The Night Paris Was Under Attack

January 24th, 2008 by Maks

w00t!It was a memorable night, saturdaynight the 18th of January 1992. Crime scene: The Grande Arche de la Défense (check here or here) in Paris. On the bill: Laurent Garnier and LFO, pioneers and masters of techno at that time, although you might still consider Garnier as a progressive DJ nowadays. LFO isn’t among us anymore, but back then they had already recorded their first underground floorfiller called - guess what - ‘LFO’ and was immediately signed by Warp Records on which they released their overwhelming debut ‘Frequencies’ in 1991. Their sound was surprisingly warm, but terrifying loud as well, with a barrage of basses so deep and penetrating it almost felt as if your lungs and heart were instantly ripped out and splashed on the floor. You’ll understand as soon as you know that LFO is an abbreviation of low-frequency oscillation.
In other terms, LFO was the perfect guerilla for a body- and mindblowing ‘rave’ or ‘warehouseparty’ as it was called those days. Luckily the guys (Mark Bell and Gez Varley) recorded their outrageous gig and that’s why you’ll be able to re-experience a part of the same magical night I had in the basement of la Défense in 1992.
But wait a minute… Re-experienced? Recorded?
Is it true?

While surfing the internet, I bumped upon this: ”There is a strange story behind this CD. Although according to the sleeve notes it was recorded live, apparently the guys actually forgot to record the gig, so concocted the tracks you hear on this CD from the sequences they had, adding a crowd noise loop (and possibly some form of degradation since the sound on this is rather odd.)
Don’t know if this is true but it came from a reliable source close to the band a long time ago.

Hm, well. I prefer to remember it as the night Paris was burning and the birth of an instant classic line at our studio I was working at that time: ”Where were you the night LFO bombed Paris?”.

LFO live in Paris - 18/01/1992