Datacide conference review by history is made at night
Check out Neil’s review of the conference and party HERE
Read MoreCheck out Neil’s review of the conference and party HERE
Read MoreJohn Eden has written a review of our recent event, check it HERE
Read MorePlease note the the end of this review was accidentally deleted in the print edition. For the full article read
Read MoreAfter several months on white label Vile Enginez’ new release on Sub/Version is out this week – a mind trip through devilish labyrinths of a myriad of sound constructions. Vile Enginez, hailing for Basel, CH, has produced his most innovative and complex record yet.
Read MoreBrainstorm was a fundraiser party for Datacide Ten which took place May 31, 2008 at the Katakomben, Scharnweberstr. 38 in Berlin, feat. Xanopticaon, Base Force One, Cannibal Brothers, Rioteer, Hetzer, Nemeton, Rokkon, Naboa, and Parataxia.
Read MoreAn overview of the British radical left party press from 2008. “Party” unfortunately not meaning a joyous gathering, but most of the time an authoritarian Leninist grouping.
Read MoreDouble book review by Stewart Home from Datacide Eight. Leslie’s Marxist reading of Benjamin contrasts sharply with Olson’s anti-Marxist take on comedy. Leslie, a British Socialist Workers Party activist, seeks to reclaim Benjamin for Trotskyism, critiquing both philosophical appropriations of Benjamin and the cult around him. Olson, an old-fashioned liberal with anarchist leanings, critiques the shift from a classical to a neo-Marxist literary canon, though his grasp of Marxism is flawed. While Olson’s work lacks Leslie’s rigor, both books offer corrective insights when read together, illustrating the tensions between politics, aesthetics, and ideology.
Read MoreWhilst those of us in the UK were being deluded by the rise of ‘intelligent techno’, a pocket of resistance arose in the Hague through the activities of the Acid Planet parties and the Bunker label: Unit Moebius, Interr-ference, Rude 66, Sulphur Surfer…
Read MoreA short article from Datacide 1 which for the first time was writing about the developments of French speedcore in general and more specifically about the emerging work of the Michelson sisters, who were in the process of changing the hardcore narrative.
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