Decibel - You Lied, You Cheated - Wired Recordings - Experimental
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Out of Stock |
Track ListingA1 Freebase MixA2 Full 12" Fix B1 Decibel Mix C1 You Lied Edit C2 You Lied Inst D1 Speed Freak Dub Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+) Sleeve Condition » Not Graded |
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| Artist | Decibel | ||
| Title | You Lied, You Cheated | ||
| Label | Wired Recordings | ||
| Catalogue | |||
| Format | Vinyl Double 12 Inch | ||
| Released | |||
| Genre | Experimental |
Other Titles by Decibel
• You Lied, You Cheated •
Some Other Artists in the Experimental Genre• Kenickie • New Kingdom • Senser • John Callaghan • Vangelis • Fridge • Michael Crawford with The London Symphony Orchestra • BBX • Acid Scout • Mira Calix • Le Tone • Antipop Consortium • Pistol Grip • Sudden Impact • Osymyso • Passage • Firstborn • Brothomstates • Synergy • John Keating • Panoptica • PC Worship • G.G.F.H. • Burundi Black • Alexander's Annexe • The Art Of Noise & Max Headroom • RMN • Ladyvipb • Wyfekillaz • Mark Jenkins • Tackhead • M' Black • Space (KLF) • Process • Boom Bip • NT • Prophecy • Burning Bush • Francois De Roubaix • Ragga And The Jack Magic Orchestra • |
Some Other Artists on the Wired Recordings Label• Raw Stylus • Space 2000 • Jhana • Elevatorman • Shola • Source Of Light • Sugar Shack • M. Doc • Jai • Little Axe • Bug City • Ruby Turner • Virtue • Space Brothers • |
Information on the Experimental Genre
At the beginning of the British rave era a number of UK based electronic musicians were inspired by the underground dance music of the time and started to explore experimental forms of EDM production. By the early 1990s the music associated with this experimentation had gained prominence with releases on a variety of record labels including Warp Records (1989), Black Dog Productions (1989), R & S Records (1989), Carl Craig's Planet E, Rising High Records (1991), Richard James's Rephlex Records (1991), Kirk Degiorgio's Applied Rhythmic Technology (1991), Eevo Lute Muzique (1991), General Production Recordings (1989), Soma Quality Recordings (1991), Peacefrog Records (1991), and Metamorphic Recordings (1992).By 1992 Warp Records was marketing the musical output of the artists on its roster using the description electronic listening music, but this was quickly replaced by intelligent techno. In the same period (1992–93), other names were also used, such as armchair techno, ambient techno, and electronica, but all were attempts to describe an emerging offshoot of electronic dance music that was being enjoyed by the "sedentary and stay at home". Steve Beckett, co-owner of Warp, has said that the electronic music the label was releasing at that point was targeting a post-club home listing audience. In 1993 a number of new record labels emerged that were producing intelligent techno geared releases including New Electronica, Mille Plateaux, 100% Pure, and Ferox Records.

