the seduction of silence [extended double cd edition]

echospace [detroit]

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Stephen Hitchell's full-length debut under his Intrusion moniker literally picks up where his last full-length—Echospace's 2007 epic The Coldest Season, recorded with partner-in-crime Rod Modell—left off. The massive "Empyrean" that closed The Coldest Season with a floor-friendly journey into dub techno was the album's most overtly

Stephen Hitchell's full-length debut under his Intrusion moniker literally picks up where his last full-length—Echospace's 2007 epic The Coldest Season, recorded with partner-in-crime Rod Modell—left off. The massive "Empyrean" that closed The Coldest Season with a floor-friendly journey into dub techno was the album's most overtly Jamaican-sounding and beat-laden track, and the Intrusion sound finds its roots within its blueprint.

If The Coldest Season's was an updated take on Basic Channel's glacial soundscapes, then The Seduction of Silence sees Hitchell bringing the more explicitly reggae-influenced sounds of Rhythm and Sound into the present—including two cuts (one a chilled dub mix of the other) with the honeyed vocals of Paul St. Hilaire (AKA Tikiman). The Caribbean lilt present throughout the album (last year's mighty "Tswana Dub" single, included here, and the two cuts with St. Hilaire being the standout examples) lends a unified air to the proceedings. Hitchell slowly but surely increases the pace and intensity of the tracks from the opener "Montego Bay" through to the shuddering, staggering "Intrusion Dub" before pulling back on the reins with the slinky, sexy "Seduction" and then alternates between the deadly intense and dead mellow on the album's back half before finally concluding with the sparkling ambient coda of "Under the Ocean."

Hitchell's solo work is far more rhythmically adventurous and danceable than most Echospace material. The delayed and doctored analog pulses (no sequencers here, thanks) are adorned with a smattering of congas and other percussion, as well as a standard deep bass drum stomp and Studio 1-inspired bass lines. Make no mistake—the album doesn't sound explicitly like King Tubby; it's more like his ghost is haunting your favorite Maurizio sides.

Beyond the phased and echoed chords and analog atmospherics, though, there is a palpable sense of spirituality present here that distinguishes The Seduction of Silence from most other dub techno, which has a tendency to be cold and metallic. There's a warm, celestial quality in the melodies here that looks skyward, and St. Hilaire's cuts provide the perfect bookends to the album; the dubbed-out "Angel Version" is track two, while the full vocal version "Little Angel" comes second to last. The lovestruck, inspirational lyrics and St. Hilaire's soothing tones go a long way toward lending a definitive voice to the album that travels beyond mere vocals into a deeper meaning that transcends the ten tracks.

Though individual highlights abound on The Seduction of Silence, the album works best when taken as a whole, an endorsement of Hitchell's vision for an expertly paced and executed album that raises the bar on the dub techno game to stratospheric levels. You'd be hard-pressed to find a better winter warmer than this; remember it with warm thoughts when winter returns later this year, when it's time for year-end polls. -Resident Advisor

Stephen Hitchell is one half of the massively influential Echospace project with DeepChord's Rod Modell. You all know that. If you don't you are probably dead or an infant child with no concept of the International dub techno mainframe. These Detroit boys have been carrying the torch for sleek, warm neon-lit ambient/dub techno for years, their gaseous, enveloping music cleansing the souls and minds of 1000's of devotees worldwide.

This is his solo masterpiece under the Intrusion banner. Yes. It's a total masterpiece. I don't use that word lightly. This fine thing came out years ago but is so highly regarded Echospace have bowed to public pressure and re-issued it in a cute double digipak with a whole slew of re-fits, re-mixes, re-shapes and re-revisions on the bonus disc from their various other ES umbrella projects. I'm not going to waffle on except to say if you really love the deepest, most spacious dub-inflected rhythms (see: the very cream of Rhythm & Sound/Basic Channel) and gently ricocheting electronica packed with spiritually enriching sonic detail then you'd be a right sad sack to pass up on this amazing package. Both discs are absolutely tremendous as is just about everything on the label.

