![]() Fucking hell, that's well intense, I love it!" These first two EPs, along with the remix EP, were later released in the US as a single CD Polyfusia, by Astralwerks. The main reason I like it is that as soon as you turn it off it leaves this big gap, this really big void. Notorious for tearing tracks apart when remixing them, Aphex Twin notably left the track much as it was released, asserting in an interview for Lime Lizard magazine, prior to remixing the track "I think it's gonna be a weird kind of a mix because I really, really like their stuff as it is, and what I'm going to do is just add a groove to it. Subsequently, the Plainsong EP was released along with an EP of remixes including two remixes of 'Time to Find Me' by Aphex Twin. It was largely compiled from four-track home recordings, but enhanced in the studio. The band's first release was the self-produced More Like Space EP, released in Autumn 1993. Soon after, one of the labels that had been sent a demo, Too Pure, approached the band. John Peel rang Peacock to say how much he liked the tracks and the band would later perform a session for his Radio 1 show. A demo tape was sent to three record companies and to John Peel at BBC Radio 1. Early recordings were made at home, and other London studios. Peacock became part of the group after Clifford answered an advert she had placed in the NME. He placed an advert at Goldsmiths College, London where he was a student, and it was answered by Fletcher who joined him on drums. In 2010 they released the Faults EP (their first new recording in 14 years) followed shortly after by an eponymous LP in 2011, both on Warp.Ĭlifford originally began writing tracks for what became Seefeel in late 1991. The band subsequently released music on electronic labels Warp Records and Rephlex, and then went on an extended hiatus in 1997, with members pursuing the side-projects Scala and Disjecta.įollowing the reissue of Quique in 2007, Clifford and Peacock relaunched Seefeel and were joined by Shigeru Ishihara ( DJ Scotch Egg) on bass, and former Boredoms drummer Iida Kazuhisa (E-Da). Initially forming as a more conventional rock band, Seefeel soon embraced electronic production and gained recognition for their 1993 debut EP More Like Space and first album Quique (1993), both on the British independent label Too Pure. Their work became known for fusing guitar-based shoegaze with the production techniques of ambient techno and electronica. Seefeel are a British electronic and post-rock band formed in the early 1990s by Mark Clifford (guitar, programming), Daren Seymour (bass), Justin Fletcher (drums, programming), and Sarah Peacock (vocals, guitar). ![]()
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