IDE
Techno Experimental
Tuzla town /Bosnia & Herzegovina/ based producer Ismar
Meskovic a.k.a Soutbridge was born in 1976.Since 1996 Southbridge
experiment with the different kinds of Techno, House, Electro and music
globally looking for his own unique style.
This love towards deep abyssy sound-spectrums and strong drum sections has its
reason in the fact that
A few years later
The year 2004 is characterized by the Stereolabs` Retro Future
album. It is a very special release where
The CD Stereolab`s Retro Future come to existence and he showing an
extraordinary development of Southbridge sound.
In the early months of 2006 Southbridge starts
'working on his new album Missile man which is based on listening
character, carried by the deep synth backgrounds, strong rhythm section and
vocal cuts.
His courage and patience never yields and
History of
Techno music
Techno was primarily
developed in basement studios by "The Belleville Three", a cadre of
African-American men who were attending college, at the time, near
Though initially
conceived as party music that was played on daily mixed radio programs and
played at parties given by cliquish,
The music soon attracted
enough attention to garner its own club, the Music Institute. It
was founded by Chez Damier, Derrick
May and a few other investors. Though short-lived, this club was known
internationally, for its all night sets, its sparse white rooms, and its juice
bar (the Institute never served liquor). Relatively quickly, techno began to be
seen by many of its originators and up-and-coming producers as an expression of
Future Shock
post-industrial angst. It also took on increasingly high tech and
science-fiction oriented themes.
The music's producers
were using the word "techno" in a general sense as early as 1984 (as
in Cybotron's seminal classic "Techno City"), and sporadic references
to an ill-defined "techno-pop" could be found in the music press in the
mid-1980s. However, it was not until Neil Rushton assembled the compilation Techno!
The New Dance Sound Of
Techno has since been
retroactively defined to encompass, among others, works dating back to
"Shari Vari" (1981) by A Number Of Names,
the earliest compositions by Cybotron (1981), Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder's "I Feel Love" (1977),
and the more danceable selections from Kraftwerk's repertoire between 1977
and 1983.
In the years immediately
following the first techno compilation's release, techno was referenced in the
dance music press as Detroit's relatively high-tech, mechanical brand of house music, because on the whole, it retained
the same basic structure as the soulful, minimal, post-disco
style that was emanating from Chicago, Illinois
and New York City, New
York at the time. The music's producers, especially May and
Saunderson, admit to having been fascinated by the
A spate of
techno-influenced releases by new producers in 1991–92
resulted in a rapid fragmentation and divergence of techno from the house
genre. Many of these producers were based in the
Derrick May is often
quoted as comparing techno to "George Clinton and Kraftwerk stuck in an
elevator". For various reasons, techno is seen by the American mainstream,
even among African-Americans, as "white" music, even though many of
its originators and producers are black. The historical similarities between
techno, jazz, and rock and roll, from a racial standpoint, are a
point of contention among fans(also Bob Marley) and musicians alike. Derrick May,
in particular, has been outspoken in his criticism of the co-opting of the
genre and of the misconceptions held by people of all races with regard to
techno.
In recent years, however,
the publication of relatively accurate histories by authors Simon Reynolds (Generation
Ecstasy aka Energy Flash) and Dan Sicko (Techno Rebels), plus
mainstream press coverage of the Detroit
Electronic Music Festival, have helped to diffuse the genre's more
dubious mythology. The genre has further expanded as more recent pioneers of
the scene such as Moby, The Zombie Hunter's Guild, Orbital, and the Future Sound of London
have made the style break through to the mainstream pop culture.
Techno features an
abundance of percussive, synthetic sounds, studio
effects used as principal instrumentation, and normally a fast, regular 4/4
beat usually in the 130–140 bpm range. Some techno compositions have strong
melodies and bass lines, but these features are not as essential to techno as
they are to other dance genres, and it is not uncommon for techno compositions
to deëmphasize or omit them. Techno is also very DJ-friendly,
being mainly instrumental, and produced with the intention of being
incorporated into continuous DJ sets wherein different compositions are played
with very long, synchronized segues. Although several other dance music genres
can be described in such terms, techno has a distinct sound that aficionados
can pick out very easily.
There are many ways to
make techno, but a typical techno production is created using a compositional
technique that developed to suit the genre's sequencer-driven, electronic instrumentation.
While this technique is rooted in a Western music framework (as far as scales, rhythm
and meter, and the general role played by each type of instrument), it does not
typically employ traditional approaches to composition such as reliance on the
playing of notes, the use of overt tonality and melody, or the generation of
accompaniment for vocals. Some of the most effective techno music consists of
little more than cleverly programmed drum patterns that interplay with
different types of reverb and frequency filtering, mixed in such a way that
it's not clear where the instrument's timbres end and the added effects begin.