It's a relatively expensive set (their stuff is never cheap, alas) but if you desire one profoundly calming, inspirational and timeless techno-orientated feast this week then bang 'The Seduction Of Silence' in your cart. Echospace-related stuff never sticks around for long in the EU, mark my words. -10/10 from Brian (Staff) -Norman Records

There's something quite special at work on Steven Hitchell's first solo album. Recording under the name Intrusion and working with the excellent techno-reggae vocalist Paul St. Hilaire on two tracks, Hitchell employs techno, reggae, dub, ambient, and African elements to define a huge and echoey but also warm and welcoming sonic space that changes color and texture somewhat from track to track, but maintains a sense of soft grandeur throughout. On "Montego Bay" a no-nonsense house beat anchors a gently swirling torrent of dubwise sound shards; on "Angel Version," St. Hilaire's voice is nicely complemented by a faux-rainy ambience that somehow manages to sound perfect rather than cheesy; on "Intrusion Dub" the contours of an actual reggae song emerge out of the murky sonic soup and the house-cum-rockers rhythmic throb, complete with an actual chord progression (only two chords, naturally) and shredded wisps of melodica. "Seduction" is more quiet and contemplative than sexy, and the album's final hidden track is ambient in an almost Brian Eno-ish style. The dark and echoey grooves are all grist for the downtempo mill, but there's something more subtle deep in the heart of this music as well -- a spirit that is not quite meditative, not quite joyful, not quite explicitly uplifting, but that still somehow communicates all of those things at once. -All Music Guide

The Intrusion full-length is finally here - a massively anticipated follow up of sorts to 'The Coldest Season' album and without question the most fully-realised Echospace project since that album came out 18 months ago. Steve Hitchell reserves his Intrusion moniker for his rich and sumptuous dub experiments, more Rhythm & Sound as opposed to the to M-Series or BC references more commonly associated with the Deepchord axis. Referencing the Caribbean on 'Montego Bay' the padded, heady structure of the music infuses the massive sense of space with a warm and breezy pulse that sets this music apart from so much of the rubber-coated preset teasing that passes for dub techno these days. Paul St. Hilaire, meanwhile, adds a typically righteous vocal presence alongside luxurious Fender Rhodes on 'Angel', a beautiful cut exclusive to this CD issue. The best tracks from the 12"s are compiled with 'Intrusion Dub', 'Seduction', 'Reflection', 'Tswana Dub' and 'Twilight', in addition to the glorious 'A Night To Remember' inspired by his travels to Japan. Crazily limited to a mere 300 copies only, the cd is now completely sold out at source so we strongly recommend you get a nudge on if you want in. Highly Recommended! -BOOMKAT

Of all the many producers who've continued to refine the dub/techno blueprint sketched out in the mid '90s by Mark Ernestus and Moritz Von Oswald as Basic Channel, Detroit's Echospace — comprised of Stephen Hitchell and Rod Modell — are rightly the most garlanded. On The Seduction Of Silence, Hitchell dons his Intrusion moniker for more fuzzily lachrymose cuts, all of them marked by thick, hypnotic 4/4 pulses, spiralling echoes and submerged bass rumbles.

The opening lurch of "Montego Bay," with its sudden switch from slo-mo rambling to direct, surprising sturdiness works as a neat template for what follows, Hitchell carefully pairing the horizontal tones of home-listening warmth with the more forceful demands of the dancefloor. Make no mistake though, it's a dancefloor of the deepest, most doleful variety we're talking about; the aquatic kick drums and glooping reverb of "Angel Version" entwine themselves around regular Ernestus and Oswald contributor Paul St. Hilaire's heavenly feather-light vocals, while "A Night To Remember" layers lush static washes over barely-there bass and delicately poised percussion.

Like all the best dub, and indeed the best techno, Seduction inhabits the murky area between moving and staying still, between sleeping and waking, stretching time with its slow-morphing, endlessly unravelling loops. It's been said that the micro-scene that orbits around the sounds pioneered Basic Channel, Chain Reaction and the rest is at its finest when it can't be replicated by your memory after hearing it — music that's so textured it can't be hummed, or drummed, or experienced in any fundamental way when it's not playing. In this languid dream of an album, Hitchell has proved that he has this intangible techno hinterland at his fingertips, masterfully channelling the echoing ghosts of dub's past and re-forging them as beguiling entities all of their own. -Emusic

Certain schools of thought believe the highest achievements of dub techno have been long ago attained by the likes of Maurizio and his Basic Channel/Chain Reaction cohorts. However there is no denying the stunning addendums from the likes of Quantec, Rod Modell and Stephen Hitchell et al. have furthered the legacy of the deep, dubby sound. Hitchell has been carving out a name for himself since the early days of the millennium with his stunning twelves and EPs under various guises and now marks his debut foray into the full length album stakes as Intrusion.

