FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE - 1994-11 - 12" - Vinyl

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Barcode: 817231016744

Label: Seilscheibenpfeiler Schallplatten Berlin SKU: 13416 Catalogue ID: SSPB17 Format:
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FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE - 1994-11 - 12" - Vinyl

FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE - 1994-11 - 12" - Vinyl

€14.99 €6.99

 

LABEL: Seilscheibenpfeiler Schallplatten Berlin

CAT NO: SSPB17

BARCODE: 817231016744

 

Tracklisting:

A1. 1994-11 (Demokrator Remix)

B1. 1994-11 (Shed Remix)
B2. 1994-11 (Original Mix)

 

 


FUNDAMENTAL KNOWLEDGE – 1994-11

12″ – Vinyl


On most days, Seilscheibenpfeiler is fully focused on the future, but every once in a while, we like to revisit the sounds that inspired the label in the first place. Back in 1994, Sebastian Szary was living with his parents in the suburbs of Berlin and making music in his bedroom, and although he’d adopted the name Fundamental Knowledge, he never actually got around to naming any of his tracks. Two unnamed tracks with befriended artist Dr. Rhythm were released in 1994 on the very first Seilscheibenpfeiler release, a rare collectors item nowadays. The rest of the tracks were just given numbers and for the most part, they sat on Szary’s hard drive until just a couple of years ago, when 1994-2 and 1994-21 appeared on SSPB012.

Now, Szary has once again dipped into his archives and unearthed 1994-11, a synth-driven tune that’s arguably closer to a church recital than a techno party. Made with just a few pieces of equipment and recorded directly to tape, it’s a surprisingly pensive piece, although its booming drums (which don’t actually show up until the track is halfway through) take some obvious cues from late ’80s / early ’90s hiphop. Alongside the original are a pair of newly crafted 1994-11 remixes, both of which significantly ramp up the energy level.

Up first is Szary’s Modeselektor partner Gernot Bronsert, who’s billed here — for the first time — under a new solo moniker, Demokrator. Transforming the song into a hard-charging techno cut, his rework pairs bubbling, sci-fi melodies with slamming kicks, employing just enough corroded static to give the track a gritty warehouse feel. A similar vibe colors the remix from old friend Shed, who layers the ethereal melodies of the original over a rough-and-tumble assault of rave-ready breakbeats — fans of his work as Head High will definitely approve.