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  1. Yeah this is the main reason. Aphex Twin got big in the UK underground in the early to mid 90s making bangers. Ambient Works got him international. He broke a lot of ground sonically, including making weird core into pop music (windowlicker), with classic music videos that were viral. Most of this happened before Squarepusher was out of the gate.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SquarepusherSquarepusher - Wikipedia

    Nothing. Website. www .squarepusher .net. Thomas Russell Jenkinson, known professionally as Squarepusher, is an English electronic musician, record producer, bassist, multi-instrumentalist and DJ. His music spans several genres including drum and bass, IDM, acid techno, jazz fusion, and electroacoustic music.

  3. Aphex Twin met Squarepusher in a pub in South London, where Squarepusher was doing a gig. He'd already recorded most of the tracks that went on to be Weird Things, and it was that meeting that got Jenkins on to Rephlex. He did an interview for Resident Advisor where he talks about this, its worth checking out. 37.

  4. Jun 7, 2021 · By 1996, Jenkinson started crafting what would become his debut, Feed Me Weird Things, for Aphex Twin’s Rephlex label. Across that album’s 12 tracks, that giddy, careening, wild sense of forward motion came to define his career as Squarepusher. “I don’t really like dwelling on music I made years ago,” Jenkinson admits.

    • Andy Beta
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Aphex_TwinAphex Twin - Wikipedia

    Richard David James (born 18 August 1971), known professionally as Aphex Twin, [1] [2] [nb 1] is a British musician, record producer, composer and DJ. [3] [4] [5] He is known for his idiosyncratic work in electronic styles such as techno, ambient, and jungle. [12] Journalists from publications including Mixmag, The New York Times, NME, Fact ...

  6. Jan 31, 2020 · Aphex Twin headlines festivals; ... Squarepusher fans have been clamoring for Jenkinson to get back to his roots, and Be Up the Hello is the closest he’s come to his ’90s self in quite some ...

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  8. Aug 18, 2023 · In a similar alt-rock vein, Kevin Parker, the mastermind behind the Australian neo-psychedelia project Tame Impala, once revealed that Aphex Twin would be his dream collaboration. “It would probably be someone really, really kind of fucked up. Like Aphex Twin or Squarepusher or someone like that,” Parker told Pitchfork in 2010.