There are other producers of this sound who have made their own mark with rich, palatable offerings of dub-wise bounty, some steeped in the blueprint of those who came before them, others presenting a more modern slant. For my money though the refined sound-sculpture of Intrusion captures the essence of this music’s past as well as staying true to the ethos of dub being a future gazing sound. This becomes more and more apparent throughout listening to The Seduction Of Silence, especially on repeat as the frayed textures weave in and out of the atmospheric hiss and tape noise, that sonic grit itself punctuating the notes through various filters and gates.

This is not just a well realized and cohesive album, but also one displaying an encompassing approach to dub techno, from the spatial, languid grooves on “Montego Bay” to the more upbeat, faster paced “Intrusion” and “Tswana Dub” (the latter even sound checks its own history with a nod to the disco zaps of the 70′s era Brentford Road producers). For every peak of intensity reached a more sedate, gloriously downbeat moment follows, the apex reached via the ten plus minute instrumental sounds of “A Night To Remember,” which is about as heady and trance-inducing as dub techno gets. Things start winding down with “Little Angel,” quite fittingly featuring the heavenly vocals of Paul St. Hilaire, the Dominican with a long associated history within the genre. More commonly St. Hilaire’s lyrics are songs of praise or rastaman’s lament; “Little Angel,” though, is a love paean through and through and marks an exit towards the ambient rub of “Under The Ocean.”

Where other albums represent a more clinical or detached take on this oeuvre, Hitchell’s heart is in the analogue gear he uses, giving The Seduction Of Silence an unbridled human warmth that is the very pulse of emotion. It’s this feeling — all at once melancholy yet hopeful — that keeps this album on continuous loop on my system and surely makes it worthy of consideration as as an early contender for album of the year. -Little White Earbuds

xlr8r.com/reviews/the-seduction-of-silence/

Far from a routine exercise in dub techno, The Seduction of Silence slowly reveals itself as a warm and wonderful place to be. Crafted by Stephen Hitchell (half of Deepchord), the album is defined by its warmth, space, and strong, slow builds. Muscular, dubwise basslines coil around the tunes, weaving distant African percussion, sub-bass kicks, melodica, and dub-chord waves into timeless, pulsing grooves. At times recalling Pole’s and Rhythm & Sound’s best work, the music culls from those artists’ best aspects while still maintaining a fresh and unique sound. Seduction looks outside the standard Maurizio cohort, as Hitchell prefers to channel King Tubby swimming alone at night. -XLR8R Magazine

Echospace has been dominant in the techno dub sweepstakes over the last two years. The Detroit label has paid tribute to both the European origins of the genre and its Detroit location, particularly with their project reconfiguring Model 500 last year. Even by this label's increasingly high standards, The Seduction Of Silence is a gem. Unlike Deepchord, Steven Hitchell's chilly collaboration with Rod Modell, Intrusion radiates warmth. Two versions of "Little Angel" with Paul St. Hilaire set the pace, where dramatic filter sweeping washes over the song like a tropical breeze. "Montego Bay" delivers on its promise, with gentle waves of sound, which turn into an irresistible undertow. Even the most remote sonics, such as "Twilight," still manage to stir the soul in unexpected ways. The tiniest details warrant scrutiny on this disc but the whole is a lovely journey in sound that also works in less intensive listening circumstances. Hitchell makes you think about the emotional content of pink noise. -EXCLAIM Magazine

thewire.co.uk/archive/contributors/matthew-wuethrich/rewind-2009_contributors-charts

Best album of 2009 in numerous magazines and honorable mentions in The Wire, XLR8R, Textura, NPR, GO, De-Bug, Groove and more. This digital edition includes 3 songs which weren't featured on the physical CD releases.

"A Night To Remember" inspired by the 2008 Labyrinth Festival, Japan. Paul St. Hilaire appears courtesy of False Tuned, published by Basic Channel Publishing.

This album is dedicated to my children, family and the only father I've ever known: Robert Lee Hitchell (R.I.P.)

A special thanks to all the fans, distributors, stores, believers and friends who have supported and embraced this music, without you none of this would be possible.

