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Mark EG - Blackout Audio Radio Show - UK - Feb 2006

Submitted By: Top 100draufbold
Genre: Techno
Date of Set: Mar 1st, 2006
Filesize: 140.20 MB
Total Downloads: 18

 

 

Biography of Mark EG

Name: Mark EG
Resident: Leeds, UK.
Date of Birth: 26-05-73
DJ since: 1982
Producer since: 1996
Style: Hard electronic club music
Main Influences: Patrik Skoog, Glenn Wilson, Woody McBride, Autechre, Aphex Twin, Model 500, Phuture, Armando, Adonis etc.

On a constant search for new sounds, fresh production talent and cutting edge club music, Mark EG is at the forefront of the UK's new music movement. He refuses to be labelled. As they say, good music is good music. And this sometimes chameleon-like addiction to music has held Mark responsible not only for some of the most ground breaking releases in the hard techno world over the last few years, but also for the underground explosion of both hard trance and hardstyle thoughout much of the UK.

With a DJ history that spans back to the early 1980's, Mark is widely acclaimed for his intense and captivating stage presence, as well as his outrageous deck talents. His most notable achievements include his massive popularity in Serbia over the last eight years - where techno is the biggest form of club music thoughout the country; his almost cult-like status within the UK hard dance movement (especially in the South-West where his residency sets at places such as The Country Club were legendary); the near sonic domination of the Canadian rave scene in the late nineties (a close second to Paul Oakenfold in a popular Magazine Poll). But most recently he was voted 'UK's Best Hard Dance DJ' at the the Hardcore Heaven Awards 2003, proving his continued popularity within the hard dance fraternity.

The whole concept behind my DJing is to get people into new music.' begins Mark 'I try to do this by exploring different areas of hard club music. Techno will always be my favourite but DJ-ing is all about mood, atmosphere, reading a crowd and trying to get your message across. It's also about compromise and keeping the people on the floor at fever pitch. So you have to develop different styles for different people. As long as you have the tools to ensure those infront of you are screaming for more, then you can walk away satisfied. That's what truly matters.'

It comes as no surprise that when it coms to music production, Mark's focus is undoubtedly techno. His most well known project has to be The Anxious, which he and his partner Chrissi have taken to the forefront of the global techno movement. Their sound is dark and driving, relentless and uncompromising. Listen to one of Mark's hard techno DJ sets and you'll realise where this energy comes from. Is it any wonder then that Mark and Chrissi have released music on some of the worlds finest techno labels including Glenn Wilson's Planet Rhythm, Compound, Hereos and Submissions imprints. There have been releases on labels such as Chris McCormack's well-respected Embryo imprint and the now defunct Blueline USA label. Their own label Blackout Audio has seen their work skillfully remixed by names such as Hardcell, Inigo Kennedy, Headroom, Chris McCormack and Glenn Wilson to name but a few.

Under the name The Fuzz on Chris Liberator's Cluster label, they also release acid techno. They've had releases on other London Acid techno labels such as Hydrualix and Intected. Although they've also released many sought after trance productions on Bonzai/XTC and Massive, Germany, Mark feels that techno is where his heart now lies in the studio.

We're on a mission to find new ways, new sounds.' says Mark 'You can push serious boundaries in a room with two people because there's no crowd there, but you still need to think about what your tracks would sound like in a club or you might as well disappear in obscurity. We want to create dark rhythmic music that you can either stick your head in the bassbin and throw up to, or disappear into your own personal space and find yourself with.

