The 1996 debut LP by Trackmaster Lou’s staunch Detroit techno box bangers and UR affiliates, Scan 7, still bucks hard and unrelenting nearly 30 years after it landed on Tresor, especially in its newly remastered form.
Lou Robinson is a true OG of the 313 since his prototypical jams with Sherard Ingram (DJ Stingray) and Juan Atkins as NASA arrived in 1987. He’s a been a crucial cog in the Motor City machine factory line ever since, most notably with the definitively tuff funk of Scan 7, who delivered ‘dar Territory’ in ’96 after dropping a a pair of total classic 12”s for UR in the preceding years (and one impossible to find 12” for the Submerge store-only S.I.D. label).
From the factory line rigidness offset with jabbing synths on ‘Planet Energy’, thru the heaving bassline and rictus claps of ‘Dark Territory’, via the clenched funk of ‘Dark Corridor’ Scan 7 define a very particular vein of Motor City pressure. Along with the fierce acid attack of ‘Black Highway’ and pneumatic pump of ‘Dark Universe’, thru the plucky funk of ‘Unusual Channel’ and jagged tension of ‘VII’ it’s a totem to Detroit techno at its meanest and uncompromising.
It’s not hard to hear why “Mad” Mike Banks bestowed Lou “Trackmaster” Robinson his moniker; the rhythm trax are hard and unyielding on the 4 in a deadly functional style snapped to the grid in a way that would fuel the hardest warehouse sessions from Detroit to Berlin, and in abundance across this LP.
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The 1996 debut LP by Trackmaster Lou’s staunch Detroit techno box bangers and UR affiliates, Scan 7, still bucks hard and unrelenting nearly 30 years after it landed on Tresor, especially in its newly remastered form.
Lou Robinson is a true OG of the 313 since his prototypical jams with Sherard Ingram (DJ Stingray) and Juan Atkins as NASA arrived in 1987. He’s a been a crucial cog in the Motor City machine factory line ever since, most notably with the definitively tuff funk of Scan 7, who delivered ‘dar Territory’ in ’96 after dropping a a pair of total classic 12”s for UR in the preceding years (and one impossible to find 12” for the Submerge store-only S.I.D. label).
From the factory line rigidness offset with jabbing synths on ‘Planet Energy’, thru the heaving bassline and rictus claps of ‘Dark Territory’, via the clenched funk of ‘Dark Corridor’ Scan 7 define a very particular vein of Motor City pressure. Along with the fierce acid attack of ‘Black Highway’ and pneumatic pump of ‘Dark Universe’, thru the plucky funk of ‘Unusual Channel’ and jagged tension of ‘VII’ it’s a totem to Detroit techno at its meanest and uncompromising.
It’s not hard to hear why “Mad” Mike Banks bestowed Lou “Trackmaster” Robinson his moniker; the rhythm trax are hard and unyielding on the 4 in a deadly functional style snapped to the grid in a way that would fuel the hardest warehouse sessions from Detroit to Berlin, and in abundance across this LP.
The 1996 debut LP by Trackmaster Lou’s staunch Detroit techno box bangers and UR affiliates, Scan 7, still bucks hard and unrelenting nearly 30 years after it landed on Tresor, especially in its newly remastered form.
Lou Robinson is a true OG of the 313 since his prototypical jams with Sherard Ingram (DJ Stingray) and Juan Atkins as NASA arrived in 1987. He’s a been a crucial cog in the Motor City machine factory line ever since, most notably with the definitively tuff funk of Scan 7, who delivered ‘dar Territory’ in ’96 after dropping a a pair of total classic 12”s for UR in the preceding years (and one impossible to find 12” for the Submerge store-only S.I.D. label).
From the factory line rigidness offset with jabbing synths on ‘Planet Energy’, thru the heaving bassline and rictus claps of ‘Dark Territory’, via the clenched funk of ‘Dark Corridor’ Scan 7 define a very particular vein of Motor City pressure. Along with the fierce acid attack of ‘Black Highway’ and pneumatic pump of ‘Dark Universe’, thru the plucky funk of ‘Unusual Channel’ and jagged tension of ‘VII’ it’s a totem to Detroit techno at its meanest and uncompromising.
It’s not hard to hear why “Mad” Mike Banks bestowed Lou “Trackmaster” Robinson his moniker; the rhythm trax are hard and unyielding on the 4 in a deadly functional style snapped to the grid in a way that would fuel the hardest warehouse sessions from Detroit to Berlin, and in abundance across this LP.
The 1996 debut LP by Trackmaster Lou’s staunch Detroit techno box bangers and UR affiliates, Scan 7, still bucks hard and unrelenting nearly 30 years after it landed on Tresor, especially in its newly remastered form.
Lou Robinson is a true OG of the 313 since his prototypical jams with Sherard Ingram (DJ Stingray) and Juan Atkins as NASA arrived in 1987. He’s a been a crucial cog in the Motor City machine factory line ever since, most notably with the definitively tuff funk of Scan 7, who delivered ‘dar Territory’ in ’96 after dropping a a pair of total classic 12”s for UR in the preceding years (and one impossible to find 12” for the Submerge store-only S.I.D. label).
From the factory line rigidness offset with jabbing synths on ‘Planet Energy’, thru the heaving bassline and rictus claps of ‘Dark Territory’, via the clenched funk of ‘Dark Corridor’ Scan 7 define a very particular vein of Motor City pressure. Along with the fierce acid attack of ‘Black Highway’ and pneumatic pump of ‘Dark Universe’, thru the plucky funk of ‘Unusual Channel’ and jagged tension of ‘VII’ it’s a totem to Detroit techno at its meanest and uncompromising.
It’s not hard to hear why “Mad” Mike Banks bestowed Lou “Trackmaster” Robinson his moniker; the rhythm trax are hard and unyielding on the 4 in a deadly functional style snapped to the grid in a way that would fuel the hardest warehouse sessions from Detroit to Berlin, and in abundance across this LP.
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The 1996 debut LP by Trackmaster Lou’s staunch Detroit techno box bangers and UR affiliates, Scan 7, still bucks hard and unrelenting nearly 30 years after it landed on Tresor, especially in its newly remastered form.
Lou Robinson is a true OG of the 313 since his prototypical jams with Sherard Ingram (DJ Stingray) and Juan Atkins as NASA arrived in 1987. He’s a been a crucial cog in the Motor City machine factory line ever since, most notably with the definitively tuff funk of Scan 7, who delivered ‘dar Territory’ in ’96 after dropping a a pair of total classic 12”s for UR in the preceding years (and one impossible to find 12” for the Submerge store-only S.I.D. label).
From the factory line rigidness offset with jabbing synths on ‘Planet Energy’, thru the heaving bassline and rictus claps of ‘Dark Territory’, via the clenched funk of ‘Dark Corridor’ Scan 7 define a very particular vein of Motor City pressure. Along with the fierce acid attack of ‘Black Highway’ and pneumatic pump of ‘Dark Universe’, thru the plucky funk of ‘Unusual Channel’ and jagged tension of ‘VII’ it’s a totem to Detroit techno at its meanest and uncompromising.
It’s not hard to hear why “Mad” Mike Banks bestowed Lou “Trackmaster” Robinson his moniker; the rhythm trax are hard and unyielding on the 4 in a deadly functional style snapped to the grid in a way that would fuel the hardest warehouse sessions from Detroit to Berlin, and in abundance across this LP.