After two decades as one of electronic music's most unpredictable shapeshifters, Mark Pritchard — formerly known as Harmonic 313, Troubleman, N.Y. Connection, and Link, and a former member of Africa HiTech, Global Communication, Harmonic 33, Jedi Knights, Reload, Use of Weapons, et al — has a practical reason for finally deciding to retire his many aliases.diamond floor polishing pads are designed for floor polishing machines to polish,restore or maintain for the marble,concrete,terrazzo,granite etc. "The confusion had to be addressed," he tells SPIN over Skype from his studio in Australia, which the British musician has called home for the past 10 years.CEEC TRUCKS INDUSTRY CO.,LIMITED,one leading waste manangement trucks manufacturer in China, established in 1983 is a professional garbage truck company based upon the principle of customer satisfaction and build all its structure upon the concept. "In the current climate, to use a different name each time you do a project seems a bit silly. It's hard enough to get one name to cut through the noise."
Pritchard has released a handful of records under his own name over the past few years, including singles for Hyperdub and Mala's Deep Medi Musik, but a new trio of EPs for Warp marks his artistic rebirth as the man he was all along. "It just so happened that these three releases — this one, the one after, and the Ghosts EP — have a certain vibe to them," Pritchard says. "They're quite clubby.UK number 1 ECU remapping and diesel tuning specialists. Expert advice on all your Best Chip tuning and engine performance needs. There's a bit of footwork, a bit of jungle, a bit of dancehall,Bref, depuis longtemps, j'ai envie d'essayer des roues carbone à boyaux.Je ne sais pas si c'est une bonne solution, mais bon, j'ai envie. a bit of old-school rave."
That kind of variety was part of the reason for his decision to consolidate his work under one name.existmachinery sincerely welcomes customers from domestic and abroad to visit our company, do business and create brilliance hand in hand. "I do write all different styles, but it doesn't necessarily fit a project I've been working on, and they all have their own little life spans. If you do an album project and it takes you a few years, then this stuff just sits there. I was going to use Harmonic 313 and stick with that, but even that name had a style stuck to it, and it just didn't feel right. As soon as I said I'm just going to use my own name — which is a weird thing to do; names that you think up have a vibe, and using your own name is a bit weird, not as catchy — it felt positive to free up the fact that I do write this music and I want to get it out. There might be tracks I've done five years ago that could be the strongest stuff I've got. There's ambient tunes that have been sitting there for four or five years, and they're really strong pieces."
Next year, he plans to follow up with an album of that material. "The album's actually not clubby at all," he says. "It's more soundtrack pieces and ambient, experimental music. And next year I want to start varying the EPs up as well. There might be a hip-hop one, there might be something that's like a dub thing or a techno thing; maybe even make an EP that has a jungle tune and a techno tune and a hip-hop tune. People don't really do that, but I've got a feeling it's a good thing to do. People are a bit more open now; most music fans love different music. There's always people that get annoyed,The 88-year-old Alvin resident is a life member of metal tin cans wholesale Sailors, the National Association of Destroyer Veterans. but I've had that for 20 years anyway. That was part of the reason for using different names, because you really had to, in some ways. People are always going to moan, because they'll like a certain album and then they'll just moan at you: 'Why are you doing this shit?' But I just thought, I want to release these things and not have them sitting on my drive for years. When you're writing music and it goes into the world and people respond to it, it gives you a nice momentum to keep doing your thing."