / interview28:43

    Shitmat - Dubplate Murder Sound4:41

    Shitmat And Ebola Getting Interviewed In Finland!6:27

    µ-ziq - summer living4:02
     
     

    7 downloads

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  7. Squarepusher Weekly Dig Interview.mp3

    http://digboston.com/boston-music-concerts/2012/10/interview-squarepusher/
     

     
     
     

    “I kind of perversely find it fascinating to try to play with no feeling, with no human idiosyncrasies.”


     

    Concerning the (approximate) metric ton of over-caffeinated Beatport stars who have entered the electronic music community in recent years, each and every one of them, consciously or not, has Tom “Squarepusher” Jenkinson to thank. One of the pioneers of the genre (alongside fellow Warp Records artist Aphex Twin), Jenkinson took electronic music into unprecedented territory in the late ’90s, conquering with his astounding, jazz-inspired drum ‘n’ bass that remains as intricate as it does frantic.
    His latest full-length release, Ufabulum (released May 15 via Warp), serves as a return to form for the seasoned vet, as Jenkinson once again finds himself amongst the glitch-y mayhem he helped popularize. We recently got a rare opportunity to chat with the UK legend about his dazzling new live show, his (self-taught) instrumentalist roots, and the electronic scene today.
    Your tour in support of Ufabulum has certainly upped your use of visual techniques and imagery. What was the most important aspect, to you, in their design?
    Tom Jenkinson: I suppose the most important detail of it is the images themselves; the content, some people would put it. The way in which they’re displayed is secondary to that, although still quite important, and is factored into the creation of those images. But nevertheless, the images themselves are the things that are most important to me.

     
     
    Is there a particular characteristic you associate with the album? I know a lot of fans and critics were saying it was a return to form, stylistically.
     
    TJ: I suppose I tried to put it in the most mundane terms, really. I think to offer interpretations and opinions as to whether this is referring or relating to my earlier work is more the work of a journalist or a listener. I would simply say that I was trying to get away from the tendency, which is being developed in my work as of late, of using live instrumentation as the primary sound source in my work. Particularly in the last few records, it’s come to be the dominate sound, and I wanted to change that.
    On a very day-to-day level, I was quite fed up with having to play instruments all the time. Any live instrument or performer would agree that in order to actually do a performance relatively well, you have to have a regard of discipline regarding your playing, and keep practicing, and maintain a standard that is appropriate to the kind of music you want to play. And that, quite often for what I want to do, is pretty demanding. It sounds ridiculous, but yeah, I wanted a holiday from all that effort and stress.
    Being a tech-savvy multi-instrumentalist gives you a unique slant on the creation process. A lot of electronic musicians today are just familiar with the software and the technology. What’s your take on these two schools of thought?
    TJ: I think it all has its roots in my initial approach to trying to make music, which is basically to try to get [a] hold of whatever instruments [and] technology I could. In those days, I didn’t make any distinctions whatsoever.
    But as I’ve [gotten] older and slightly more sophisticated in my usage of these things, inevitably you start to classify things into groups. And the broader classification, as you’re saying, I suppose, is between instruments/the associated playing with those instruments, and the recording technology and incorporating more of those electro-sound making devices. But obviously there’s a middle-ground. For example: a synthesizer—where you play it, but you also have very direct control of the sonic character of what you’re playing.
    I think the more you know, the better you’re disposed to be able to do what you want to do. The less you know, the more you’re railroaded into certain decisions. It doesn’t mean you’re gonna make bad music. I’m not making any direct connection between the quality of what you do and what you know, but for me, I just feel free to be able to realize my ideas with that stored knowledge available. I think, not just in music, but as a human being in general, if you’re better prepared for situations as a whole, the more knowledge you have.
    While I sort of agree in the names of what punks were saying, I think that just because you have knowledge, doesn’t mean you need to wield it at people at all costs. It doesn’t mean you’re using your music making as an opportunity to show knowledge. It just means that that music making is freer, and you can operate in a more fluid fashion.
    When you incorporate live bass into your shows, I’d say it’s kind of like a unification of all the things you say you stand for.

