Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Cover

 


Table of Contents

Haunted Rave Music
The Doomcore Techno Guidebook

Table of Contents

What is Doomcore Techno?

There is something I always considered highly fascinating about the various Hardcore sub-genres that began in the 90s.
A lot of these genres are virtually unknown to almost everyone. Yet the people involved in these miniature scenes are often willing to dedicate their lives, their free time, their desire, their creativity, their well-being and sanity for their favorite passion. Be it as fans, producers, DJs, promoters, writers...
There is no prospect of fame, their is no inclination to become rich, no respect to be earned by mainstream society, and "groupies" (of any gender) are nowhere to be seen as well - yet these people go on, for years and years, decade and decade.

To use a quote from a British TV show here: "Without hope. Without witness. Without reward".

There are pocket scenes that have a whole history, genealogy, evolution, ecosphere - yet are totally unknown to the outside eye.

And, amongst these, one of the most extreme cases is the genre known as "Doomcore Techno"
The genre existed in "four decades" now. Hundred of producers added their creations to its gene pool. Entire labels and parties committed themselves to the Doomcore sound.
Yet, outside all of this... rarely anyone knows this genre exists, or how it sounds.

It's neither just a "weird categorization" of a style. In music, media, or art, sometimes terms and names are invented to describe a trend or trope, even though the general population could not care less (i.e. who, outside the sphere of journalists and film buffs, can tell "Neon Noir" movies apart from "Neo Noir" movies?).
But that isn't the case here.

Doomcore is an extant and distinct genre, that has many characteristics that sets it apart from other styles like "Industrial Hardcore" or "Dark Techno".

So, to shed some light into this dark corner of the music scene - this book was created!

History of Doomcore Techno - The 1st Generation: PCP

History of Doomcore - The 1st Generation: PCP

The history of Hardcore is quite opaque. For example, there is still some debate on what were the first Hardcore tracks (see here or here).
Luckily for us, things are much more clear when it comes to Doomcore.

The Mover - In Deep Rage (1991)

The subgenre of Doomcore was created by PCP aka Planet Core Productions. For the first few years, PCP was more or less the only label that released Doomcore.
They might have even coined the term.
By the mid 90s, the PCP mail-order service already classifies and advertises a few of its vinyl releases as being "Doomcore".
And the "doom" motif is recurring in the world of PCP. Doomed bunker loops, doom dancers, doom supporters (take care!).

The label made it clear that they produced doomed techno, doomed hardcore... doom-core!

Now that we're through with the linguistics, let us listen to the sounds (like the giant would have said).

The Mover - Gatecrusher (1991)

"Frontal Sickness" by the Mover (aka Acardipane) was released on PCP in 1991. Yet it already had the full blueprint for the Doomcore genre mechanics.
Minimalist, dark synth melodies that barely have more than 3-4 chords (or notes). Slow, deep drums. Technoid percussion.
An overload of reverberation that sounds as if haunted spectres are talking (or reaching) to you.
A stripped-down, raw aesthetic - no complicated FX setup, no epic singing, no guitar riffs or "big" elements (i.e. things that happened in a few other Techno / Hardcore Genres).
The sound is almost as reduced as in lo-fi Black Metal.

But, of course, this doomed minimalism is extremely effective - and even suitable for huge space arenas.

Program 1 - Betrayer (Pow!) (1992)

The next one's a bomb.
"Louder than a Bomb" was planted and timed by Program 1 in 1992.
This release adds "Hardcore" beats to the doom template.
Especially noteworthy is "Betrayer". Checks all the ingredients for a rumbling Doomcore track: disharmonic "three chord" synths, hard kicks, horror samples. Pow!

1993 then sees the release of "World's Hardest MF" by The Leathernecks (actually a remix of a "Louder Than a Bomb" track).
And this shows the ultra-distorted industrial edge of our Doom genre.

Freez-E-Style - Enter The Gates Of Darkness (1994) 

And then we "Enter the Gates of Darkness" with Freez-E-Style in 1994 - this will even convince those aficionados for whom "Frontal Sickness" was still too close to Techno (do such people exist?)

These were all "aka Acardipane" productions - but there were other shakers on PCP as well.
The double-sided hammer "Purple Moon" / "Understand" by Miro became another template for the Doomcore genre (deservingly!)

Miro - Purple Moon (1997) 

And Doctor Macabre unleashed a Poltergeist that even haunted the big Gabber festivals in the 90s (and today).

These were just some examples - the PCP catalogue is full of dark, sick, twisted sounds.
So better take care, doom supporter!
 
The Mover - Changing Platforms (1993)

Program 1 - World's Hardest MF (Leathernecks Remix) (1993)

Rat Of Doom - Before The Breakdown (1995)

Reign - Light and Dark (The Next Dimension) (1996)

Dr. Macabre - Poltergeist (1996) 

Reign - Hall (Huge Mix) (1997)

History of Doomcore Techno - The 2nd Generation: Labels & Artists


Quite a unique sound.

The History of Doomcore Techno: The 3rd Generation and Beyond

After the 1st and 2nd generation, the "genie was out of the bottle" and couldn't be put back in (or maybe it was a dark djinn?).
The ghost of Doomcore spread like wildfire around the world. A myriad of labels, projects, even parties were set up - solely dedicated to the doomed souls of the Hardcore Techno scene.
Most or these faltered quite quickly and disappeared again.
Hence we will cast our (evil) eye on those that lasted a bit longer, preferably to this day.

As mentioned, there are *a lot* of Doomcore labels.
So this is just a tiny selection out of these.

Hellfire

Hellfire was set up DJ Darkside, who has been around the Hardcore and Doomcore scene for a long time.
This label stands out as it almost exclusively dedicated to vinyl releases, in a time when most others have gone digital.
Hellfire is a home to some very high profile names, like Dr Macabre, FFM Shadow Orchestra or The Horrorist.


▲NGST

Technically this isn't about a label;
Angst is a project by FFF, who was one of most successful 2nd generation Breakcore artist.
No breakin' here, but darkness through and through.
This ain't some poser-aggressive big bassdrum shit; the sound is more introverted, there is influence by ebm, 80s industrial, black ambient and even shoegaze.
Angst classified their music as "doomgaze" accordingly.



