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Dweller Electronics Library
Dweller Electronics Library
Our co-editor Ryan Clarke has researched a list of articles, interviews and documentaries about techno and its history. We have compiled it into this library that will be updated as we find more relevant work.
·dwellerforever.blog·
Dweller Electronics Library
Daniel Dylan Wray: The legend of Serbian factory worker Abul Mogard, and other cult origin stories (Loud and Quiet)
Daniel Dylan Wray: The legend of Serbian factory worker Abul Mogard, and other cult origin stories (Loud and Quiet)
A look into the hoaxes and dubious genesis tales of cult musicians. --- However, would the music of Jungle really, truly have taken off in the way it did if it was presented honestly by the creators from the off? Would two white guys from a failed indie band who went to a £20,000 a year private school, knocking out generic laptop music, have been the buzz band of the year? […] The underlying question around all of this remains, of course: why? Pretending to be a retired Serbian factory worker is of course not the same as racial or cultural appropriation but they are linked and the answer is somewhat axiomatic in the fact that articles like this are being written. More pieces have been written about this kind of music because of both its backstory and its likely fakery than ever would have been written if some Scottish band started knocking out some retro 1970s German music. The real answer to this approach arguably comes when McFadyen is asked about the ongoing success of his project, as volumes continue to sell. “It’s been very satisfying to see the music spread naturally through word of mouth. Thankfully, as the advertising budget has been, and remains, zero.”
·loudandquiet.com·
Daniel Dylan Wray: The legend of Serbian factory worker Abul Mogard, and other cult origin stories (Loud and Quiet)
DeForrest Brown: Decolonizing Techno: Notes from a Brooklyn Dance Floor (Afropunk)
DeForrest Brown: Decolonizing Techno: Notes from a Brooklyn Dance Floor (Afropunk)
DeForrest Brown, Jr. went to the Dweller Festival and asked the question, can one celebrate Black underground artists and audiences in a gentrified genre? --- And it must be clearly understood: dance music, in all of its various forms, was born in Blackness, patterning itself after the communities, spaces and shared skills that were built in hopes of finding a specific kind of respite, and an alternate future. Techno in particular has been a music riddled with misconceptions and distorted histories, whose global popularity has unfortunately scrubbed away its origins in Black American culture. Fundamentally, techno is a rhythm and soul-based music developed in 1980s Detroit, using Motown studio production techniques, jazz and funk. Though largely adjacent to house music, techno is distinctly from Detroit, whereas house was rooted in Chicago; and both share their technologically progressive, DJ-based DNA with hip-hop, forming the holy trinity of Black dance-floor Utopias of the late 20th century.
·afropunk.com·
DeForrest Brown: Decolonizing Techno: Notes from a Brooklyn Dance Floor (Afropunk)