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Amon Tobin
Bricolage
(Ninja Tune)
Spotify / Apple Music
Brazilian production whizz Amon Tobin had already made waves with 1996’s Adventures in Foam under the Cujo moniker, but it was Bricolage that really solidified his legacy. A fusion of dusty jazz, drum & bass, trip hop and IDM, Bricolage is still singular thanks to Tobin’s restraint; whenever it feels as if the blend of disparate sounds might cross the line, he’s able to pull back. There’s a reason why US auto giant Lincoln has been using ‘Easy Muffin’ in their TV ads since 2015. JT

Aphex Twin
Come To Daddy
(Warp)
Spotify / Apple Music
Come To Daddy isn’t quite an album, but it’s arguably as important a release as any of Richard D. James’ other efforts, much to his dismay. He famously dismissed the track back in 2001 as “a joke”, but to many of us listening it marked a transitional period for experimental electronic music. Sounding more like heavy metal or industrial music than any of James’ previous noodling, ‘Come To Daddy’ was PWEI and Nine Inch Nails piped through a rack of distortion, draped in a hoarse death metal vocal that was never anything except an attempt by James to troll his increasingly-rabid fans.
The track hit 36 in the UK charts, assisted by a truly iconic video from Chris Cunningham, and stands as one of James’ most recognizable tracks. Even more impressively, the rest of the EP is even better. ‘Flim’? ‘Bucephalus Bouncing Ball’? ‘IZ-US’? Any of these tracks would be exemplary on their own – welded together, we’ve got a classic. JT

Autechre
Chiastic Slide
(Warp)
Spotify / Apple Music
Chiastic Slide might be IDM’s most important album. At least, it’s the Autechre album that best crystallizes the duo’s idiosyncratic blend of dancefloor experimentation and the sound of hundreds of computers failing in unison. It emerged during a flurry of activity, straddled by beloved EPs Envane and Chichlisuite and following their acclaimed Tri Repetae, but it wasn’t a hit with critics initially, who dismissed it as overlong and lacking the melodic punch of its predecessor.
Fans, however, took it to heart, and within a few short years it felt as if every other IDM producer was attempting to mimic Sean Booth and Rob Brown’s jagged fusion of stuttering hip-hop rhythms, bold synth lines and crunchy noise. Without Chiastic Slide, electronic music could sound very different. JT

Biosphere
Substrata
(All Saints Records)
Spotify / Apple Music
Biosphere’s third album Substrata guaranteed a tag that would stick with Geir Jenssen for the next thirty years – “Arctic ambient”. Sculpting 11 beatless soundscapes from biting winds, dripping water, squawking seagulls and eerie, low-end bass drones, Substrata freeze-framed the sublime beauty of Jenssen’s Arctic Circle homeland using field recordings and gossamer guitars that peek through the thick, icy fog.
For Jenssen, Substrata also shifted the paradigm from the techno pulse of his previous two albums to a world of deep tissue bliss, one that perfectly mirrored the vastness and desolation of his surrounding environment. It was a landmark feat for both the ambient canon and the Norwegian producer’s production trajectory – and one that, of course, ensured plenty of metaphor-rich fodder for music journalists. ACW

Björk
Homogenic
(One Little Indian)
Spotify / Apple Music
Plenty of ‘90s pop albums tried to absorb the innovations of post-rave music and IDM, but none so successfully – nor so agelessly – as Bjork’s 1997 masterpiece. She’d spent the previous few years hanging about with Goldie and LFO’s Mark Bell (whose production skills added a spine-tingling, WTF-am-I-hearing element to tracks like ‘Hunter’ and ‘Jóga’), so it’s no surprise that Homogenic landed right on the bleeding edge of the pop frontier. It sounds just as fresh 20 years on. CR

Carl Craig
More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art
(Planet E)
YouTube
Techno has had an awkward relationship with the album format since its inception. There’s no shortage of techno full-lengths out there, but they rarely capture the genre’s versatility, its outlook and its depth without losing sight of the dancefloor. Carl Craig is one of the few artists who managed to crack the formula, and More Songs About Food and Revolutionary Art still stands as one of the genre’s shining pillars.
He managed this quite simply – by joining the dots between Detroit’s first wave of techno, the UK’s early IDM experiments and Basic Channel’s pioneering dub variations. It’s a perfect snapshot of techno’s boundless creativity in 1997 and stands as a sober reminder of the laziness that would characterize the genre as it became co-opted by Europe. THIS is techno. JT

The Chemical Brothers
Dig Your Own Hole
(Virgin)
Spotify / Apple Music
Big beat aged poorly, there’s no getting around that – by 1998 it was practically a curse word – but it’s hard to write off Dig Your Own Hole, The Chemical Brothers’ ambitious second album. Here, the duo refined the elements that had made their debut so successful and came up with a perfectly-formed electronic pop album that connected to a new generation of fans.
They did so by opening up a dialog with Britpop – the laddish, rockist genre that at the time was seemingly at war with dance music. When Noel Gallagher jumped on ‘Setting Sun’, a heaving throng of lager-chucking “Eng-er-land”-chanting blokey-blokes decided that electronic music might not be that bad after all. The sun was setting and a new dawn was near. JT

Company Flow
Funcrusher Plus
(Rawkus)
YouTube
Company Flow’s divisive debut album is a hip-hop milestone. Sure, there had been plenty of underground, experimental and independent rap records before 1997, but Funcrusher Plus‘s punk-ish fusion of dystopian soundscapes and charged, complex rhymes was different and felt completely singular. It was like hearing an early Public Enemy or BDP 12” playing over the Blade Runner soundtrack and informed a legion of followers. There’s a damn good reason why two decades later, rapper/producer El-P is one of hip-hop’s most recognizable figures. JT

Daft Punk
Homework
(Virgin)
Spotify / Apple Music
On their never-truly-bettered debut album, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo and Thomas Bangalter squashed two decades of club influences (as nodded to on their tribute track ‘Teachers’) into an album of anarchic yet slyly pop-savvy dancefloor weapons. These days the robots are known for their slick studio perfectionism, but on Homework we got to hear the cogs whirring inside the machine. CR