Doomcore Records

Doomcore Records was set up in the cold, dark harbor city of Hamburg, and had over 200 releases since its inception.
Famous artists and newcomers have released side 2 side on this label, and the musical styles are all over the map, too; as long as its rhythmic, repetitive, and wakes up the dead.


System Shutdown

Another Hamburg project (the doom must be strong in this city).
There are few releases, but they keep coming steadily at a timed pace, and they are all the better because of this.
These aren't just tracks, the releases are often tied into multi-media experiences with videos and spoken word(s), and extensive myths and lore are drawn around each object.



Doomcore Initiative

A quite young label with some very strong releases.
Not much is known, but the people involved in this project are scattered around the globe. Maybe bound by a vow silence?
The releases themselves are esoteric and dark.



Dead Zone Communications / Future Dust Division

The DarkCreator was a player in the original Dutch Gabber scene, so he is a true veteran of hard sounds.
The labels are not about Gabber though, it's Doom- and Industrial Hardcore all the way.
Almost every release hosts some quality music, so it's definitely worth checking out.



Nethercords

Nethercords is run out of "down under" by Tyrant X who, according to his bio, is "a disciple of Lilith and Hecate".
And that's exactly what you get here; haunted and occult sounds that make you feel as if you have stepped into the nether worlds already.
Most releases center more on Industrial Hardcore and Techno; but Doom will be met, too.



Noisj

Noisj was *the* label of the 2010s Industrial Hardcore scene, with releases popping out almost every other day.
The schedule is more paced now, but it's still surfing the tide.
In total, there are lots and lots of styles on this label; Gabber, Hardcore, Oldschool... and Doomcore too!



Dark Impact

Sublabel of an Italian label dedicated to more contemporary Hardcore sounds.
But as the name implied, this ain't mainstream, but all about the dark side of the core.
Industrial Hardcore, Dark Techno, Doomcore...
There is steady output, the music has high production values, and the releases are strong in general.



Dark.Descent

Host to a family of labels and sublabels; most are about hardcore-techno-acid sounds, but there are some pure doom releases too.
Again, this is an already veteran label which is still quite vital.
Worth checking if you are willing to do some digging.


Pre-History: From Industrial Goths to Doomcore Techno: Tracing a Dark Bloodline

I always like to say that Doomcore actually predates the advent of Hardcore, even that of Techno. A tongue-in-cheek statement, of course, but with more than one grain of truth.

The reality is that the types of synths, sounds, melodies, chords, arpeggios that are used in Doomcore tracks had been around in the 80s already.
Electronic music and electronic experiments where vast in that decade; and while you had euphoric poppy Cindy Laupers and Limahls on one side, darkness ruled in the valleys that led into the underground.
There were "scenes" such as post-punk, goths, industrial, ebm, minimal-wave that often bled into each (yeah and a lot of these "terms" came only in major use after the 80s had long ended). It is astonishing to me how similar some of these synth-tracks were to what we call Doomcore now. All they would have needed was a straight 909 and some percussion.

Was this a case of "parallel evolution" (if somewhat time-shifted) or is this really the root and origin of Doomcore?

Well, there are at least a lot of artists that claim this earlier sound as a source of inspiration - including The Horrorist, Marc Acardipane, Current 909 (many non-doom producers as well - such as The Speed Freak, Xol Dog 400, Taciturne)... so there definitely is a thread there... a dark and blood-stained thread.

But regardless. The "Electronic Doom Music" of the 80s is able to stand on its own as well, with its powerful, punishing beats and haunting, tenebrous sentiments.

So let's look at 10 tracks from this occulted realm now:

#1. Anne Clark - Contact


#2. Nightmoves - Transdance (Uk Club Mix)


#3. The Actor - Le Champ D'Honneur


#4. Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark - I Betray My Friends


#5. John Foxx - The Garden


#6. Nocturnal Emissions - In Our Time


#7. The Cure - One Hundred Years (Studio Demo)


#8. New Order - Doubts Even Here


#9. Oppenheimer Analysis - Scorpions


#10. The Vyllies - Whispers In The Shadow

The Early Doomcore Techno And Dark Hardcore Canon

This canon covers the first generation of Doomcore Techno (i.e. Planet Core Production) and the second generation (the tenebrous contemporaries of PCP). It does not cover the later generations, i.e. those who were directly inspired by PCP and actively tried to build on their doomed legacy in one way or the other.

Or, in other words. It tries to cover the very beginnings of dark and shadowy Hardcore Techno emissions; that created a movement that is, to this day, as legendary as it is invisible. "Members only", so to say.

It contains both the more introverted, technoid sounds - and the all out twisted hardcore. The slower stuff - and the faster. The minimalist, and the monumental.

It also includes general dark hardcore tracks and those that are more "doomcore-adjacent", on the cusp, than pure breed doom sounds; but that we felt are important, too.

Of course such a list can only be incomplete and highly subjective.
Each Doomhead might have different tracks that they consider to be their very personal favorites.

P.S.
The interested person might also check the Early Hardcore Techno canon:

https://thehardcoreoverdogs.blogspot.com/2024/09/the-early-hardcore-techno-canon-kickin_24.html

But for now... here we go again.