Instead of employing
traditional compositional techniques, the techno musician, called a producer,
treats the electronic studio as one large, complex instrument: an
interconnected orchestra of machines, each producing timbres that are
simultaneously familiar and alien. Each machine is encouraged to generate or
complement continuous, repetitive sonic patterns that come relatively
'naturally' to them, given the capabilities and limitations of early sequencers
— such sequencers, especially those built-in to old drum machines, tend to
encourage the production of repeating 16-step patterns with a limited number of
instruments being playable at once, yet they also allow sounds to be arranged
in any order, regardless of whether live musicians could easily reproduce them.
Rather than just mimicking arrangements playable by live musicians, the techno
producer is free to prominently feature unrealistic combinations of sounds.
Most producers, however, strive to achieve a listenable, dancefloor-friendly
balance of realistic and unrealistic arrangements of mostly synthetic,
semi-realistic timbres, rather than a demonstration of machine-powered
extremes.
Depending on how they are
wired together, the machines sometimes influence each other's sounds as the
producer builds up many layers of syncopated, rhythmic harmonies and mingles
them together at the mixing console.
After an acceptable
palette of compatible textures is collected in this manner, the producer begins
again, this time focusing not on developing new textures but on imparting a
more deliberate arrangement of the ones he or she already has. The producer
"plays" the mixer and the sequencer, bringing layers of sound in and
out, and tweaking the effects to create ever-more hypnotic, propulsive
combinations. The result is a deconstructive manipulation of sound, owing as
much to Debussy and the Futurist Luigi Russolo as it does to Kraftwerk and
Tangerine Dream.
The techno producer's
studio can be anything from a single computer (increasingly common nowadays) to
elaborate banks of keyboards, synthesizers, samplers, effects processors, and
mixing boards wired together. Most producers use a variety of equipment and
strive to produce sounds and rhythms never heard before, yet stay fairly close
to the stylistic boundaries set by their contemporaries.
In the early 1990s,
adventurous techno producers experimented with the style, spawning new genres
that have taken on a life of their own. The most prominent of these techno
offshoots are:
Detroit techno - music in the style of early
techno from
Tech house - a slightly lower-tempo fusion that
often combines techno with a prominent bass line and other elements of house and dub.
Trance and its subgenres - a form that tends to
emphasize continuous synthesized, melodic or harmonic figures in the lower
midrange frequencies, and that often uses build-ups, dramatic crescendos, muted
bass drums, and sometimes includes vocals.
Hardcore, which
evolved into breaks as well as jungle - a form based mainly on complex
arrangements of sampled percussion, often at high tempos (140–200 BPM), and
often featuring loud, dub-influenced bass lines played at half time.
Gabba,
Gabber, or what was known as hardcore techno in the U.S. - a very loud,
aggressive, high-tempo (140–220 BPM) techno, much of which originated in Rotterdam and often features a distorted Roland TR-909 bass drum overdriven to the point where it
becomes a tonal square wave.
Acid techno -
IDM,
representing techno's "avant-garde" side - a genre often influenced
by and crossing over into ambient, experimental music
and even rock music, usually features complex,
asymmetrical beat patterns that render it more for listening than dancing.
Minimal is a new fusion of downbeat and Detroit techno that is gaining popularity in the
Less well-known genres or
styles directly related to techno include Yorkshire Bleeps and
Bass or "Bleep," which was prominent in the very early
1990s, and Ghettotech, which combines some of the aesthetics
of techno with hip-hop, house music, and Miami bass. Various other styles exist and have a
fan base, although the names and encyclopedic notability of these styles are
points of contention. Examples include amigacore, speedcore, frenchcore, darkcore, glitch, happy
hardcore, hardbase, hardstyle, digital hardcore, splittercore, bouncy techno, Schranz, Swechno, and Wonky techno.
Occasionally, well-funded
pop music producers will formulate a radio or club-friendly variant of techno.
The music of Technotronic, 2 Unlimited, and Clock
were early examples of this phenomenon. Established pop stars also sometimes
get techno makeovers, such as when William Orbit produced Madonna's
"Ray Of Light".
The
"originators", the "first wave" artists often credited with
inventing techno, are as follows:
Other "second
wave" Detroit-area techno producers active since 1988–1990 include the
following people:
Other artists of note who
have produced techno may be found under Category:Techno
musicians.