
After a marketing campaign that lasted what seemed like half a decade, Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories finally arrived this week.
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After a marketing campaign that lasted what seemed like half a decade, Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories finally arrived this week.
How does Rene Pawlowitz manage to stir up such a flux of excitement when his records first appear on those Hardwax pages? After all, we’re not exactly talking about the latest chart hit here – his productions are notoriously raw, off-kilter, reductionist and largely beat-driven, containing only shards of fragmented melodies, but yet there’s a distinctively personal and honest characteristic about them.

Techno is an international music, but the characteristics that shape its identity are often rooted in location-specific naunces. As Richard Brophy recently discovered, this proved to be the case with Rene Pawlowitz, the producer who works as Shed and under numerous other house and techno-related projects including Wax, EQD and WK7.
“If you do not hear this” a distorted voice says at the start of Shed’s third album, The Killer, as low bass frequencies are deployed, “Or that – you will not feel it”. It’s a suitably tongue in cheek moment from René Pawlowitz, who, despite operating in a fundamentally dry area of dance music, seems to be increasingly keen to have some fun with what he does. It’s therefore not totally surprising that he’s ended up releasing an album on 50Weapons, a label run by a duo (Modeselektor) whose personal brand is represented by a stylised monkey face, who have always been outsiders to what the rest of Berlin’s techno scene has been doing at any given time, much like Pawlowitz himself.
As intimidating as Rene Pawlowitz’s discography is, it seems fair to say that the first six months of 2012 will go down as not just the most prolific, but varied periods since he started producing. At this point there are six records that have either been released or are set for release imminently, across several aliases and spanning a gamut of styles from house to experimental dubstep. It’s testament to his talent as a producer that despite each of these records being ever-so-subtle variations on raw loop techno that the halo over his head has yet to slip.

Yesterday XLR8R reported news of a new Shed 12″ appearing out of the blue on the rarely used Power House imprint.

German producer René Pawlowitz aka Shed has remixed Joy O’s “Ellipsis” for the latter’s Hinge Finger imprint, run in collaboration with renowned designer Will Bankhead.

There have been hints surfacing from the 50 Weapons camp regarding a new LP from German techno machine Shed for a while now: today it was revealed the album will be called The Killer and arrive in July.

Ostgut Ton have just announced details of a new 12″ from Shed (aka René Pawlowitz), under a new moniker, The Traveller.

The ever-dependable London-based party Oscillate Wildly are putting on the first 50Weapons showcase in the city next month at Corsica Studios, and we have a pair of tickets to give away to one lucky reader.