The Early Doomcore Canon

This canon is also accessible as a Youtube playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvgSYgoYaFC_eL2pXuidlNKeQUCGk3rdf
  1. Freez-E-Style - Enter The Gates Of Darkness (Stay Strong, Raise The Flag And Spread The Spheres Of Light) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdLhYfjWyJk
  2. Aftermath - The Aftermath https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8Cvj3t7mOU
  3. Arrivers - Dark Invader https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ6qSKNNwoo
  4. Arrivers - The Arrival https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vD8P0_7m76k
  5. Arrivers - The Things To Come https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yly91eMxY84
  6. Superpower - Innocent Minds https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mD5n2OlbYhQ
  7. Superpower - By The Fire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF01F41lAYM
  8. Superpower - In The Midnight Hour https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzzS4zrkNss
  9. Miro - Purple Moon (Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l54irfablXg
  10. E-Man - XTC Express (Higher Level Mix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjmGLB7YMcY
  11. Renegade Legion - Torsion
  12. Renegade Legion - Dark Forces
  13. Miro - Blue Sun https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yanWyEYyklA
  14. Disintegrator - In The Sun https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AyvjLrw1uc
  15. Miro - Purple Moon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMKbCf8gXmk
  16. Pascal II - The Future Is Ours https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wP04JHjpl9s
  17. Frozen - Soul Saver https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKtmTT3rTAM
  18. Reign - Hall (Maximum Mix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TfEHhHoKUjo
  19. Neuroviolence - Surfing On A Sea Of Blood https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC5eh2FXggk
  20. Reign - The Final https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WJOWKmnGMg
  21. Evidence - Inspirit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMScljzpbvw
  22. The Overlord - Master Of The Universe https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q54KkVhE0tc
  23. ? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCzroN2ZzHk
  24. DrMacabre - Dance Macabre https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/danse-macabre
  25. Lunatic Asylum - Seven https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/seven
  26. Cybermouse - My Dorectives https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LAQpjPLdTE
  27. Sonic Subjunkies - Confusion https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxRQWxdWQ0Y
  28. Miro - Understand https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9T5VX9fT7vk
  29. Taciturne - Phenylphrin-Hydrochlorid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7mx7KEa0B0
  30. Neuroviolence - Baal https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2dmeTl5U9M
  31. Neuroviolence - Das Boot https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=geIDYy_KItI
  32. Neuroviolence - ETA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jrxy7iZXbGo
  33. Frozen - Into The Light https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPioPBCsWTA
  34. I-F - Shadow Of The Clown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUBFAkBbwhU
  35. Taciturne - Haematopan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J-TGMJ2yuc
  36. Robert Armani - Hit Hard https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUoHrGDFcqg
  37. Lorenz Attractor - Shadow Fax https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkdHFP0nXEk
  38. Lorenz Attractor - Complexity Crisis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pqUqp_P6ks
  39. The Mover - Track 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dna578Br2cE
  40. I-F - Envy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPoEKSxY-5M
  41. X-101 - Rave New World https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoKARg1efEw
  42. Dr Macabre - Macabre https://www.hardtunes.com/tunes/dr.-macabre-meets-rotterdam-terror-corps-macabre-remastered/49145
  43. The Horrorist - Mission Ecstasy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JRoA8O5m6_Q
  44. Manga Corps - The Hunter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qer_ygpcnZE
  45. T-Bone Castro - Return 2 Planet E https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNq300IPGpU
  46. Manga Corps - First Wave https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EcjUHbPmEWA
  47. Manga Corps - War Dancer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJUfjXQyECM
  48. Superpower - Molecule Man https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2SnAvyeCew
  49. The Horrorist - Flesh Is The Fever https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kK-i-O-REPA
  50. Superpower - Dark Germany https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptHGg_pxr88
  51. Rat Of Doom - Untitled (A1) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7csOBKpqdY
  52. Taciturne - Der Toten https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXYVBKo63ZE
  53. Rat Of Doom - Before The Breakdown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QgjAxf_bVk
  54. Rat Of Doom - Untitled (B2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QgjAxf_bVk
  55. Current 909 - The Lockdown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zttXZgPLe2Q
  56. Manu Le Malin & The Horrorist - The Storm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFNymDEzWi8
  57. Tanochinjaii - Fallen Angel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmn9TST5cAw
  58. Evidence - Arctic Rider https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gqwe4QqpVs
  59. Evidence - Black Ice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sf3T52qCuBo
  60. French Connection - French Connection https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/french-connection
  61. Arrivers - I Declare https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-1i7Lhe_Fs
  62. Arrivers - Baptism of Fire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkK6q7obsv0
  63. Negative Burn - Gates of Hell https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/gates-of-hell
  64. Negative Burn - Gates of Heaven https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/gates-of-heaven
  65. Dr. Macabre - Night of the Living Dead https://hauntedhouserecords.bandcamp.com/track/night-of-the-living-dead
  66. Arrivers - The Sky Is Falling https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIGaf_nSGFk
  67. Marc Acardipane ft. The Horrorist - Human Machine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IY-rt9tt5k
  68. Acrosome - Akros Soma https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHGQE7ThKAA
  69. The Horrorist - Into the Moonbeam - Arena Mix https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1B5bpsr_1jk
  70. The Horrorist - The Real World https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMYBBcfGDZo
  71. The Horrorist - We Are All Live https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDzn2iqFaxs
  72. The Horrorist - Ice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RG_YYav1-Nc
  73. 8 A.M. - The Fog Track https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7a_ctvNWiik
  74. Miro - Rizing High https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuYna6gmo9Q
  75. Miro - Shining https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEB0o_pvDX0
  76. Dr Macabre - You Must Die
  77. Superpower - Move: Don't Stop! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4Ud0m9HUf8
  78. The Horrorist - Can You Hear The Sound https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdSY6gaEhzk
  79. Current 909 - Hospitalism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ifn-ObDCz6A
  80. Reign - Light and Dark (The Next Dimension) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JxZ_qc5O7Q
  81. Reign - Skeletons March https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fMSoMCBHDp0
  82. Taciturne - Den Toten (97 Hammel Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zN0A7xB9WLM
  83. Current 909 - Information War https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFNRs-Ybg8A
  84. Current 909 - Golden Dawn https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIpvd7XQEmc
  85. The Horrorist - Run For Your Life https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZnXnVE-yyU
  86. The Horrorist - It Goes Like This https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Fx1b_V8ItU
  87. Corrosion Of Conformity - King Of The Rotten (Kotzaak Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4H78JuizFM
  88. Somatic Responses - Axon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GsMILhciNas
  89. Reign - Start Level 99 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-K6bu6KYNHs
  90. Cypher - Marchin' into Madness https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7U3wa4_Iuc
  91. Rave Creator - Thru Eternal Fog https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neyGgKMqa8g
  92. Temper Tantrum - Africa 4010 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7A2MYc_n1xg
  93. Reign - Hall (Huge Mix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=De4sHmNO3eU
  94. Program 1 - Betrayer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfhzlAKfLTM
  95. Taciturne - Mourning https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8oQYVpWpDg
  96. Zekt - Explorers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-lMcdwoS90
  97. Zekt - Exp. Part 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGKRlwiignQ
  98. Zekt - Phantom In The Hall https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwfs96sfNrI
  99. Reincarnated Regulator - The Hiding (Reanimated Chicago Dub) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwfs96sfNrI
  100. FFM Shadow Orchestra - D.N. Acid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cs7YFn9M93c
  101. FFM Shadow Orchestra - A Second Split https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx_e6-eyhEY
  102. FFM Shadow Orchestra - French B*tch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSRqekH_Yds
  103. FFM Shadow Orchestra - Dead Man Walking https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkWeX-mdxmc
  104. The Mover - Gatecrusher https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5LDbKDUwhY
  105. The Mover - Nightflight https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otMIaSNgpQg
  106. DJ Jappo & Lancinhouse - Sacrifice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqtrA14IwlA
  107. The Horrorist - Symphony #9 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2--8ymMEM0
  108. DJ Silence - I Got The Beat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1zZoCG3oVc
  109. DJ Silence - Terra Firma https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5z24C3D4PI
  110. DJ Silence - Immortal https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUN6KM7r7kI
  111. Planet Phuture - 2017 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8_POK8Zb1A
  112. Cold Blooded Split - Untitled https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDeAGkM-_Vo
  113. Cold Blooded Split - Invaders https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8arS-6NQoA
  114. Program 1 - MF Skulls https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7NJ_Oq3Bdw
  115. Dusty Angel - Acid Bitch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlUTXCGfzFA
  116. The Mover - At The Abyss Of Deception https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njAy9a9g-pE
  117. PCP - The Phuture (Live 28.1.94 FFM Festhalle) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQUvqT5vKkY
  118. Planet Phuture - Suburban Survival System https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKXORonR6ZM
  119. Darius G - Dead Zone https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMVyUcaZqdg
  120. Darius G - Final Cut https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUJI3tP_9TQ
  121. Darius G - Industrial Blues https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lCVGBHhbmw
  122. Program 1 - World's Hardest MF (Leathernecks Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMs40jhWBcI
  123. Epoch 90 - Last Night of the World (War Zone) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6mEWPOGsiE
  124. Mask ‎– Behind The Line A1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPHSgcWpSy8
  125. Reincarnated Regulator - Untitled A https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jt8o9jjJemA
  126. Reincarnated Regulator - Untitled B https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JA4l14xQlV8
  127. Zekt - True Hard https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC9HPrK7Ap8
  128. Zekt - The Outside World https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryJpTaS7peU
  129. Terrorists - America https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvMsvNu4HrY
  130. 303 Nation - Dos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDwGeBzDRVk
  131. 303 Nation - A World Noire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltgybSBCQBc
  132. The Overlord - Countdown 2017 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBhyeOsnj68
  133. The Overlord - Kill https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kM35nYUhVJ0
  134. Noface - Master Of The Lost Souls https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkjiXe-6FaY
  135. Noface - Torment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-2bd_Jm_Mo
  136. Lorenz Attractor - Dissonance And Disorder https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9l2Rr67vs6U
  137. George Sabellicus - B1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAzmL8Mcigc
  138. George Sabellicus - B2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8Ux-sH2wJg
  139. Spurious - Morpheus https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-mpt_oZgPY
  140. Evidence - Resist https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSNBmba_Itw
  141. Miro - Understand (Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKdOhHl-oc4
  142. Miro - Arize https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFOUFFWXWus
  143. Miro - Destroy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhNoywmHfRE
  144. The Mover - Astral Demons https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSMT2KdQt5Q
  145. The Mover & Rave Creator - Astral Demons 94 (Cold Planet Remix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSz84WbjfkQ
  146. The Mover - Into Wasteland https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ofpZbYp72U
  147. The Mover - Reconstructin' Instructions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZXDqKhSmBU
  148. Alien Christ - Of Suns & Moons Phase II https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRu4Mezxsjw
  149. Alien Christ - Interracial https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_HYDNpaVww
  150. Barracuda - Braineaters (Craig Tayaffo Mix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiOK0pf-SK0
  151. Barracuda - Braineaters (Bellini Uno Mix) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXfuuHZJigg
  152. The Mover - World Downfall https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJXSZmrELRs
  153. The Mover - The Emperor Takes Place https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dpTMIdTHcZc
  154. The Mover - Over Land & Sea https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cb3mAoaPjz4
  155. The Mover - Changing Platforms https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFakkMXHfiM
  156. Ultra Spaceman - Electric (Cross) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FwbxoIOkhU
  157. Frozen & Dr Macabre - Dimension Of The Doomed https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qry87sLIhMw&t=2984

