|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12"
|
|
REG 113EP
|
"In their bid to re-discover the obscure early '80s electronic cuts that today's dance music rely so heavily upon, New Religion bring you the 'Vanity Project'! Influential cuts from the pioneers of electronic dance music have been re-mastered and updated, bringing you a 12" series that we hope you will savour. First up is solo artist and one time member of Ultravox, John Foxx with the track 'Mr No.' 'Mr No's' surreal dark soundscape -- originally released in 1980, belies the year that it was made and is just one of many influential tracks from this camp. Previously only available as a limited edition 7" double pack, New Religion presses it on a loud 12" for the first time just for your enjoyment. Paris' man of the moment Joakim brings you the update on the flip. Joakim has been an outstanding producer on the leftfield electronic dance scene, remixing Max Berlin, Chateau Flight and Clashing Egos amongst many others to devastating effect, as well as a string of impressive solo ventures under his belt. Bringing a similar feel to this classic."
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
12"
|
|
REG 118EP
|
Originally released in 2005. Full 12" versions of 2 tracks off the CD (not on the LP version). "New Religion teams up with Kirk Degiorgio's legendary ART imprint to release an off-the-cuff, limited edition 12" from Stacey Pullen & Domu! This is a sampler for the Electric Institute LP and CD, which feature tracks from Anthony 'Shake' Shakir, 69 (Carl Craig), Kirk Degiorgio & Ian O Brien, Balil and also a super hot Mayday remix of Neuropolitique! 'Liquid Letter' by Stacey Pullen has some almost Drexciyan moments, before launching itself into a lush Detroit hybrid of techno and house styles. Domu's 'Quarantine' track could be likened to some of Carl Craig's more broken beat based productions."
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
12"
|
|
REG 097EP
|
Originally released in 2004, with remixes from Orlando Voorn and Maurice Fulton. "In the first of this two part series, New Religion invites some of their favourite artists from the electronic underground to remix tracks from their limited edition 4 x 12" series. Maurice Fulton is well known for his raw freaked jacking dancefloor style, both under his own name and as part of Mu. Rewiring Dan Keeling & Kirk Degiorgio's Critical Phase project, he fuses loose early '80s electronic punk funk with the warm strings and rhythm of today's underground dance music. Orlando Voorn, hailing from Holland, is now a resident in Detroit and a member of the ever growing Submerge family. He is also known for his releases as 'Fix' or under his Baruka & Basic Bastard pseudonyms, on the classic Buzz records and Outland respectively. Currently undergoing somewhat of a renaissance, Orlando can now be found residing and collaborating with Detroit's legendary Underground Resistance project. Here he brings us a deep remake of Manchester's Freak 7."
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
2LP
|
|
REG 118LP
|
Double LP version, deluxe gatefold jacket. 9 of the main tracks off of the CD in this DJ-friendly format (only the short CD interludes are missing from the combined vinyl releases). Features: Artists: Balil, Beetlejuice, As One, Newworldaquarium, Kirk Degiorgio, 69, Neuropolitique, Shake, Super-A-Loof.
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
CD
|
|
REG 118CD
|
Originally released in 2005; one of the great techno music comps of all time, highlighting the mid-90s work of Kirk Degiorgio's ART label. "New Religion have joined forces with legendary UK electronic label, Applied Rhythmic Technology (ART), to bring you this very special project. In this joint release, New Religion combines new exclusive tracks from legends of the scene with fresh new talent to bring you 12 exclusive and unique works of A.R.T. Original ART-artists As One (Kirk Degiorgio) and Balil (Ed from Plaid) bring fresh new tracks, while a special treat from the vaults is in store from Neuropolitique & Derrick May and Carl Craig (as 69). They are joined by Anthony 'Shake' Shakir, Domu, Stacey Pullen, Newworldaquarium and Ian O'Brien - resulting in a definite future classic. Also featured is a bonus ART classic - the rare Mayday mix of Neuropolitique's 'Artemis.' For the first time available on vinyl! All tracks on this album are pearls on their own, from the more raw funk-oriented things by Domu and Stacey Pullen, to the deep electronic freakiness by Shake, 69 and newworldaquarium and a perfect end to the journey comes with Ian O'Brien and Kirk Degiorgio, teaming up as Super-A-Loof to bring back the best memories to Derrick May gems as his remix of Inner City's 'Praise' and 'Icon.' The Electric Institute is probably the most ambitious techno compilation to be put together since the days of the Virgin Detroit comps, Virtual Sex and Artificial Intelligence." Artists: Balil, Domu, Beetlejuice, Blue Binary, As One, Newworldaquarium, Kirk Degiorgio, 69, Neuropolitique, Shake, Stacey Pullen, Super-A-Loof.
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
10"
|
|
REG 119EP
|
Originally released in 2005. "Carrying on the success of last year's Joakim/John Foxx collaboration, the second release in the series welcomes Kirk Degiorgio's new band project The Beauty Room. Re-issuing and updating long lost electronic curiosities is what The Vanity Project is all about, and we're very proud to bring you The Beauty Room's stunning version of Jan Hammer's beautiful love song 'Don't You Know.' Hefner provides a modern update on the flip. Jan Hammer's 'Don't You Know,' (taken from his classic '78 LP Melodies) has been in the more discerning leftfield DJ's box for many years now and we hope this modern update brings this great song to a different generation's attention!"
|
|
Artist |
Title |
Format |
Label |
Catalog # |
|
|
12"
|
|
REG 061EP
|
2001 release. "Using his real name for the first time, 'Nairobi' and 'Unruly' feature all the funky, techno based elements of Kirk's original ground-breaking releases on his legendary ART label, but update them with a fresh creativity and all the hi-tech polish that 10 years of studio building can bring. And if you thought the future funk of 'Nairobi' and the smooth, stylish techno of 'Unruly' was good enough then Carl Craig's remix should be the icing on the cake. A new studio refit provided the perfect opportunity for one of Detroit's finest to produce one of his most club-worthy mixes since the days of Paperclip People -- deep, moody and very Carl Craig. Perfect."
|