were about as close to being experimental techno superstars as the tenets of their genre and the limitations of their audience allowed. Through a series of full-length works and a smattering of EPs on Warp, Clear, and their own Skam label,
consistently garnered the praise of press and public alike. Unlike many of their more club-bound colleagues, however,
had roots planted firmly in American electro, and though the more mood-based, sharply digital texture of their update seemed to speak otherwise, it was through early 12"s like
's "Scorpio," and "Pretty" Tony Butler's "Get Some" that their combined aesthetic began to form.
Booth and
Brown met through a mutual friend, trading junked-up pause-button mixtapes of their favorite singles back and forth. Happening onto some bargain basement analog gear through questionable circumstances, the pair began experimenting with their own music before they were out of high school. After some disastrous experiences with a few small labels, the pair sent a tape off to Warp Records, whose early releases by
Sweet Exorcist,
Nightmares on Wax, and
B12 were announcing a new age in U.K.-based techno (and one in which
Autechre would become a key component). Releasing a handful of early singles through the label,
Autechre's first stabs were collected on their debut full-length,
Incunabula, as well as the 10" box set remix EP
Basscadet.
Subsequent albums reached a wider audience through stateside reissue, first on Wax Trax!/TVT, later on Nothing (the label managed by
Nine Inch Nails'
Trent Reznor), and finally through a stateside branch of Warp. Although stylistically rooted, affectations for the ponderous extend beyond their name and track titles ("C/Pach," "Bronchusevenmx24"), with the basic premise of their approach being music without a whole lot of stylistic baggage but plenty of DSP'ed-to-death hyper-programming. Later albums
Untilted (2005),
Quaristice (2008),
Oversteps (2010), Move of Ten (2010), and the two-hour Exai (2013) were not as groundbreaking, yet
Autechre easily retained one of the most distinctive sounds in the world of electronica.
In addition to
Autechre,
Booth and
Brown released material as
Gescom on their own Skam imprint and through the Clear label, most notably the
Sounds of Machines Our Parents Used EP on the latter. The group also provided a number of memorable remixes (oftentimes more memorable than the original material) for artists including
Palmskin Productions,
Slowly,
Mike Ink,
DJ Food,
Scorn,
Skinny Puppy,
Tortoise,
Phoenecia, Various Artists,
the Black Dog, Apparat, and the Bug.
–
Sean Cooper, Rovi