When it comes to the 90s era, another important factor was Fifth Era Records.
But due to the unique nature of their releases, we felt it would not do them justice to try to catalogue and list them in any way; thus, feel very free to explore these highly recommendable sounds on your own!

The forgotten genre of Techno

What is the definition of the Doomcore sound?

In a sense, Doomcore is more "limited" and closer to a template than the other Hardcore and Techno genres.
When you look at Speedcore, for example, it could be a lot of things - 300 BPM mayhem with guitars and screams, or 800 bpm noize, maybe even very fast Gabber stuff with Rave stabs... very varied.
Doomcore does not have that much of a range in tempo and elements.

The tracks usually have a steady, "four to the floor" drum around 120-150 BPM (exceptions exist!).
Unlike the general rule in Gabber, the drums do not have to be overly distorted, and a lot of tracks have "plain" Techno drums, especially among the "Oldschool" Doomcore releases.

Apart from the drums, there is Techno / Rave type percussion. And this is one the defining things that sets it apart: it's groovy. It's danceable. Maybe not in an elated-raver kind of way, but it's not just stuff to mosh around and bang your head to (like Speedcore, for example).

And now the most important thing: in almost every case, there is a dark, grim, "doomy" melody, drone, or ambience.
Traditionally, this has been a few detuned / disharmonic synth sounds; often just 3-4 chords, one for every 4 or 8 beats, and then looped again.
I always felt this put Doomcore close to the non-electronic genre of punk rock, which has a similar "3 chord" scheme going on.

Nowadays, the melody can be anything, though, from wild arpeggios and dark ambient drones to movie-like scores.

And while we're at the movies: often vocals, quotes, sentences, are taken from horror and scifi movies and then added to the tracks. "Demons to some, angels to others".

