Review by dexterfengMar 14, 2006(edited over 3 years ago)
Organico records grew out of Reactor magazine. A Chicago based and too short lived free monthly which documented Mid Amerikan raves circa 92 to pre-further 94 while taking on a freak freely Keseyian spirit and mixing it heavily with McKenna and Leary among other things. Little Green Matt wrote Dispatches from Hyperspace and was a contributing editor.
Organico made contact and landed in Chicago in the fall of 1993. First contact was made with the Little Green Men who did (of all things you might say) the theme from Close Encounters. From the first encounter we discovered Dubtribe and Derrick Carter and Chris Nazuka's Sound Patrol via #'s 2 & 3. Organico closed up shop towards the end of 1996 after a run of nearly 30 releases among which were the first two albums by Dubtribe and Sound Patrol's Sweetened No Lemon and 'hits' like Planet Earth, Tripping Among the Stars, Desert Moon.
Organico as a label bridged a gap somewhere in between house and ambient: Ibizia (the original cafe del mar balearic spirit, not the titted up punter spirit), Burning Man and that Further spirit which you have to experience to understand. A sound and something which could probably be summed up by a long running and occasional night in Chicago called Atmospheric Audiochair. A direction which grew from the aforementioned premises and was probably laced with the following reminder.
Wisconsin; We Eat People.
Organico made contact and landed in Chicago in the fall of 1993. First contact was made with the Little Green Men who did (of all things you might say) the theme from Close Encounters. From the first encounter we discovered Dubtribe and Derrick Carter and Chris Nazuka's Sound Patrol via #'s 2 & 3. Organico closed up shop towards the end of 1996 after a run of nearly 30 releases among which were the first two albums by Dubtribe and Sound Patrol's Sweetened No Lemon and 'hits' like Planet Earth, Tripping Among the Stars, Desert Moon.
Organico as a label bridged a gap somewhere in between house and ambient: Ibizia (the original cafe del mar balearic spirit, not the titted up punter spirit), Burning Man and that Further spirit which you have to experience to understand. A sound and something which could probably be summed up by a long running and occasional night in Chicago called Atmospheric Audiochair. A direction which grew from the aforementioned premises and was probably laced with the following reminder.
Wisconsin; We Eat People.