| A1 | Rythim Is Rythim* - | It Is What It Is | 5:36 | |
|
Edited By [Edits] -
Juan*
Written-By, Producer, Mixed By - Mayday | ||||
| A2 | Blake Baxter - | Forever And A Day | 5:36 | |
|
Mixed By -
Master Reese*
Producer - Blake Baxter Written-By - Baxter* | ||||
| A3 | Eddie "Flashin'" Fowkes* - | Time To Express | 5:41 | |
|
Mixed By -
Magic Juan*
Producer, Mixed By - Eddie "Flashin'" Fowkes* Written-By - Fowkes* | ||||
| A4 | K.S. Experience - | Electronic Dance | 6:36 | |
|
Mixed By -
Master Reese*
Producer - Kevin Saunderson Written-By - Kevin Saunderson | ||||
| B1 | Members Of The House - | Share This House (Radio Mix) | 5:56 | |
|
Engineer -
Rufus Harris
Mixed By, Edited By - Cutting Board Inc., The Producer - Don Davis Written-By - Banus* , Merriweather* , Harris* , Weatherspoon* | ||||
| B2 | A Tongue & D Groove - | Feel Surreal | 6:55 | |
|
Edited By [Edits] -
Stoney
Mixed By - Mayday Producer - A Tongue , D Groove Written-By - Tongue* , Groove* | ||||
| B3 | Mia Hesterley - | Spark | 6:09 | |
|
Mixed By -
Master Reese*
Producer - Kevin Saunderson Written-By - Baxter* , Saunderson* | ||||
| B4 | Juan* - | Techno Music | 7:20 | |
|
Mixed By -
Magic Juan*
Producer - Juan Atkins Written-By - Atkins* | ||||
| C1 | Inner-City* - | Big Fun | 7:39 | |
|
Featuring -
Kevin Saunderson
Mixed By - Magic Juan* Producer - Kevin Saunderson Vocals - Paris* Written-By - Forest* , Pennington* , Saunderson* | ||||
| C2 | Blake Baxter - | Ride Em Boy | 7:02 | |
|
Edited By [Edits] -
Juan*
Mixed By - Mayday Producer - Blake Baxter Written-By - Baxter* | ||||
| C3 | Shakir* - | Sequence 10 | 5:20 | |
|
Mixed By -
A Tongue
,
Shakir*
Producer - Anthony Shakir Written-By - Shakir* | ||||
| C4 | Idol Making - | Un, Deux, Trois | 6:05 | |
|
Mixed By -
Master Reese*
Producer - Mayday Vocals - Blake Baxter Written-By - Baxter* , Mayday | ||||
| D1 | Various - | Detroit Is Jacking (The Techno! Megamix) | 13:49 | |
| Dj Mix [Megamix] - Magic Juan* , Mayday | ||||
Transformed into a whole artistic movement, it was meant to be avant-garde music made by the young students Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Kevin Saunderson, Eddie Flashin' Fowlkes, Blake Baxter, Anthony Shakir, among other pioneers. All the mentionned artists are part of this amazing compilation 'Techno - The New Dance Sound Of Detroit'. Released in 1988 under the supervision of Neil Rushton, it would change the course of Techno forever.
Techno is a Movement guided by cultural essences, but also by these kids’ desires, dreams and imaginations about the Future. Among the first evidences of this futuristic influence can be found on the 'Techno Rebels' expression, part of one of the main books of the Sci-Fi writer Alvin Toffler - "Future Shock" - about the impact of the new Technologies. That book had a very significant influence on Juan Atkins (known as the Godfather of Techno) early works, suggesting the use of the term 'Techno' as the title of a new upcoming musical genre.
If this Afro-American legacy left by the references of Jazz, Soul & Funk excerced a definitive impact on the new born Techno music, Science Fiction offered essential elements as well, and this is the main reason why Techno is different from any other form of Electronic Dance Music. This Sci-Fi inspiration did not imply on the existing technology necessarily, but on the whole idea of Future imagination. It was about dreaming, about trying to foresee an entire new reality, which resulted on the first electronic music genre that systematically made use of Sci-Fi expressions, and usual Astronomy terms. Some good examples can be found on Cybotrons's early music on Deep Space Records such as "Cosmic Cars" (and the proper name of the project itself, taken from the same book "Future Shock" by A. Tofler), at the same time suggesting a love heritage for Science Fiction like was on the P-Funk era of Parliament-Funkadelic and the whole Electro movement connected to the Break Dance (which also used several Sci-Fi music titles).
In fact, Techno used that Sci-Fi Soulful combination as a model, but went toward new directions comparing to the other genres mentionned before, from new synth timbres to new standards, patterns and ways of music conception - all present on this amazing selection. Through the music, visual arts and other forms of human engagements, Techno would stand as a testament of a Movement created not only through Music but as a more holistic artistic perspective.
Arguably considered the first major compilation of the genre, "Techno - The New Dance Sound Of Detroit" (1988) was compiled by the music expert Neil Rushton (whose career included a place inside Virgin Records staff and later as the head of Network Records). Neil was briliant in compiling a testament of the upcoming futuristic sounds of Techno that would influence not only Europe but the entire planet since then: Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Kevin Saunderson, Blake Baxter, Eddie Fowlkes, Anthony Shakir would all take part of this selection with tunes of quality and an accurate sense for the future of the dance music.
The release of this compilation is considered on of the major chapters of the history of Techno and an event with almost no parallels on the genre. It is said that the last choosen tune was "Big Fun" (1987) by Inner City, a project made by Kevin Saunderson with the vocalist Paris Grey (which got the collaboration of two other major names of Techno - James Pennington and Art Forrest). "Big Fun" became one of the milestones of Techno and invaded all the radio & DJ charts since 1988, acquiring the status of a major Techno hit all time. "Techno - The New Dance Sound Of Detroit" also brought Derrick May's supreme masterpiece "It Is What It Is" for the first time on a compilation; it was released the same year as the single itself.