And this is, essentially, the Doom formula.
A lot of tracks are really "just this". A steady drum at ~140 bpm, sparse hits of percussion, 3 synth tones and scary movie samples.

Yet, despite this "simple" template, this structure gets varied and mutated to the highest degree.
There are "miniature symphonies" using these basic elements. Or there are tracks that add further layers, until it becomes an epic production.
Some add the most distorted drums. Some add vocals by a real singer (or themselves).
Some add elements of EBM / Industrial.
Some add elements of gothic and new wave.

This is part of the dark beauty of Doomcore.
Despite its simpleness at "first glance", it is almost infinitely complex.

Oh, and before we go out completely, let us add one more thing: in 99% of cases, huge, cavernous reverberation and echoes are a must!

The Aesthetics of Doom

More than any other Hardcore sub-style, Doomcore is defined by its own aesthetics, themes, mood, settings and tropes.
And these are, as expected, dark, doomed, and haunted.
There are references to horror movies, hellraiser, nightmare on elm street, the evil dead.
There are tracks about spiritism, hauntings, demonic possession, infernal vortices.

Madness is a theme; the mental asylum, derangement, the criminally insane.

Zombies, Poltergeists, Vampires, Witchcraft and Lilith - they are all here to join the party and their feet burn on their dancefloor - and maybe they'll burn your soul too, if you're not careful!

Similarly, there is an affection for science fiction tropes - of the dystopian kind.
Alien reign, future police states, meteors hitting earth... and the apocalypse is just around the corner.

Related to this, we can find tracks of resistance and political uprising - against these dystopian authorities, against present or future tyrannies.

Yeah, tracks who are outspoken in that manner are less common than those that are about summoning spirits.

But the theme of dark rebellion, an uprising of societal outcasts, the fury of the lost & forgotten (and the dead and haunted?) is a thread that runs right through the whole doomcore movement.

We can see that the general themes of Doomcore appear close to other genres, like Gothic, Industrial, Death- and Black Metal.

Yet there is of course also the dance beats, the euphoria, the ecstasy of Techno parties here.

A mid 90s entry in the PCP mail order catalogue advertised it's records as the right stuff for "future zombie ravers".

Hence it is a bit of a paradox. "The Graveyard becomes the Raveyard".
And all the grim emotions, the hauntings, the tracks about demonic possession should not be taken too seriously and with an "ironic eye", too.

Generally, Doom heads are more like horror movie nerds who are well behaved in social happenings, and not real life Hannibal Lecters.

Bridging this dichotomy - between "Doom" and "Rave", between melancholy and euphoria, dark feelings and nights of dancing, is in my opinion, the main thing that defines Doomcore.

Credits and About

About the author:

Hi,
I'm Sönke aka Low Entropy.
"Hardcore Raver" since 1994, music producer since 1996.
I was part of the 2nd generation of Doomcore artists, that were directly inspired by PCP (I didn't include me in that chapter of the book because, well, that wouldn't be modest, right?)
I produced in many other electronic styles too, though.

Apart from other activities, I wrote for fanzines or ran my own, and ended up documenting a lot of the things that happened in the 90s, and the decades afterwards.

Other e-books by me include:

The Hardcore Primer - An Extensive Guide To 90s Underground Hardcore Techno Labels And Artists
https://hardcoretechnoprimer.blogspot.com/

The Fischkopf Records Guidebook
https://fischkopfrecordsguidebook.blogspot.com/

PCP - Legends In Their Life - The unofficial Planet Core Productions guidebook
https://pcplegendsintheirlife.blogspot.com/

And now it was time to tackle the doom.

Links:

https://lowentropyproducer.blogspot.com/
https://lowentropy.bandcamp.com/
https://www.discogs.com/artist/22777-Low-Entropy
low.entropy.80@gmail.com

About the book:

The Doomcore Techno movement exists for several decades now, and there never was any danger it would falter.
What's new is that there is now a growing interest in this music by the outside world, too.
Infos, facts and knowledge are hard to come by, though.

The book caters to the "newcomers" of the scene who are hungry to know more - and maybe the "old dogs" can still learn a few new tricks, too!

This book includes a history of the Doomcore genre, information about some of its labels and producers, musings on sonic themes, and a look at topics that might not be "strictly doomcore", but are related to the whole thing.

For now, the book is hosted on these Blogger webpages.
PDF and other formats are planned for the future - and hopefully, even a printed edition.

Review of the Past: Reign - Time Machine (Dance Ecstasy 2001 - DE 2054)

The releases by Miro Pajic under his various akas - like E-Man, Steve Shit, Jack Lucifer, or simply Miro - are usually highly revered by Hardcore-, Doomcore-, and PCP-heads.
But this one tends to get a bit overlooked. I rarely hear people mention it, or see the tracks in DJ playlists.
And this is completely undeserved. I think this is one of the best releases the (E-) man ever did!


The A side sports "A Better Tomorrow". This is the best known track on this release, as the crew pushed it onto various compilations.
A highly interesting blend: not really "Hardcore" in the sense of Gabber primitivism. In its essence, it's a Techno track; but in a Miro way; in a highly unusual way.
It really feels as if the eponymous "Time Machine" worked and the future sounds of Techno got sucked into the present day (which, in our timeline, is actually in the past now).

4 or out of 5 stars for this one already.


But now let's turn the record around.

Surprisingly, the flip side features a mini-mix; 3 tracks that are seamlessly joined into one. And this is rare for vinyl releases.
Because of this, only one track has a "normal" length; the other two barely pass the 2 minute mark.
But the tracks are all the greater, despite this.

You know the epic tracks by Miro, like "Purple Moon" or "Hall", right?
Well, I think these have the most "epic" sound of all of them.


It makes me feel as if I'm in a huge space arena on a different planet (or a different time in the future), and there is either a major ceremony or a giant party happening. Choirs of a 1000 voices are singing, fanfares and synthetic horns are blaring, while massive, echoed kick drums blast on.
This sound is really out of this world (or out of time).

A few years after this release, Miro switched his style to more contemporary Techno.
But this "Time Machine" leaves us with a lasting glance into the future. And the future is massive!

