listed a to z by surname






















The Beauty Room
The Memory Band
Findlay Brown
Marissa Nadler
Ellis Island Sound
Klima
Aril Brikha
Little Dragon
David Alvarado
Dan Bell
Norma Jean Bell
John Beltran
Chris Brann (Wamdue Kids)
Max Brennan
Recloose
Dan Curtin
Roy Davis Jr.
Detroit Escalator Company
Gemini
Jos? Gonz?lez
Marc Hellner
Robert Hood
Jello
Paul Johnson
Neil Landstrumm
Kenny Larkin
Joe Lewis
Alton Miller
Moodymann
Anthony Nicholson
Lucien - N - Luciano
Ian O'Brien
Theo Parrish
Marco Passarani
Luke Slater
Stasis
Suburban Knight
Ron Trent
Glenn Underground
Underground Evolution
Nouvelle Vague
Readymade FC
Charles Webster


Remix Series

Herbert
Plaid
Playgroup



Albums


Release Date

Past Movements 01/12/03
From the old to the new 1996
Inspiration 1994


Singles / EPs


Release Date

Circuit Funk 1993
Artificial World 1993
Steve Pickton first appeared on the UK scene with a release on B12 Records under his Stasis monicker, he then released a number of 12''s and albums under several other guises including Stasis, Paul W. Teebrooke, Phenomyna and The Otherworld Collective, whilst also running his own Otherworld label. Steve Pickton's music is characterised by a dreamy, melodic, melancholic and yet powerful, driving, energetic sound, combining Detroit-influenced beat patterns and basslines with beautiful string sounds.

In 1994 his debut album 'Inspiration' was released and thereafter 'From The Old To The New' in 1996, at this stage he turned to a more alternative sound, incorporating numerous styles and influences into his productions.

At the end of 2003, Peacefrog released 'Past Movements', a compendium of Steve?s recording history taking in his finest moments under his many guises. The majority of these 12? are rare classics & are now long deleted. From the beautiful & delicate heartfelt strings of ?Point Of No Return? to the morphed disco electronic elegance of ?Funky purple Hot pants?? these tracks are timeless classics that deserve to be heard by a wider audience.

Expect more from Mr. Pickton in 2005.