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tswana dub [12"]

intrusion

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Following on the heels of this spring's "Intrusion/Reflection" double-pack, Intrusion (AKA Stephen Hitchell) steps out onto a new echospace [detroit] sub label with an absolute stunner. Displaying a slightly melodic bent and a palpable reggae influence not heard in much of what's being lumped into the dub scene these days, "Tswana Dub" creates a

Following on the heels of this spring's "Intrusion/Reflection" double-pack, Intrusion (AKA Stephen Hitchell) steps out onto a new echospace [detroit] sub label with an absolute stunner. Displaying a slightly melodic bent and a palpable reggae influence not heard in much of what's being lumped into the dub scene these days, "Tswana Dub" creates a hazy mood that's perfect for late summer swinging. Riding a skeleton of keyboard stabs and a bass line straight outta Kingston, the track effortlessly drifts out of the speakers like a cloud of thick green smoke. Light but dense shimmering pads bounce off of each other and faded bits of percussion drift in and out of the mix to create an almost tangible atmosphere: dark, steamy, and built on a foundation as timeless and solid as the hills. This is music to dream to, to float on, to pray to.

Brendon Moeller's Beat Pharmacy Dub steps up the Jamaican influence even further, deploying ghost horns, organ stabs, and expertly phased and echoed percussion while upping the tempo slightly and adding a welcome bass kick over effects, including a nifty backwards rhythm track that adds to the otherworldly feel. More percussive and active than the original, Moeller's dub would make King Tubby proud. Hitchell's Phase90 moniker does the honors on the final version, submerging the whole formula in a vat of fizzing acid and playing back the half-dissolved track over the most uptempo beat yet and that rock-steady bass line; too tough to die, it survives the dunking and adapts to the quicker pace as if it always belonged there.

While dub techno may be an especially "trendy" style in 2008, "Tswana Dub" easily elevates itself over most everything else in the genre, with all three cuts representing the best the genre has on offer. Ignore the hype (and impending backlash) and embrace this as the very special record that it is.

5/5 -Resident Advisor

www.residentadvisor.net/review-view.aspx?id=5434

"The mysterious Intrusion project (feat. on echospace 007) emerges once again and delivers another epic release. Throughout the original mix of "Tswana Dub" you find smooth textured pads and a bassline even the mighty King Tubby would surrender to. The melodies evolve in slow motion over time as the synth hits open and close into a fierce midnight skanking session so lo-fi you would think this was recorded at Studio 1 in the 1960's. On the flip side Brendon Moeller serves up heavy bass reductions, live melodicas, brass sections and spatially aware dub FX. The Phase90 mix dissects Intrusion's original into a full spectrum spatial affair as deep as the sea, epic and beautiful." -Boomkat

Convulsing bass, Jamaican summer vibes and techno ambiance and the mysterious Intrusion project, sub-label of echospace, is launched with a truly heartfelt eruption. Again, this release stands far above the flood of 'dub-techno' releases also flooding the market right now. The bassline alone on Tswana Dub will undoubtedly blow you away and with totally authentic dub styling to boot, then look no further, this is the business. -Interstellar Sounds, England

written + produced by stephen hitchell. remix + additional production by brendon moeller. mastered in echospace

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the seduction of silence [12"]

intrusion

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Steve Hitchell's prolific output over the last 12 months continues to keep us on our toes , but with a brilliantly simple tempo drop his latest emission as Intrusion ranks as his finest material yet. 'Seduction' is a typically righteous Hitchell cut, except it opeartes on a heavy lidded 100bpm, more commonly associated with the cosmic or balaeric

Steve Hitchell's prolific output over the last 12 months continues to keep us on our toes , but with a brilliantly simple tempo drop his latest emission as Intrusion ranks as his finest material yet. 'Seduction' is a typically righteous Hitchell cut, except it opeartes on a heavy lidded 100bpm, more commonly associated with the cosmic or balaeric disco sound and imbuing the track with a heady off-balance that just intensifies the narcosis. The bass pulses like a rhythmically heavy headwind, allowing the atmospheric analog ephemera to swirl in slo-mo for deep, almost paralysing effect. His CV313 Morning Dub edit on the flip climbs the tempo to a 115bpm throb, and adds more detailed layers of housing percussion making for the perfect breezy dancefloor effect, imagine the lights creeping through the blinds at Panorama Bar at 10am and you're there. Extremely limited copies - Buy! -Boomkat

written + produced by stephen hitchell. remixed by cv313. mastered in echospace.