     
    TJ: I don’t know, I’d be a bit uncomfortable to say I stand for anything in particular. I do see what you mean. It actually does feel satisfying to try and actually explore what unity potentially exists between these two worlds, because I’ve never actually had a snobbish technique regarding making music. Whatever technique is appropriate to the piece is fine by me. If that’s programming, fine. If that’s playing, fine.
    And I thought, if in the end the music is moving me and it’s an enjoyable experience, I find it hard to say it was made in an illegitimate or connoisseur inferior fashion. And actually it feels immensely satisfying to try to bring these worlds together.
    But there’s sort of a conflict, because these two methods are heading in a sort of—they just require different mental outlooks. This is one of the things I was finding tiresome regarding making records of late; actually trying to shift my mentality between using the equipment and being more like a recording engineer, then switching back to being an instrumental player—it’s quite tough. I think if you pull it off, it’s (in my personal opinion) the Holy Grail if you can explore that middle-ground between what avenues instruments make available and what avenues programming makes available. There’s actually a fail-safe in my set, if I lose power, then I’m just on my bass.
    Not a bad back-up plan. I remember Brian Transeau losing power at a gig a couple years back, and he just started improvising classical piano to keep it going.
    TJ: It’s kind of the same thing as what you’re saying. And actually the funny thing is that working so much with programming-based means of making music actually does affect the way you use instruments, and vice versa. There’s sort of a feedback which is quite interesting to explore through those two worlds. My experience in using devices you have to program to make music, [which] is one of the strands that is brought out in my playing, is to try to play like a machine. And honestly, a lot of people would say that is exactly what you shouldn’t do. I kind of perversely find it fascinating to try to play with no feeling, with no human idiosyncrasies. Of course, you can’t avoid it. But nevertheless, these kinds of things are interesting experiments to me if nothing else.
    You actually have to approach it in the sense of, why not try it, because nobody can actually tell you what the outcome is. My experience with that is quite extensive, where I would try to explain ideas to people very early on when I was still trying to work with bands to make music, and they would say, “Well that would never work, that won’t sound good, it will be crap.” And it’s like, “Well, I don’t know, but I want to try it. If it does work it’s gonna be amazing.” And actually my career is partly a recording of those attempts to see which ideas that work on paper actually do. Of course, it’s anyone’s opinions to whether they work, but I wouldn’t put it out on a record, unless it wouldn’t do, I suppose.
    What do you think about this surge of popularity in electronic music over the last couple of years?
    TJ: I mean, it’s a fascinating thing, but I actually think that in a way, you’re going to be in a better place to answer that. I’m coming from the inside of the situation, and trying to keep things moving, [exploring] new tangents. What the public makes of it and what the popularity of it is a long way down my list of concerns. I don’t mean that to try to sound completely independent of the audience or to have a completely blasé attitude, but simply, your best bet as an artist is to concentrate on what you want to do and to not deliberately try to fit in with what is currently popular. I don’t monitor these things particularly closely. And I think particularly in America—maybe in Europe, I’m not so sure it’s had that same kind of surge—
    But yeah—you’re the guy with the overview. I’m really caught up with the very fine details of what I’m doing and what I’m trying to get out there, and that may not play into this surge in popularity. But, popularity is not my problem [Laughs]. It’s in the sense that—I’m self-sufficient, and that’s my aim, and that’s the way I aim to stay. So, part of self-sufficiency is selling enough records so you can keep going, but also not being [so] concerned about how many records you’re selling so that it starts dictating what you do, artistically.
    What do you think of the new electronic artists you have heard?
    TJ: I think that there’s a pop sensibility in what lots of people are doing, which was a lot less evident in what people were doing in the ’90s. There was quite a self-consciously experimental and aggressive outlook, which has come to be replaced by a much more audience-friendly aesthetic.
    I’m not making a valid judgment on that, personally, but that’s how it appears to me. I’m aware of what people are doing, but it’s really not my problem, I suppose. I’m always trying to catch up with my own ideas, as much as fragments of what’s happening out there will come to influence me. I’m not going to deny that, of course. But still, I’m always racing to catch up with the ideas I’ve come up with, so, in a sense, it troubles me if too much of what’s going on in the outside world gets in, because it means I’m getting distracted. I’m not making any valued distinction between what I’m doing and how it relates to other people’s works, but I feel that my strongest suit is to follow my own ideas as in as committed fashion as possible.
    And not just in terms of the music itself, but also the tools with which to make the music are everywhere. You can set up an electronic music studio for nothing. When I started making music, it was impossible. The equipment was very expensive, hard to find, and not very easy to use. There wasn’t a great big scene of people discussing how to use those things; you kind of had to make it up as you went along. And I think there’s a legacy of that in my attitude. I felt embattled in those days. [in] electronic music now, there’s nothing controversial about it whatsoever. There’s still a legacy of how it used to be in my attitude today, which [is that] I tend to view the outside world as a quite hostile place [Laughs], and I still follow my ideas very, very aggressively.
    Lastly, do you know anything about this mysterious artist off of Rephlex known asSteinvord?
    TJ: What’s the name of the artist?
    Steinvord. It’s supposedly a pseudonym for a mixture of two of yours and Richard D. James’s tracks (
    and )TJ: No—I mean, nothing I could say about it in public, no. [Laughs] But in all honesty, what can I say? Nothing.
    In association with Mmmmaven:
    SQUAREPUSHER
    w/ KIMBIE, PRISM
    WED 10.31.12
    ROYALE
    279 TREMONT STREET
    BOSTON
    8PM/18+/$25
    @SQUAREPUSHER
    SQUAREPUSHER.NET
    ROYALEBOSTON.COM
     