50 Weapons have just announced the first concrete details regarding the forthcoming material from veteran techno producer Shed to be released on the label.
The Power House label debuted in 2010 with the “It’s A Love Thing” 12″, which contained two relentless interpretations of a track boasting a kick drum that would make Kerri Chandler blush. The combination of this weighty thud, 909 hats and 90s rave stabs made this an unlikely – and somewhat hard to find – underground anthem. Only available from Hardwax in Berlin, it quickly sold out and many hushed conversations were shared about who was behind the release. This being 2011, the cloak of mystery was eventually – inevitably – lifted, with René Pawlowitz (aka Shed) outed as the producer behind the Head High alias. There was even a re-release this year on the equally surreptitious H2 Recordings (albeit without the excellent Power Cut version that graced the original), making it available to a wider audience.
Soon after came the follow-up, from an artist named WK7, which also remained a Hardwax exclusive until earlier this month. It’s safe to assume that Pawlowitz is again behind this new moniker (although the B2 remix credits “additional production” to Shed – a deliberate attempt to muddy the waters perhaps), and considering the towering nature of the debut cut, “The Avalanche” is a worthy follow-up. This is throbbing, muscular party techno, and again the punishing kick forms the centrepiece around which all other percussive elements fall. Reigning blows down without sympathy, it’s the sonic equivalent of sticking a firework up the dancefloors’ collective backside.
On the B-Side, “High Power” is just as incendiary, although, like all the Power House tracks, it’s much more than just a dumb slice of peak time dance music, and is riddled with detailed nuances. A passion for old school production methods and an obsession for intricate sound design are evident as throwback chord stabs bounce off pounding beats and oscillating synths. The Hardcore PCK mix of “Higher Power” tweaks the original’s 4/4 structure into a concrete slab of brilliant broken beat techno.
Aaron Coultate
There’s always been an undeniably fun element to René Pawlowitz’s music. His two full length albums under the Shed moniker saw him wear his influences on his sleeve yet still carve out his own little inimitable sonic niche. His “Boom Room” track on last year’s Fünf compilation for Ostgut Ton was an utter beast, just the right side of silly – how can that relentless mechanical thump not raise a cheeky smile? And raising the bar even further was the Hardwax exclusive Head High project – if you’re at a loss for a suitable example of raw 90s rave revivalist tackle then look no further. Originally surfacing last year under a cloak of mystery and techno intrigue, it was in all honesty little surprise to discover Pawlowitz was the producer behind such a pummelling slice of retro machine funk. Who else could it have been, really?
The Wax series, meanwhile, has followed a reassuring path, plodding along at the rate of one 12″ per year in between other projects. A simple but devastatingly effective formula has been developed, copied by many but matched by none – white label vinyl, no track titles, two slabs of unadulterated dancefloor-friendly techno. On the stamped side of 40004 you’ll find pumping chords reigning blows down on rasping hats and a volumous bottom end – the kind of low frequencies that Cosmin TRG has been nailing lately. The brace of mid-section breakdowns will have DJs reaching for it the moment that first bead of sweat drops from the roof onto the dancefloor below. The track on the unstamped side is, initially at least, more linear in persuasion; however the straight up techno bass drum is soon joined by a softly soaring synth line and a melodic hook that is looped and contorted to perfection.
Aaron Coultate

The good folks at Hardwax have announced a couple of highly impressive new 12″s, due to hit the shelves this week.
Shed, one of a small clutch of contemporary producers willing to push the boundaries of techno, returns with his second album The Traveller. His debut opus Shedding The Past was rightly lauded upon its release in 2008, and is regarded in many circles as one of the best electronic albums of the past decade. Since then René Pawlowitz has released material under various guises, ranging from the club friendly WAX series to atmospheric dubstep as Panamax Project. On first impression, The Traveller sounds like a love letter to UK club music wrapped up in a German techno album – nods to hardcore, drum & bass, jungle and dubstep are all present and correct. Moreover, there’s also an inescapable feeling that Pawlowitz actually had fun making this.
The tone of The Traveller ranges from moody, delicate interludes to proper Berghain tackle (“M R Class’s” seriously thumping dubby vibe being a prime example), but with only one track breaching the five minute barrier this is definitely not an album aimed at DJs. A raw drum pattern juxtaposed against a Jean Michel Jarre inspired synth line makes “Atmo – Action” an intriguing prospect, while the twinkling keys on “44A (Hardwax Forever!)” give way to a distorted, unannounced drum frenzy that will scare the shit out of you if you are not ready for it (you can almost see the grin on Rene’s face when he was making this one). “Final Experiment” is reminiscent of the recent Actress album on Honest Jon’s, all compressed bleeps and sonic squiggles submerged deep beneath layers of compression, presented in sketch form rather as a fully fledged song. “Hello Bleep’s” cheeky “Spastik”-esque drum roll leads nicely into album closer “Leave Things”, which itself finishes with an old school jungle flourish that cannot help but raise a smile. Never has techno been so much fun to listen to.
Aaron Coultate
Ace Berlin bass demons Modeselektor have announced the full tracklist for Modeselektion Vol 1, an 18 track CD compilation that features a heavyweight cast of international producers currently entrenched in the post dubstep sound.

For the last 11 years, something electronically special has been brewing in Montreal. Throughout five adventurous days and nights, Mutek emphatically made a case for being quite possibly the world’s premier showcase for forward-thinking, cutting edge electronic music and digital creativity. Accompanied by its unmatchable array of stunning visual spectacles, this year brought a host of exciting North American artist premieres including King Midas Sound, Ikonika, Brandt Brauer Frick among many others As over 150 artists and acts converged to dazzle and challenge us, it was impossible to take in everything. The following is what intrepid Juno Plus techno warrior Steve Phillips extracted from all the blissful madness.