All Cold Rush Records releases listed, rated, and short-reviewed

Lost 1 - Various - The Last Judgement Part One EP

the first ep on the legendary cold rush label.
as varied as it can be.
"impossible xtc" is haunted sub-frequency techno.
"the fog track" is a true doom anthem, and surely a nice fit for any dancefloor at 8 am.
"Slo Motion" is a sub-bass powerhouse.
and "Maniac" is certain to twist your mind.

Rating: 81 / 100

Lost 2 - Various - Doom Supporters EP

take care, doom supporters!
one of the first "doomcore" genre releases; heavy techno and austere atmospheres come in plenty now.
my pick is "Fallen Angel", a track reminiscent of cosmic heartbreak, or an angel's tear turned into a soundwave.

91 / 100

Lost 3 - Cypher Doomed Bunkerloops

the first release by a "solo" artist on the label.
the well known one is "Marchin' Into Madness" here. ferocious snare- and bass-drums guide you on your march into hell - is anybody out there?
"Frozen Boom Erection", on the other hand, will get your heart pumping.

77 / 100

Lost 4 - Rave Creator – Lights - Sound - Action!

a lot of action here, as this EP includes 3 classics:
"Immortal" is build upon a rock hard bassdrum, intermingled with classic acid house vocals;
"Bleep Blaster" is a true bleepcore anthem that sounds like a lunatic got hold of a whistle to blow into.
And "Thru Eternal Fog" is another great track celebrating smoke filled strobe powered nightly dancefloors in derelict buildings.

85 / 100

Lost 5 Freez-E-Style – Enter The Gates Of Darkness

another big, big classic.
"Enter The Gates Of Darkness" is one of the earliest "doomcore" tracks with a highly distorted, powerful kick.
"doom dancer" is tripping the dark fantastic.

75 / 100

Lost 6 - Cold Crush City Cru – The 6th City Mob EP

yes yes, this is the one (sorry, Laura!).
as it includes "stereo murder", maybe the most monumental track by PCP (and in techno history!)
"t99" type samples, a thunderous, reverberated drum... guaranteed to send anyone in the huge space arena into madness.
the flipside gives us another two mean and dirty tracks.

99 / 100 (for stereo murder!)

Lost 6 R - Marshall Masters – Stereo Murder (The Cold Rush Remixes)

"more of the same"? No, 3 very diverse remixes!
reign adds a cavernous doomcore type sound; rave creator adds extra boldness;
and "Stereo Murder (2 Tonys' Progressive Club Mix)" is what the name implies.

in my opinion, the original release is slightly better, with its untouchable reduced purity; but this is a great release as well.

90 / 100

Lost 7 - The Mover & Rave Creator – Rave The Planet

most people will know this EP for atmos-fear - and deservingly so.
but the other tracks are interesting as well:
"O.K. Bassquake" is a dancefloor killer with a very twisted mentasm and vocal sound;
and "Astral Demons 94 (Cold Planet Remix)" is an outer space trancecore remix of the classic original track.

91 / 100

Lost 8 - Reign – Chapter One: Skulls And Crossbones

miro pays a visit to cold rush records, using his "reign" alias.
mentasm-fueled doomcore-gabber with miro's trademark somber, rude attitude and samples

62 / 100

Lost 9 -  Protectors Of Bass – Awake In Neo Tokyo

pitch-hiker is on here; a track widely known beyond the hardcore sub-scene of techno.
in case *you* don't know it, it's an genius-bordering-on-the-insane 909 bassdrum workout without any other elements; just on-going filtering and distortion. if you hear it, you will love it.
and the flipside is pure phuture sound.

92 / 100

Lost 10 - Pilldriver / Tilt! – Apocalypse Never

"doom supporter" marc acardipane seems to have had a sudden change of mind, because now it's "apocalypse never"?
either way, it's a superb track somewhere between hardcore, doomcore, and gabber; i won't describe it further, as you probably know it already!
"Hell-E-Copter" is one of these speed-up / slow-down tracks, and i think PCP always does this very well.

87 / 100

Review: Minimum Syndicat - S​​​.​​​C​​​.​​​H​​​.​​​O​​​.​​​R​​​.​​​L. (KILLEKILL029)


The long, long awaited album by Minimum Syndicat finally dropped. Their record label tells us:

"S.C.H.O.R.L. is their first full length album [...] At this point subgenres are less important than in the past, it's more like the alternative electronic scene against the industry turning techno into moronic money-driven entertainment."

And indeed, we discover a bold and eclectic, even at parts non-sequitur clash of the most different styles here.
Or, from another perspective: it's not multiple styles: it's *their* style. As this style runs like a red thread to all the tracks.
Heavy electro hardcore cinematic Sci-Fi dancefloor score music. At it's best!

The track titles underscore the idea that we are enjoying a movie with its soundtrack here:
"The mantis-priests have gathered", "Signal from Vertrem-4", "Requiem orbital" (a collaboration with Umwelt)... and this definitely adds to the moods and atmospheres of the respective tracks.
And I am hallucinating this, or does the track order compose a whole, a complete, genuine Sci-Fi story from start to end? Starting with strangely received signals from outer space, and later tracks such as "Scorched earth" or "The aftermath (a bitter Victory)" hinting at a disastrous end for humanity, brought upon them by the hands of the incoming aliens.

Either way, this is already one of my favorite releases (of all artists, all genres) for this year - and maybe even my favorite MS release in general!

So, doomed scifi hardcore aficionados, grab your popcorn, take a seat, and then - lights, sounds, action!

Full Length Review: Purple Moon / Understand

Review: Miro - Purple Moon / Understand - DE 2052

It somewhat doesn't feel right to review this record, as it has already be done a dozen times by other people. yet is one of Miro Pajic's most intriguing works, and worth reviewing.
When it came out, there was nothing before it. There was nothing like it. You can check the back catalogues of the labels of that era, and you will see there isn't any record like this. Maybe only some earlier works of Miro can contend. And afterwards, there is nothing either. Except for Miro's tracks of course. But, as far as I can tell, no other artist after this record has managed to pull off something similar to this. It is definitely one of the early highs of Miro's music journey.

