Rephlex Records
| Rephlex Records | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Founded | 1991 | 
| Founder | Richard D. James Grant Wilson-Claridge  | 
| Defunct | 2014 | 
| Genre | Electronic, IDM, ambient techno, experimental | 
| Country of origin | United Kingdom | 
| Location | Cornwall, then London | 
| Official website | rephlex | 
Rephlex Records was a record label launched in 1991 in Cornwall by electronic musician Richard D. James (aka Aphex Twin) and Grant Wilson-Claridge.[1] The label coined the term braindance to describe the output of Aphex Twin and fellow artists.[2]
History
In 1989, Grant Wilson-Claridge met Richard D. James (a.k.a. Aphex Twin) DJing at The Bowgie, a club located just along the coast from Newquay, Cornwall. According to Wilson-Claridge, back in 1989, "the Bowgie was the best club ever...this was before Newquay turned into the Cornish Ibiza" and it was very difficult to hear new and interesting music. Wilson-Claridge and James used to DJ on alternate weeks. When he noticed that James was playing his own tapes rather than records, Wilson-Claridge suggested that they press up some records. In the beginning, committing Aphex Twin recordings to vinyl was a way of making music the duo's friends wanted to hear. Due to their geographical dis-location they did not have access to the music they wanted to hear and so they decided to create their own, and Rephlex was born.[3] Although the label was founded in 1991 in Cornwall, it moved the year after to London.[4]
On a post to an internet newsgroup in 1992, the label stated that its intent was to "promote 'Innovation in the dynamics of Acid' – a much loved and misunderstood genre of house music" and to "demonstrate to the rest of the world that British dance music can be entirely original".[5]
Rephlex has released the music of many electronic artists, among them Mike Paradinas, DMX Krew, Luke Vibert, Aleksi Perälä and Squarepusher. The label has also remastered and re-released the early works of 808 State[6], the Future Sound of London and The Criminal Minds,[7] and relaunched the career of electronic duo producers Black Devil with a re-release of their first record.
James closed Rephlex in 2014, saying "that's something that needed to be done a long time ago. Me and my friend would have drifted apart, but actually the label did keep us together. It got to a point where I'd actually rather be his friend than be in business with him."[8]
Roster
- 808 State[6]
 - Arpanet
 - Baby Ford
 - Black Devil
 - Bochum Welt
 - Bodenstandig 2000
 - Brian Dougans
 - The Bug
 - Ceephax Acid Crew
 - Chimera
 - The Criminal Minds[7]
 - Cylob
 - D'Arcangelo
 - Dabrye
 - DMX Krew
 - Dopplereffekt
 - Drexciya
 - Ensemble
 - EOD
 - The Gentle People
 - Global Goon
 - hecker
 - Richard D. James (including releases as AFX,[9] Aphex Twin, Bradley Strider, Caustic Window and the Tuss[9])
 - Jodey Kendrick
 - JP Buckle
 - Kosmik Kommando[1]
 - Leila
 - The Lisa Carbon Trio
 - Ovuca
 - P.P. Roy
 - Bogdan Raczynski
 - Seefeel[1]
 - Squarepusher[10] (including releases as Chaos A.D.)
 - Urban Tribe
 - Universal Indicator (collective)
 - μ-Ziq[1]
 - Wisp
 - Luke Vibert (including releases as Amen Andrews)
 - Vulva
 - Yee-King
 
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Colin Larkin, ed. (1998). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Dance Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 285. ISBN 0-7535-0252-6.
 - ^ "repHlex official sponsors of braindance". Archived from the original on 2 March 2001. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
 - ^ Stuart Aitken (November 2003). "A history of Rephlex Records". Stuartaitken.com.
 - ^ "Rephlex Records: Recalling Aphex Twin & Grant Wilson-Claridge's label". Orb Mag. 7 May 2018.
 - ^ "~~~ The definitive RePHLeX ~~~ alt.rave". Alt.rave. 30 November 1992.
 - ^ a b Michaels, Sean (18 February 2010). "808 State set to reunite". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
 - ^ a b "The UK's answer to The Bomb Squad compiled". FACT. 16 March 2011.
 - ^ Hoffmann, Heiko (25 December 2014). "25 Questions for Aphex Twin". Groove. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
 - ^ a b Jonze, Tim (18 September 2014). "Aphex Twin: Syro review – a tour through brain-bending avenues". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
 - ^ Michaels, Sean (11 October 2010). "André 3000 and Squarepusher collaboration 'will happen'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
 
External links
- Rephlex Records at Discogs.com
 
