Fabric discography

From November 2001 to November 2018, the London nightclub fabric ran a monthly mix compilation series. Mixed by a variety of emerging and established DJs, the two series were entitled fabric and FABRICLIVE respectively. The compilation mixes were released independently by fabric on an alternating monthly basis.[1]

fabric discography
The interior of fabric nightclub in Farringdon, London, circa 2009
fabric mixtapes100
FABRICLIVE mixtapes100
fabric presents mixtapes4
fabric podcast episodes35

In May 2018, fabric announced that the fabric series would end "in its current form" with its 100th instalment; in October 2018, fabric revealed the final fabric compilation would be a triple-disc set, mixed by two of the club's residents—Craig Richards and Terry Francis—as well as its founder, Keith Reilly.[2] In August 2018, the club announced that the FABRICLIVE series would also end with its 100th instalment, and would be mixed by Kode 9—founder of the celebrated underground electronic music label, Hyperdub—and Burial—a pioneering UK dubstep producer.[3]

In January 2019, fabric announced a revamped quarterly mix series, titled fabric presents, coinciding with the club's 20th anniversary celebrations.[4] The inaugural mix of the new series was released in February 2019 — compiled by UK electronic musician, producer, and DJ, Bonobo.[5]

fabric series (2001–2018)

The albums in this series generally feature music in the techno, house, electronica, and tech-house genres. The mixes in the fabric series reflect the kinds of music typically showcased at the nightclub's Saturday night events.[6]

FABRICLIVE series (2001–2018)

The albums in this series generally feature music in the UK bass, drum & bass, grime, and hip hop genres. 'Live' in the series' title does not in fact indicate that the mixes were recorded live. The mixes in the FABRICLIVE series reflect the kinds of music typically showcased at the nightclub's Friday night events.[6]

fabric presents series (2019–present)

fabric podcast series (2007–2010)

  • fabric podcast 01 - Craig Richards (09-10-2007)
  • fabric podcast 02 - Andrew Weatherall (20-11-2007)
  • fabric podcast 03 - Doc Scott (19-12-2007)
  • fabric podcast 04 - Jonny Trunk Part 1 (08-01-2008)
  • fabric podcast 05 - Jonny Trunk Part 2 (23-01-2008)
  • fabric podcast 06 - Ross Allen Part 1 (13-02-2008)
  • fabric podcast 07 - Ross Allen Part 2 (26-02-2008)
  • fabric podcast 08 - Keith Reilly Part 1 (11-03-2008)
  • fabric podcast 09 - Keith Reilly Part 2 (26-03-2008)
  • fabric podcast 10 - Peanut Butter Wolf & James Pants (08-04-2008)
  • fabric podcast 11 - Peanut Butter Wolf & James Pants Part 2 (22-04-2008)
  • fabric podcast 12 - Howie B (13-05-2008)
  • fabric podcast 13 - Howie B Part 2 (27-05-2008)
  • fabric podcast 14 - Don Letts (12-06-2008)
  • fabric podcast 15 - Don Letts Part 2 (24-06-2008)
  • fabric podcast 16 - Zed Bias (16-07-2008)
  • fabric podcast 17 - Zed Bias Part 2 (04-08-2008)
  • fabric podcast 18 - Greg Wilson (26-08-2008)
  • fabric podcast 19 - Greg Wilson Part 2 (28-08-2008)
  • fabric podcast 20 - Kid Batchelor (30-09-2008)
  • fabric podcast 21 - Kid Batchelor Part 2 (21-10-2008)
  • fabric podcast 22 - Jazzanova (13-01-2009)
  • fabric podcast 23 - Jazzanova Part 2 (22-01-2009)
  • fabric podcast 24 - Mad Professor (24-02-2009)
  • fabric podcast 25 - Mad Professor Part 2 (29-02-2009)
  • fabric podcast 26 - Dave Dorrell (28-04-2009)
  • fabric podcast 27 - Dave Dorrell Part 2 (29-04-2009)
  • fabric podcast 28 - DJ Vadim (01-06-2009)
  • fabric podcast 29 - DJ Vadim Part 2 (11-06-2009)
  • fabric podcast 30 - Malcolm Catto (13-07-2009)
  • fabric podcast 31 - Malcolm Catto Part 2 (26-07-2009)
  • fabric podcast 32 - Surgeon (24-08-2009)
  • fabric podcast 33 - Surgeon Part 2 (25-08-2009)
  • fabric podcast 34 - Four Tet (05-04-2010)
  • fabric podcast 35 - Four Tet Part 2 (06-04-2010)
gollark: It seems that I may have slightly frozen it by foolishly assuming that the weird "i" symbol it has for range was an iota.
gollark: Yes, I'm looking at that.
gollark: Hmm, the only APL thing I can get from my package manager is "GNU APL".
gollark: Is there a similar language without the incomprehensible symbols? I've heard of "J" or something.
gollark: I am somewhat interested in doing so at this point.

See also

References

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