As well as DJing and Music Production, you'll also see Mark's record reviews in several global magazines including M8 for Scotland and England and Mixer/Big Shot in the USA (formerly Mixmag USA). All of his record reviews from the last five years can be found on the Blackout Audio site (www.blackoutaudio.co.uk), including articles and reviews that include those from when he was techno editor of the cult rave magazine Eternity and also Music Editor of Wax Magazine.

http://www.myspace.com/markeg

 

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Steve Stoll - Blackout Audio Radio Show - UK - Feb 2006

Submitted By: Top 100draufbold
Genre: Techno
Date of Set: Mar 1st, 2006
Filesize: 140.20 MB
Total Downloads: 18

 

 

Biography of Steve Stoll

Steve Stoll sits quietly in a mid town cafe amongst the hustle of bustle of mid week Manhatten life as officer workers hurry by accompanied by ever present trails of steam, as the hot air spat out of there mouths makes contact with the cold November chill of New York. Across the street a fraught cab driver bellows a string of profanities at a passing courier who has clipped the side of his already battered yellow cab. Steve Stoll takes a sip of coffee and ponders over an idea. 'You know what' he says to no one in particular. 'In a thousand years time they'll probably find a 303 in some excavation'. Welcome to the crazy world of native New Yorker Steve Stoll. An ex army techno aficionado with more than a passing interest in all things ancient. Never one to carry the 'correct' credentials for instant access to the techno hall of fame, Stoll is something of an idiosyncratic outsider. With a preference for humanists flourishes in a world of cold machine music and spells in the gulf recording and photographing the detonation of Iraqi missiles for fun ( 'A whole group of us had the same hobby...we formed a kind of club') Stoll is far from the level headed, distant lover of all things Roland we have come to expect from our techno heroes.

Steve orders a second coffee with all the poise and over the top aggression expected of someone who has lived in New York for most of their lives. Take a slice through Steve Stoll and you'd probably be faced with a cross section consisting of half a pound of deli specialities, a few ounces of pretzels and a couple of pounds of prime time Cagney and Lacey. You see Steve Stoll and New York are interchangeable. You can take Steve Stoll out of New York but you can't take the New York out of Steve Stoll as the saying goes. Well something like that anyway. If ever there's an argument for environment shaping the music, well Steve Stoll's it. 'I think it's important to take into consideration my surroundings' Steve states. 'I live in mid-town Manhattan. When I pop out for some cigarettes the first thing I come across is a bunch of prostitutes, it's a bit of a creepy area'. In a similar way that the grandeous , spatial, almost classical sounds of Detroit reflect a once great city now ravaged by a social blight and hanging on by the skin of it's teeth, the sound of Stoll is a clear response to the claustrophobic, frantic, skyscraper heavy surrounds of New York. Like I said as New York as yellow cabs and take away pizza.

Always expect the unexpected with Steve Stoll. Never one to follow the conventional root, Stoll has preferred a path of most resistance in coming to where he eventually finds himself today. Born in Staten Island New York, Stoll found himself in the middle of a warzone in 1991 after joining the US army. Primarily involved in satellite tracking Stoll non the less ended up stationed in the Gulf with the whiz of overhead missiles soundtracking his life in the early part of 91. Add to this a stint as in house percussionist with Chicago based industrial label Wax Trax and you end up with what can only be described as a far from average scholarship. His affection for technology and his percussive talents where, with hindsight, the perfect qualities with which to launch a career in the techno field. With growing confidence and knowledge, Stoll first emerged via Richie Hawtin's Probe label under the guise of Datacloud. Hooked on the sound and with a catalogue of ideas circling in his head, Stoll went on to record under a variety of aliases including, Hemisphere with Pete Namlook, Storm for D-Jax and Ausgang for fellow New Yorker Damon Wild's label Synewave. Having established his own Proper Records in order to 'capture the New York vibe' Stoll has now found his way to London's NovaMute .Yet the sound of Stoll has maintained an unnerving consistency since he first emerged.

The hectic New York environment and fevered imagination of Stoll have combined to create slices of music far removed from the conventional confines of the techno world. With a strong techno base, Stoll has concocted an esoteric sound, alchemising individual hybrids that are as distinctive as his finger prints. 'The more simplistic and pure the sound is' ponders Stoll, ' the more direct effect you can attain'. Sharing an ethos with fellow New Yorker's Joey Beltram and Damon Wild, Stoll is a clear believer in the more is less school of thought preferring to lock and work a groove to it's maximum potential. Terming his philosophy 'minimalist modulation' captures and ensnares his listener by gently tampering with the balance of a track as it progresses towards it's conclusion. 'Repetition is the basis for many of my songs if you listen carefully' he states. 'You can hear subtle changes. A song looses it's direction if there's too much variation in it. I prefer to build a groove.'