    10 downloads

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  10. Squarepusher on the BBC2 Culture Show 2006.flac

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZ0LL1SJ-6U

    7 downloads

    0 comments

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  11. Squarepusher on the BBC2 Culture Show Part 2 Interview.flac

    File imported by an administrator

    3 downloads

    0 comments

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  12. Squarepusher On the BBC2 Culture Show Part 1.wmv

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZ0LL1SJ-6U

    4 downloads

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  13. Squarepusher on The Breezeblock 2006.flac

    tracklist :
     
    Trentemøller - 'Nightwalker' (Poker Flat)
    Toasty Boy - 'Knowledge' (White)
    Wonder vs. Darwood - 'Death B4' (Dumpvalve)
    Content - 'It's So (Will Saul remix)' (Simple Records)
     
    The Dubplate
    Skream feat. Warrior Queen - 'Check It' (Tempa Dubplate)
     
    Method Man feat. Streetlife & Carlton Fisk - '4:20' (Def Jam)
    Enduser - 'Playing The Devil' (Dubplate)
    000 - 'Jabberwok V7' (Sublight)
    Burial - 'Versus' (Planet Mu)
     
    Headline Set - Squarepusher
    Tracklisting to follow...
     
    03.00
     
    Mathhead - 'South Bronx' (Terminal Dusk)
     
    The Download
    Tom Burbanks - 'Gnats' (Planet Mu)
     
    Ruff Sqwad - 'Xtra' (Rapid Fire Records)
    Matt Domino - 'Duet' (Bingo Beats)
     
    Squarepusher in the Mix
    Tracklisting to follow...
     
    Move D - 'Kunststoff' (City Centre Offices)
    Sir Smurf Lil' - 'Intro' (YNR)
    Beck - 'Cellphone's Dead' (Interscope)
    Rhythm Beater vs. Benny Page - 'Dubroom (remix)' (Cutters Choice)
    T. Raumschmiere - 'Radikal Meditation' (Shitkatapult

    4 downloads

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  14. Squarepusher on The Breezeblock 2006.flac

    tracklist :
     
    Trentemøller - 'Nightwalker' (Poker Flat)
    Toasty Boy - 'Knowledge' (White)
    Wonder vs. Darwood - 'Death B4' (Dumpvalve)
    Content - 'It's So (Will Saul remix)' (Simple Records)
     
    The Dubplate
    Skream feat. Warrior Queen - 'Check It' (Tempa Dubplate)
     
    Method Man feat. Streetlife & Carlton Fisk - '4:20' (Def Jam)
    Enduser - 'Playing The Devil' (Dubplate)
    000 - 'Jabberwok V7' (Sublight)
    Burial - 'Versus' (Planet Mu)
     
    Headline Set - Squarepusher
    Tracklisting to follow...
     
    03.00
     
    Mathhead - 'South Bronx' (Terminal Dusk)
     
    The Download
    Tom Burbanks - 'Gnats' (Planet Mu)
     
    Ruff Sqwad - 'Xtra' (Rapid Fire Records)
    Matt Domino - 'Duet' (Bingo Beats)
     
    Squarepusher in the Mix
    Tracklisting to follow...
     
    Move D - 'Kunststoff' (City Centre Offices)
    Sir Smurf Lil' - 'Intro' (YNR)
    Beck - 'Cellphone's Dead' (Interscope)
    Rhythm Beater vs. Benny Page - 'Dubroom (remix)' (Cutters Choice)
    T. Raumschmiere - 'Radikal Meditation' (Shitkatapult

    5 downloads

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  18. Squarepusher @ Koko 2005 with Paul Hession and Mick Beck.wmv

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbJ16t_PVwc

    3 downloads

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  19. Squarepusher @ Koko 2005 Hello Meow.wmv

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbJ16t_PVwc

    3 downloads

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  20. Squarepusher @ Meltdown 2005.mp3

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-2005-06-26-uk-englandlondon-meltdown-festival/

    7 downloads

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  21. Squarepusher in Tokyo Part 6.flac

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part1/
     
    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part2/

    3 downloads

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  22. Squarepusher in Tokyo 2004 Part 1.flac

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part1/
     
    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part2/

    4 downloads

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  23. Squarepusher in Tokyo 2004 Part 5.flac

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part1/
     
    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part2/

    3 downloads

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  24. Squarepusher in Tokyo 2004 Part 4.flac

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part1/
     
    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part2/

    4 downloads

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  25. Squarepusher in Tokyo 2004 Part 3.flac

    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part1/
     
    http://www.mixcloud.com/sinlopez/squarepusher-live-2004-05-15-tokyo-part2/

    3 downloads

    0 comments

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