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little angel feat. paul st. hilaire

intrusion

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Killer final 12" in the series cutting the remaining tracks from the album onto lush marbled vinyl housed in the usual clear plastic sleeve. The swooning emotional pinnacle of his 'Seduction of Silence' set, 'Little Angel' features a particularly affecting vocal from Paul St. Hilaire (aka R&S' Tikiman, but you know that by now, right!?) over

Killer final 12" in the series cutting the remaining tracks from the album onto lush marbled vinyl housed in the usual clear plastic sleeve. The swooning emotional pinnacle of his 'Seduction of Silence' set, 'Little Angel' features a particularly affecting vocal from Paul St. Hilaire (aka R&S' Tikiman, but you know that by now, right!?) over heavy lidded bass bubbles and tendrils of atmospheric dub effervescence in the finest Rhythm & Sound style. The 'Angel Version' flips the delay to create a rolling 4/4 rhythm up there with the best of Hitchell's dubs, while on the flip 'A Night To Remember' sets sail for the distant horizon on the good ship Bass, with Hitchell guiding his way by the stars as the sun slowly sets. It's very very lovely indeed and another must-have Echospace transmission. -Boomkat

Top 50 records of 2009 in The Wire. www.thewire.co.uk/issues/charts/2009-rewind

Steve Barker (The Wire / BBC Radio) top 10 reissues of 2014: otwradio.blogspot.com/2015/01/steve-barkers-top-10s-of-2014-wire.html

Der Einfluss von Basic Channel und Rhythm & Sound auf die Musik von Stephen Hitchell bleibt wohl unbestreitbar. Auch wenn er selbst gerne behauptet, eher von Dub und Detroittechno gelernt zu haben, ist die Vorstellung, dass sich Rod Modells Deepchord, das gemeinsame Projekt Echospace oder eben auch Intrusion ohne die Schützenhilfe und Blaupausen von Mark Ernestus und Moritz von Oswald entwickelt hätten, gelinde gesagt Wunschdenken. Allein mit Paul St. Hilaire alias Tikiman zu arbeiten (hier bei dem Track „Little Angel“), spricht Bände. Zur Verteidigung und Ehrenrettung von Hitchell muss allerdings gesagt werden, dass er den eigenen Dreh gefunden hat. Zwischen hypnotischen Soundlandschaften, dem alles überlagernden Dub-Einfluss und eben der Berliner Ästhetik findet Intrusion eine warme, fast optimistische Klangfarbe, die ihm einen individuellen Wiedererkennungs-Wert verleiht. Zu den Höhepunkten gehören die auch als 12-Inch erhältlichen „Tswana“ und „Intrusion“ oder „A Night To Remember“. In voller Länge genossen am effektivsten, kann man The Seduction Of Silence durchaus ein paar Stunden am Stück ertragen. Wenn schon Epigonentum, dann doch bitte so. -Groove

Intrusion. It's one of those names that's easy to forget. I keep mixing it up with inversion, infination, elevation, redundance and substance—five-dollar words that appeared on my favorite records from the Basic Channel camp in the 1990s, which brings us back to redundancy. How do you evaluate an artist whose records sound as if they would seamlessly fit into Rhythm & Sound's catalogue from a decade ago?

Every movement produces a handful of artists who break serious ground and establish a new form. Consider Ernest Hemingway's terseness or Saul Bellow's loquaciousness and how Cormac McCarthy and Salman Rushdie carry the mantle today. A closer metaphor to dub techno might be color field paintings or Swiss graphic design: We're grateful that Barnett Newman and Josef Mueller-Brockmann established the forms, but there's plenty of room for more of it—so long as the line between variation and homage is clear.

The homage component is taken care of here by Paul St. Hilaire who, under his Tikiman alias, provided many of Rhythm & Sound's brightest moments. Ten years later, it sounds like he's seen some pain: The vocals on "Little Angel" are weathered, more emotional, and somehow closer to your ear rather than keeping time in the dancehall. As for the variation part of the equation, Stephen Hitchell's Intrusion guise pushes the boundaries while giving you what you came for. As with minimal art and design, the elements of the dub techno template are finite: bass, drum, and some reverb and fuzz—it's the nuance of size and positioning that matters.