A1 Purple Moon

This is it. The Purple Moon. Do I need to describe it? Outer space beats open this records. We are moved along, more elements are added. While this track is at a fast speed, it is nothing like the "Hardcore" of it's time. This track feels more as if one of the great sonic pioneers, such as Jarre or Klaus Schulze, had their go at Techno as if this was done by a Techno man on a Techno label.Tthen, the breakdown, and the high-cutoff-synth-saws come in. I listen to a lot of music; especially melodic music. But this melody is something that is in a field of its own. I rarely heard something as beautiful; as sweet; as moving, as the harmonies of this track. It seems simple at first, but, in its simplicity it is extraordinary complex. The melody is what drives this tracks, and it makes it special.

B2 Understand

This track is often overlooked in favor of Purple Moon. But not rightly so. This, too, is one of Miro and PCP's greatest works. The rising synth sound prepares us for what is to come next. I can't say what image this track invokes in me - a space station, space exploration, or an alien meeting, somewhere far in the universe? But it is a powerful image.
The melody again is the main thing for me here, less melancholic, yet as powerful, and more complicated as in Purple moon. I could listen to it in a loop for a long time.
The track is more of a Hardcore affair than Purple Moon, yet again far removed from the normal "Hardcore" of its time. This track is a gem, and the whole record is a precious jewel.

Review: Final Dream – The Future Is Dark


If there ever was an "underdog" release, it's this one. "Final Dream" is a project by Phil Klein aka Bass Junkie, who is known for championing the Electro-Funk sound of the 80s when no-one else had the balls to do this (of course, *by now* every hipster producer is back onto this sound again).
But let's not talk electro this time. Because, in a very unusual move, this is actually a gritty Hardcore release by the man.
And a very interesting one at that. Very experimental sounds, and it seems to draw from a lot of sources, such as "Industrial Hardcore", Gabber, Acid, even a bit of Speedcore and, yes, Electro.
It's really one of a kind, and the production values are top-notch (which was still a bit of a rare thing in that period).

I see no reason why this release did not become big big big and end up in lots of sets and tracklists. Maybe lack of promo, being released on an "obscure" label, and being an unusual project for Phil Klein are the culprits here.

Either way, truly experimental and well-made releases in the Hardcore spectrum are hard to come by, and this one truly nails it.

https://battletrax.bandcamp.com/album/final-dream-the-future-is-dark

Review: Miro - Forever And Ever (Planet Phuture)


During his PCP/ACA era, Miro produced in a wide array of styles. He is probably best known for his work as Stickhead/Jack Lucifer/The Kotzaak Klan (and more) for Kotzaak Unltd., delivering vicious and merciless Hardcore and Speedcore that's darker than the devil himself.

There were also projects like Steve Shit and Billy the Kid, with their cheeky, hit-the-dancefloor type Gabber anthems full of hoovers and rave stabs. Or the more restrained but very powerful Techno of projects such as The Overlord or Reign. Yet there was also another thing that stood out very much among his creative output. Tracks like Purple Moon, Blue Sun, Inspirit, Rizing High...

And if you were longing to hear some tracks in that vein again, I have some very good news for you! Because I think it's safe to say that this new release by Miro on Planet Phuture is a straight continuation of that style. Titled "Forever And Ever," it consists of two tracks, "Golden Dawn" and "Forever And Ever" (just like in the old days when releases like this "just" had 2 tracks - an A side and a B side).

"Golden Dawn" starts with a 909 drum going on as new elements are introduced and the drum gets put through further distortion. Then, in the breakdown, a synth melody slowly builds up. And it's an epic melody... dreamy, melancholic, poignant. In my opinion, definitely on the level of the melody work that can be found in classic tracks like Purple Moon. We are informed that "this one's designed to open your mind," the bass drum kicks back in, and surely this is the moment when all ravers will hit the floor and dance into ecstasy... The track goes on and introduces variations to the harmony and rhythmic elements and never loses its tight emotional grip on the listener.

"Forever and Ever" follows a very comparable structure: a mixture of Hardcore and Techno elements, beats, percussion FX... with powerful energy. While I prefer Golden Dawn by a notch, this is a fantastic and stunning track too. And again, the melody is of stimulating, hypnagogic, euphoric quality.

With this release, Miro and Planet Phuture unleash two monsters of the sonic kind again, which are tantamount to the legendary releases on PCP and AKA (and, in my opinion, take things even further ahead) and are bound to become future classics.

Review: Current 909 - The Price Of Existence Is Eternal Warfare



Atmosfear was a label existing in the Experimental Hardcore milieu of the 90s, associated with other labels like Praxis, Zero Tolerance London, Loop... but the sound of the label was quite different from the sometimes very noizy and "rough" outings of its aforementioned peers.
Instead, it focused on atmospheric Techno releases - but, to be honest, these two terms do not give the label justice, as it would be much more exact to say that it has very own, unique sounds, outside of genre terms.
The bandcamp info says the two main inspirations were: 1. the industrial, cult, underground movie and music scene of the 80s with its dark, bleak, and perverted ideas and concepts, and 2. the ecstatic Techno and Rave scene of the 90s, with its blissful euphoria and endless dancing. Creating a very paradox mixture, but one that definitely works here.

The label only saw two regular 12” releases, both by Current 909 aka DJ Pure; and this CD release.
It contains all tracks that were on the vinyls, plus plenty of bonus material.
Stand-out tracks include "The Lockdown", a very special and interesting early Doomcore affair, with pounding, grinding drums, darkest synth pads, that is pushed forward by samples from the legendary John Hillcoat movie "Ghosts... of the Civil Dead" which create a claustrophobic and anxious atmosphere with its allusion to a permanent lock down.
"Hospitalism", which probably is the best-known and most played track from the original 90s releases; an early Industrial Hardcore and Doomcore track as well, with a Terminator-like monotonous steel brutality.
"Golden Dawn", which seems to channel Lory D or Lorenz Attractor a bit, and is a very fine hypnagogic Dark Ambient / Electronic piece (peace).
Among the bonus tracks, go to "Information War", which is built around 'that' Genesis P-Orridge sample from the Hamburg-based Decoder movie and another very psychedelic Dark Ambient / Techno piece (peace).
But, essentially, all tracks are killer here, and there is not really one weak or mediocre piece (peace) on this CD.
And a rare, 21 minute live-set by Current 909 is included on this CD, too.