Yet the nuances and particulars of the Stoll sound are as much a response to his environment and vision as to the equipment on which he creates his pieces. Preferring the individuality and subtleties of analogue and with a penchant for creating new sound directories courtesy of long forgotten pieces of equipment, Steve Stoll is as far removed from the modernist, techno equipment buff as is humanly possible. Obviously preferring the gentle hum of the synth rather than the organic growl of the guitar, Stoll has found a different set of equipment boundaries in which to cultivate his sound. Amassing an armoury of vintage keyboards and analogue synths, Stoll still maintains the often disregarded human element in machine music. 'I like to have my hands on the desk when I am mixing as opposed to clicking on a mouse. Even if there's a fuck- up I keep it in, it adds a human quality.' Stoll is clear in his vision, one in which the vital ingredient is that of the soul of the human being interpreted by the machine rather than the other way round.

Stoll has etched himself a clear identity. An innovator and machine alchemist, he has managed to unlock hidden agendas within previously static grooves and sounds. Never afraid to experiment within the tight confines of a particular sound, Stoll has done what many fail to achieve, to create tracks of startling individuality that , on the surface share common traits with those around them , yet on closer inspection have as much individuality as the hairs on Stoll's head. And so in March of 1998 Stoll emerges with an album entitled The Blunted Boy Wonder for London based NovaMute . Chillingly stark and minimal ,Stoll ploughs a furrow of hard hitting beats and subtly changing soundscapes more at home on a crowded dancefloor than a suburban front room. Never afraid of the funk, Stoll has, in his own way, created an album of pure dancefloor material as worthy of the tab of New York dance music as any disco classic before him. His vision does not falter, with a head down enthusiasm Stoll has crafted a delightful album that takes the techno vision to further extremes. With live plans pencilled in for 1998 a slice of New York will soon be heading over the Atlantic.

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USER COMMENTS

Rating: (9)

Mar 08, 2006

Comment: Very good hard techno here. If you like it hard and fast, then this set is for you! Mark Eg drops tracks for 30 minutes and then Steve Stoll gets on for two 15 minute live pa's....SICK!!! In between is a short conversation with the two that kind of breaks up the set and gives you insight into Steve's music production. Sound quality is very good!!
 
 
 
 

Rating: (9)

Mar 14, 2006

Comment: :-| very good set of banging techno by mark egg and steve"dinosaurus"stoll.i prefer the start of the mix,but the totality is a ggod stuff.if u love the hard techno with banging tunes,download it :=|
 
 
 
 

Rating: (8)

Mar 20, 2006

Comment: Steve's PA kicked ass...Mark Eg cutting in between records got a little annoying...all in all worth the download.
 
 
 
 

Rating: (7)

Mar 22, 2006

Comment: good show, great tunes,interview with steve stoll in the middle. interesting a first but after the tunes u hav just heard the last thing on your mind is mindless chat. so skip through that to get back down to the dirty business called techno and wot a way to it with STOLL :-|
 
 
 
 

Rating: (10)

Mar 29, 2006

Comment: I realy liked the p a from steve.loved mark eg set good bangin techno
 
 
 
 

Rating: (9)

Aug 18, 2006

Comment: Really liked this. Steve stoll has a real thunderous heavy sound. Don't have too much of his stuff other than a few 12"s and The Blunted Boy Wonder album which is very good. "Model T" is a favourite. Seems a very nice gentlemen also, which is nice....
 
 
 
 

Rating: (9)

Sep 14, 2006

Comment: damn good beats here. i agree that mark eg needs to shut the eff up, but otherwise great sounds. i dig the info in the interviews and such, but it's difficult for me to get into a mix when people are talking over the music. i understand that it's part of the platform of the show, but it is a too annoying to have any real replay value.