Like a disciple of Mueller-Brockmann working with only Helvetica, two colors and a grid, Hitchell places the elements in the correct spots along with a few welcome twists. There's more white space, the drums are bolder and the tempo is slower. While the jingling wash over "A Night to Remember" evokes Basic Channel's "Quadrant Dub," it also has the fingerprints of Hitchell's Echospace project—a soft and melancholy texture. The sound of proper dub techno is unmistakable, yet the canon is small. We need even more records like this. 4.5/5 -Resident Advisor

Features "A Night To Remember" as featured on Richie Hawtin's "Enter" 4 X CD compilation.

w + p by intrusion. vocal and additional organ performance by paul st. hilaire. published by [bcp] bmg | basic channel publishing. mastered by mark richardson @ pcm.

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lo-fi soundsystem

various

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No rest for the wickid then as Steve Hitchell dives back into his Intrusion guise for four tracks of deep deep steppa's house and dub driven rhythms. His 'Velocity In A Minor' strides out with a tropical flavoured dub-house rhythm to delight any fans of this style, revolving about achingly well formed patterns shuffled with the dextrous touch of a

No rest for the wickid then as Steve Hitchell dives back into his Intrusion guise for four tracks of deep deep steppa's house and dub driven rhythms. His 'Velocity In A Minor' strides out with a tropical flavoured dub-house rhythm to delight any fans of this style, revolving about achingly well formed patterns shuffled with the dextrous touch of a proper rhythm magician. Lo-Fi Soundsystem's 'De Lions Den' is credited to an original artist from JA, but our instincts and yours may say otherwise. Either way it's an incredibly lush cut of wheezing melodicas and lurching steppas rhythms to do the business in fine style. On the flip Mildiou's 'De Natura Rerum', adds extra dub pressure to a heavy house rhythm, and Intrusion finishes with a faithful Rhythm & Sound tribute on 'Oceanview' sitting deep in smoky atmospherics and skanking movements. Another must-have for all Deepchord/Hitchell fans, seriously seriously deep. -Boomkat

w + p by stephen hitchell, mildiou and lofi soundsystem. mastered by stephen hitchell in echospace.

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a gentle embrace [12"] ep

intrusion

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Nearly 6 years in the making, this new 12" marks the return of echospace's critically acclaimed Intrusion project. The first incarnation of "A Gentle Embrace" came in the form of three extended reshapes from cv313 & variant and now we're proud to offer the original work on beautiful crystal clear 160 gram wax. This new release was engineered

Nearly 6 years in the making, this new 12" marks the return of echospace's critically acclaimed Intrusion project. The first incarnation of "A Gentle Embrace" came in the form of three extended reshapes from cv313 & variant and now we're proud to offer the original work on beautiful crystal clear 160 gram wax. This new release was engineered and mixed down from 1/4" analog tape and mastered by bazza (Abbey Road Studios, Radiohead.) at Alchemy, London. We'll let the music do the rest of the talking, from our heart to yours...

Some feedback:

"Stephen Hitchell, one half of Motor City dub-techno operators Echospace, revives his Intrusion alias in 2015 for new album project A Gentle Embrace. That title speaks volumes, quietly. This is techno-music stripped back to its bare bones, its raw elements. The A side (Original) is filled with wave-upon-wave of gaseous atmospheres being tickled by a twitching, propulsive Wolfgang Voight percussion. Flip-side, Hitchell brings the Kick. But only just, before it disappears into the wormhole. Pressed loud on crystal clear 160g wax. Engineered and mixed down from 1/4" analogue tape and mastered by Bazza (Abbey Road Studios, Thom Yorke / Radiohead)... more

w + p by intrusion. mixed in echospace. mastered by bazza@alchemy mastering, london, uk.

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a gentle embrace [variant reshapes]

intrusion

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Marking the long-awaited forthcoming release of Intrusion's "The Seduction of Silence," comes the Variant [reshapes] of " A Gentle Embrace" the forthcoming 12"/ album from Intrusion. What has not been heard before comes into glimpse via analog circuitry, obsolete synthesis & sonic exploration. A passionate, galactic, deep voyage... For all

Marking the long-awaited forthcoming release of Intrusion's "The Seduction of Silence," comes the Variant [reshapes] of " A Gentle Embrace" the forthcoming 12"/ album from Intrusion. What has not been heard before comes into glimpse via analog circuitry, obsolete synthesis & sonic exploration. A passionate, galactic, deep voyage... For all those who believe, from our hearts to yours....