So, if you're into very surreal, dark electronic "Dance" music, that has some added early Doomcore / Industrial HC significance, go for it!
The CD has been digitally re-released on bandcamp at https://musicwithmachines.bandcamp.com/album/the-price-for-existence-is-eternal-warfare-2022

Review: Murmuur - Rise Of The Death Gods



New 12" on Nethercords by Murmurr!
Get it here: https://murmuurnethercords.bandcamp.com/album/rise-of-the-death-gods

Review:

Spanish artist Murmuur on Australian label Nethercords.
The tracks straddle the line between Doomcore and Industrial Hardcore here, with some definite inspiration by contemporary Techno. The backbone of these tracks are the pounding drums, which come across ultra-brutal, and are sure to get some people pumping on the dark dancefloor.
Supported by hellish, demoniac wailing, screeching sounds that set the right mood.
What I like is that while there is a lot of punch in the production, it's not so "overly" laden and distorted like a lot of Industrial Hardcore releases these days.
Two tracks are original tracks by Murmuur, while the two other tracks are remixes of tracks originally by Tyrant X, who is also the label owner.
This is a record that stands apart from most Dark/Doomcore outings, first by the excellent sonic production qualities, and second by bringing in new and different ideas to these forms of music.
Definitely one for the Doom and Industrial heads, and anyone else who likes creative, hard and dark music.




Looking back at the first enigmatic PCP compilation: Frankfurt Trax Vol. 1 - House Of Techno


PCP had many releases of a strange and experimental nature. But even amongst its most unusual ones, this one stands out.
In fact, this compilation (and its tracks) rarely gets mentioned in "best-of" lists, DJ charts, mix-sets.
People know it exists. But they seldom talk about it.


And indeed, it is "at the edge of the board" in many ways. It almost sounds as it if was done by a different label, a different Planet Core Productions.
Few of the aliases appear again in later releases - a rarity for this label's catalogue.

There are not much "Hardcore" sounds, yes. But PCP never produced 'purely Hardcore', and you could not expect much Hardcore in 1990 anyway.
But there neither is that typical, detroit-infused, somewhat minimalist, catacomb, and claustrophobic techno mania - which later became the trademark style of PCP.

Instead, the sounds are varied, massive, expansive.
There are links to hip hop, ebm, dance...
And even though the instrumentation itself feels minimalist, the sound itself feels huge.

To put it this way: if PCP had continued that way, I could imagine them filling rock and pop arenas with a kind of PCP sound that lies in the middle of mass appeal madness and emissions from the deepest underground.
Headlining the newspapers and owning the charts.

But PCP went another way; they took no quarters, they went as rough and secretive and underground as possible.
So underground that only now, decades later, a wide audience slowly unpeels these layers.

So that's what we got here. A huge "what-if?" artifact out of the earliest days of PCP.

Rating: 89 out of 100

The Mover

The Mover is a project by Acardipane, almost around since the beginning of PCP. the first outing was the the "Frontal Sickness Part 1" EP, followed by a second part; then we get the "Final Sickness" album, the Signs Of '96, the Countdown Trax, as well as the post-PCP follow up, "Frontal Frustration". Also various combined efforts (splits with other artists) and similiar projects. (Editor's note: we got way more The Mover output since this text was written).
The Mover is highly praised and adored. Among PCP fans, the The Mover releases are usually seen as special, or rather, the most special ones. The Mover is often synonymously used with Marc Acardipane himself; especially the more sophisticated PCP fans usually call him just "The Mover". So, The Mover has engraved himself with PCP, and with Acardipane.

What is so special about The Mover?

Stylistically, there is a continuity between tracks - this is basically there with all PCP projects, but with The Mover it's more visible I think. Think of the changes Nasty Django had in sound in later releases, for example. The Mover has a common thread, a common sonic expression. The "Countdown Trax" on Narcotic Network Recordings is the only release that sounds slightly different; but it is as well deeply connected with the The Mover theme.

So what can be said about the sound?

Let us look at the first Frontal Sickness release, which, to me, sets the foundation of the sound of the mover. Even for PCP standards, we get a removed, dislocated sound. The elements have been reduced to a functional, beautiful simplicity. Melody created on a synth, a bass drum, percussion and a bit of FX. That's it. But I think that exactly this minimal, reduced approach adds a lot to the wonderful sound of The Mover. It is very unlike the minimalism of other artists; there is, indeed, not much going on in these tracks, at first glance - yet it feels so full, so exciting. It has only the necessary elements - but these elements are the more powerful.
Stylistically, The Mover is hard to locate, too. This is with all of PCP; but again, even more so with The Mover. It sometimes feels like a bit of a missing link between the pre-techno electronic days - the lo-fi "minimal synth" and EBM sound of the 80s - and the beginning of Techno. But it also is reminiscent of the Krautrock electronic days; and it reminds me a lot of the earliest electronic and sonic experimentation of the 1950s - or maybe even 1920s. It is out of time and creates its own style. I dare to call it even "Techno". maybe electronic poems - yes, this fits.
Yet the mover is also an experimental project, as can be seen in the weird electro outings and space synths of the "Countdown Trax". experimental Techno - at its best.
What sticks out, is that each track is seemingly focused around a single melody; and this is maybe what makes the trademark Mover sound. Each has a wonderful melody which the whole track is seemingly constructed around. again, it's simplistic - seemingly - and repetitive, reduced. 4 chords, 8 tones going down and up again. But these melodies are again perfectly effective, and bizarre, enchanting - exotic. I wouldn't even dare to say in which harmonic, tuning system, or even music system, they would be part of.
To write this in words is very hard to do; listen to the tunes themselves, and you will see what I mean when I say that the melodies are a special part of the The Mover tracks.
One could almost say The Mover is the punk rocker of cyborg techno: "this is one chord, this is the second; now add the beat and percussion, and go create a mover track!" [1]
To finish this text, let’s look at what is most important; the atmosphere of The Mover. Again, I say it brings up feelings of abstract art experimentation of past decades; but it is also so much in the future. PCP feels so much like space, sci-fi and The Mover is an expression of it; but at a higher dose; a "Hardcore" form of it.
The atmosphere is what gives the The Mover tracks life, and I guess it is why The Mover is so popular. a wonderful project, interesting, unique - for the future.

Footnotes:
1: Related to an old slogan of the 70s new york punk scene.