Decoder (duo)

Decoder is the stage name of drum and bass and jungle producer Darren Beale and Mark Caro.[1]

Decoder
Also known asAtlas
Beyond Reality
Koda
Psykis
Pure White
Wild Orkid
Orca
dubspeeka
OriginBristol, United Kingdom
GenresDrum and bass
Occupation(s)Producer
Years active1991–present
Associated actsKosheen
MembersDarren Beale and Mark Caro

Biography

Beale started his career in 1991 using various aliases creating oldschool hardcore tracks. He continued fine tuning the deep jungle sound under the Orca and Koda aliases on Lucky Spin Records and its sister label, Deejay Recordings, releasing "Tranquility to Earth" in 1994. In 1995 he first used the Decoder pseudonym, pioneering the dark or 'tech step' style of drum & bass, often on Mark Caro's label Tech Itch Recordings.

1997 saw the release of Decoder's Decoded EP, which achieved press recognition with a number eighteen placing in NME's "Vibes Singles of the Year" chart.

Decoder releases appeared on various labels, including Breakbeat Culture with Markee Ledge as Decoder & Substance, Tech Itch Recordings, BS1 Records, Hard Leaders, 31 Records and Audio Couture. Decoder also provided production for Peshay's Miles From Home.

Beale's next release, the Encrypted EP, reached number three in Fabio & Grooverider's "Rollers Top Ten" chart in 1998. The Encrypted EP, along with "Headlock", "Deception" and Decoder's collaboration with Mark Caro, EKO, followed. The debut album, Dissection, appeared on Hard Leaders Records in 1998[2] and went on to receive critical acclaim in the industry. Decoder was also responsible for remixes of tracks such as Photek's "Rings Around Saturn", Adam F's "Dirty Harry" and Alan McGee's "The Chemical Pilot".

Beale later went on to form a new band called Kosheen with Markee Ledge .

Discography

Albums

  • Dissection (1998)
  • Encounters — Decoder & Substance (w/ Markee Ledge) (1999)
  • Concussion (2003)
gollark: Actually, CBOR literals.
gollark: Vowels are ignored when comparing symbol names. The float type is replaced with a ratio of two decimals. Macros but they require you to rewrite the block of code they're used in as lisp syntax. JSON literals.
gollark: Maybe… even weaker types? Integer types with crazier names and also u24s and stuff for some reason? Do operator overloading to a stupid degree in the stdlib?
gollark: Idea: C-flat language, like C but stupider somehow.
gollark: Clearly what we need is C with better macros, so that "extensions" are no longer necessary.

References

  1. Cooper, Sean. "Decoder | Biography". allmusic.com. Retrieved 5 January 2011.
  2. Bush, John. "Dissection — Decoder | Album Review". allmusic.com. Retrieved 5 January 2011.
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