Thoughts:

This is a duo of CDs featuring Stephen Hitchell reimagining Stephen Hitchell. Those that are familiar with Echospace know exactly what they’re getting themselves into and those that don’t need only to listen to the first minute of the first CD to get the gist, because there’s around 110 minutes of gist contained within.

Hitchell is a busy dude, with the label releasing his debut as Phase90 late last year and here we are with an ambient opus that is based on material from 2009’s The Seduction of Silence, which just got a CD re-release and looks to go be set for an LP too. As this is so so long, I can only provide you with a weak skim, a semi-skim, if you will.

If you’re a fan of music that sounds like pure clouds, with only the faintest hint at a kick drum pulsing away its loneliness, then you’ll be at peace with this one. Emotional chords swell out of a mist assembled from subtle, slowly unfolding rushes and cracked twigs echoing into the distance. Everything’s lovely, like dew on the mountains, rainbows on the beach, getting a retweet etc. etc. The highlights of Robin’s day.

More cautious percussion and bass throbs adorn the second ‘Reduction’ disc, which seems like a misnomer as there’s a little more going on beat-wise, albeit very slowly, with a similar backdrop. As a whole, it doesn’t move very far but that isn’t necessary. This is organic dub techno for the mega-spaced times of life, be that sleep, sunbathe, or afterglow. Even the remotest association with techno seems to ruin its innocence. Dub ambient for purity. -Norman

This is a duo of CDs featuring Stephen Hitchell reimagining Stephen Hitchell. Those that are familiar with Echospace know exactly what they’re getting themselves into and those that don’t need only to listen to the first minute of the first CD to get the gist, because there’s around 110 minutes of gist contained within.

Hitchell is a busy dude, with the label releasing his debut as Phase90 late last year and here we are with an ambient opus that is based on material from 2009’s The Seduction of Silence, which just got a CD re-release and looks to go be set for an LP too. As this is so so long, I can only provide you with a weak skim, a semi-skim, if you will.

If you’re a fan of music that sounds like pure clouds, with only the faintest hint at a kick drum pulsing away its loneliness, then you’ll be at peace with this one. Emotional chords swell out of a mist assembled from subtle, slowly unfolding rushes and cracked twigs echoing into the distance. Everything’s lovely, like dew on the mountains, rainbows on the beach, getting a retweet etc. etc. The highlights of Robin’s day.

More cautious percussion and bass throbs adorn the second ‘Reduction’ disc, which seems like a misnomer as there’s a little more going on beat-wise, albeit very slowly, with a similar backdrop. As a whole, it doesn’t move very far but that isn’t necessary. This is organic dub techno for the mega-spaced times of life, be that sleep, sunbathe, or afterglow. Even the remotest association with techno seems to ruin its innocence. Dub ambient for purity. -Nowamuzyka

w + p by intrusion, mastered and engineered in echospace. re-imagined by variant for echospace.

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a gentle embrace [cv313 rewire]

intrusion

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Marking the long-awaited return of echospace's intrusion project comes the second installment of reworks from the darkest depths of Detroit with cv313 . On this version cv313 exercises the art of space and bass, rewiring the studio to ensure the most unique results, unplugging and dissecting the original pieces into an infinite sonic collage, a

Marking the long-awaited return of echospace's intrusion project comes the second installment of reworks from the darkest depths of Detroit with cv313 . On this version cv313 exercises the art of space and bass, rewiring the studio to ensure the most unique results, unplugging and dissecting the original pieces into an infinite sonic collage, a near 60 minute intergalactic groove. An analog ocean of sonic dreams and obsolete machines. For all those who believe, from our minds to yours....

written and produced by intrusion. reworked live in the mix by cv313. mastered at antique modulation, ann arbor, michigan.

