Looking back at Teste’s limited output, it would easy to write the Canadian duo off as a minor footnote in the history of techno’s early years. Their discography never extended past two official releases, but with their debut 12″ known as “The Wipe” they left an indelible mark on the techno landscape. The group was made up of Himadri Ghosh and Dave Foster who came together for their first release on the Plus 8 sub-label, Probe, in 1992. In a story that brings to mind a starry-eyed turn of fate, a tape of the track was handed to Richie Hawtin at a Toronto rave. On the return drive home Hawtin and his brother Matthew listened to the tape again and again, becoming the soundtrack for their 200+ mile ride home to Windsor. “The Wipe” had a powerful effect on the two and would soon bring its three-dimensional acid eruptions to warehouse sound systems all over the map.
“The Wipe” features a total of two tracks: two versions of the title track (one of which is the “Sonik Dub” by Richie himself) and ambient track that is practically translucent while managing to be claustrophobic. But “The Wipe (5am Synaptic)” is record’s signature cut, most notably for the psychedelic acid riff that seems to crawl out of the speaker into your head. Delayed to a state of oblivion, the 303 line is stretched, panned and modulated until it disappears into the horizon. The flanged hi-hats and splintering snares are muffled but bright like underwater welding, fusing the rhythm to a plunging bass pulse. There is a strange sense of tribalism evoked in the quieter passages as the percussion echoes in isolation, bringing the industrialism of the track a humanistic quality rarely heard at 140 bpm. Its closest peers of the time period may be some of the Basic Channel releases, but at just over four and a half minutes “The Wipe” manages to produce an urgency that sets it apart. Today it serves as the template for techno minimalism in its most vital form.
This is my favorite BBH so far! That lurking, stalking synth line of the sample track is such a precursor to lots of great current techno sounds. Thanks, Kuri!
Amazing track, has been in my sets on and off for years now. I keep hearing whispers of new remixes coming for Plus 8’s forthcoming birthday package…anyone know anything?
There’s a Marco Carola mix that Richie’s been playing, have not heard of any others, nor a release date…
Thanks Raneir. Glad you like the track and the review. One of my favorite early techno tracks that I bought back then. I had never heard anything like it at the time.
maybe the best techno track ever made.
searing.
Listening to the actual record, and then listening to the mp3 link, which is quite low bit rate I assume, really makes the track lose some magic. If one’s never heard of it, it loses a lot of sheen in that mp3. any way to post a higher bit rate version so people can get a better sense of what makes it nice?
Thanks for the great review and comments.
Its amazing that one night in my basement has lived for over 19 years..
Please let me know of any news as rich never tells me anything :p