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reflection [remastered + unreleased mixes]

intrusion

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The Echospace label returns with another endlessly deep transmission from the vaults, emerging here with some vintage material culled from old tapes recently discovered by label head Steve Hitchell from mysterious artist "Intrusion". 'Intrusion dub' is simply classic Echospace, with all the requisite elements of sonorous bass, inpenetrable analog

The Echospace label returns with another endlessly deep transmission from the vaults, emerging here with some vintage material culled from old tapes recently discovered by label head Steve Hitchell from mysterious artist "Intrusion". 'Intrusion dub' is simply classic Echospace, with all the requisite elements of sonorous bass, inpenetrable analog crackle and well crafted techno and house rhythms filtered through the minds of two dub souls. Steve Hitchell's cv313 mix is a muted affair, boiling the track down to a glowing residue of padded kicks and vinyl static, while the Phase90 reshape is our favourite cut here, adding some expertly developed techno percussion to produce a narcotic and deadly club number that will destroy anyone lucky enough to hear it played out on a proper system. The final side winds things down into ambient bliss in classic deepchord/echospace fashion, clearing the air for what will no doubt follow with the next installment from this excellent label. -Boomkat

Review from Little White Earbuds:

Given the wobbly state of music distribution after the shuttering of Syntax, Amato and Watts Music and a dollar value which shrivels daily next to the euro, Detroit/Chicago-based label echospace can be forgiven for being stingy on new releases. Echospace released the majority of its catalog last year as well, which makes this year’s new additions look scant in comparison. But after digging in to the label’s seventh release and first from heretofore unknown producer Intrusion, fans will be glad its owners (and in-house producers of a sort), Stephen Hitchell and Rod Modell, waited to throw their weight behind such a fantastic release. The 2×12″ comes on multi-colored vinyl and arrives April 30th.

As with many echospace releases, the massive scope of sound captured on “Intrusion” could score an ecosystem in mid-breath. The 12 minute behemoth ebbs and flows between a natural drifting momentum and the more deliberate structure of two rhythms (kick and upstroke) syncing together. Arriving suddenly, an affected organ tone sizzles through circuitry as its pitch defrays into many smaller notes, roughly following the loping main progression through the sonic obstacles of hiss and more effects. To call it an immense piece of music would be an understatement, as it’s easy to find something new during each spin through “Intrusion”’s many eddies.

But just in case you’re the rabid fan who quickly commits every note to memory, there are two extra versions to turn your head inside out. Hitchell’s once secret cv313 moniker provides a more streamlined version which could actually fit inside a club. Its bumpy yet singular progression mutates and bounces back upon itself as it’s pressed through ever more delay and effects. It’s the pared down, floor-pounding techno mix from Phase 90 (who? a guitar pedal enthusiast?), however, which captivates me the most. Like a giant oar scraping in its well, the tune churns with great force and explodes into a rolling 4×4 groove at the kick drum’s arrival. Padded with pneumatic hi-hat swish, the spartan Phase 90 mix nicely compliments the dark and dubby sounds of Shed/Ben Klock/Marcel Dettmann; don’t be surprised to hear them playing it out this summer.

Then there’s the “Reflection” side of the equation, which is comparatively closer to conventional dub techno. A perpetual and affected give-and-take transforms a wandering liquid melody trickling through the first minutes into electrified bolts of singing tone on “Reflection I.” By contrast, “II” is nearly beatless and almost ambient, a muffled pitch rumbling through sheets of manipulated fizz. “Intrusion/Reflection” is a strong way for Intrusion and echospace to start 2008, one much more thoroughly composed and versatile than the many derivations of dub techno bubbling around these days. It’s certainly worth the wait and your hard earned cash.

w + p by intrusion from 1995 - 2004.

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[reflection remixes ep]

intrusion

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Stephen Hitchell enlists the help of Atheus and Area here for an alternate set of views on last years amazing 'Reflection'. Area provides two mixes; the rhythm-driven 'Exhaked...' version sounding like a vintage number from the Chain Reaction catalogue circa 1998, and the beatless 'Inhaked...' mix, strongly reminding of Vainqueur in his best form.

Stephen Hitchell enlists the help of Atheus and Area here for an alternate set of views on last years amazing 'Reflection'. Area provides two mixes; the rhythm-driven 'Exhaked...' version sounding like a vintage number from the Chain Reaction catalogue circa 1998, and the beatless 'Inhaked...' mix, strongly reminding of Vainqueur in his best form. Hitchell's own 'Unreleased Extended Mix' expands on the original with amazingly deep and introspective progressions framed by spacious overdubs, while Atheus' remix is the best of the pack, shaping a deliciously dub-house-y bassline with ethereal pads and shimmering silvery-grey chords. Gorgeous material from Echospace once again - very highly recommended.. -Boomkat

written + produced by stephen hitchell. remix and additional production by area and atheus for echospace detroit.

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