Juno Reactor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juno Reactor are a goa trance music group, often known for their tribal influences, consisting of Ben Watkins and Mike Macguire. At one point, the group also included other members, including Johann Bley, Stephen Holweck, and Jens Waldenback.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] The Missile Project
Juno Reactor was formed initially in 1990 by Ben Watkins and Stephen Holweck as an experimental ambient project to record a soundtrack to accompany a sculptural art installation and performance project by the sculpture artist (and Watkins' girlfriend) Norma Fletcher called "The Missile Project". The centerpiece of the project was a 70-foot decommissioned missile nicknamed "Juno Reactor" which they rolled around London while playing their music to raise awareness about nuclear war. According to Watkins, "[it] was blue concrete. And it looked like a dinosaur tail. And a smoke came out of it." [1] The project took over a month to complete, however the exhibition lasted only several hours as London police arrived to break up the missile and arrested all members of the project. The music was eventually released as Juno Reactor's second album, Luciana.
[edit] 1993 and beyond
In 1993, Juno Reactor released their first single, "Laughing Gas", on NovaMute. This was soon followed by their debut album, Transmissions. This release was considered a huge success and is considered to be one of the first albums in the goa trance genre. Later, the band released Luciana on Alex Paterson's (The Orb) Inter-Modo label. Juno Reactor left NovaMute and Inter-Modo in 1995 and signed to UK's Blue Room Released label to release Guardian Angel single. Their album Beyond the Infinite was released in 1996.
The 1997 release on Wax Trax! Records/TVT Records, Bible of Dreams, was Juno Reactor's fourth album. It had a sound much different from the previous albums and moved away from the traditional dance beats by implementing tribal influences. Watkins collaborated with Amampondo, a traditional South African percussion act, on the single "Conga fury". Ben Watkins and Amampondo went on a five week tour of the U.S., doing the opening for Moby. In 1998 Juno Reactor played a stunning live set with Amampondo at Glastonbury Festival. They have played as headliners at every year of the Glastonbury spinoff, Glade Festival.
Watkins released the fifth Juno Reactor album, Shango in 2000. It was the first of his albums on Metropolis Records. The first track from the album, "Pistolero", was done in a collaboration with guitarist Steve Stevens (Billy Idol). The song opened up an entirely new direction for Juno Reactor. This same track was also featured during the trailer for the movie Once Upon a Time in Mexico, as well as the film itself. In the fall of 2002, Juno Reactor released new single titled "Hotaka". It was in a Japanese studio overlooking Mt. Fuji. "Hotaka" once again featured Steve Stevens on guitar, and included traditional Taiko drummers, Gocoo. In 2003, the Odyssey 1992-2002 album was released as a compilation of the best Juno Reactor tracks of the past decade.
The latest Juno Reactor album, Labyrinth, was released in October 2004, and featured Watkins' work from the Matrix films. The new album once again cemented the tribal influences present in their music through tracks like "Conquistador II".
in 2006 Ben Watkins was hired to produce the OST for Brave Story (A childrens anime movie). Very limited numbers of the Soundtrack were published in july 2006 by Sony, Japan.
[edit] Current Works
Juno Reactor may soon release an EP entitled ‘Superman – the immaculate Crucifixion’, featuring experimental works, one of the tracks (City of the sinfull) is co-written and sung by Ghetto Priest, who also provides the golden vocals for Asian Dub Foundation.
In Oct 2006 Juno reactor performed a taped concert in Tokyo including an extended lineup and some new work, this show will feature in the forthcoming tour DVD.
Lineup:
- Ben Watkins
- Taz Alexander (vocals & dance)
- Mabi Thobejane (congas)
- Michael LaDonga (African drums)
- Simpiwe Marele (African drums)
- Mandala Lande (African drums)
- Greg Ellis (drum kit)
- Paul Jackson (bass)
- Steve Stevens (guitar)
- Squid (Ghetto Priest) (rap & dance)
- Xavier Morell (dj)
Play List:
- Conquistador I & II
- Biot Messiah
- Giant
- War Dogs
- Komit
- City of the Sinfull (New)
- God is God
- Mutant Message
- Hotaka
- Pistolero
- Conga Fury
- Nitrogen II
- Insects
- Rotablade
- Zwara
- Hulalam
- Masters of the Universe
- Angels & Men
- Wavg (?New?)
- Guardian Angel
Juno Reactor are also providing part of the soundtrack for Genius Party, a forthcoming Studio 4°C Animation
[edit] Appearances in media
Their remix of Traci Lords' song "Control" as an instrumental was featured on the soundtrack for the Mortal Kombat movie. They returned for the sequel Mortal Kombat Annihilation with tracks like "Conga Fury". Later, the group, in collaboration with Don Davis, had a number of tracks featured on the soundtracks for the Matrix series of films (most notably the famous freeway chase scene in The Matrix Reloaded, which featured "Mona Lisa Overdrive", as well as the Animatrix, which featured the track, "Masters Of The Universe" on the segment, "Kid's Story" and "Conga Fury (Animatrix Remix)" on the segment, "Final Flight of the Osiris" ). Their single "Guardian Angel" was featured as the opening theme of the anime series Texhnolyze. "Guardian Angel" was also featured in the movie Drive starring Mark Dacascos and Kadeem Hardison. Other Juno Reactor tracks appear on movies such as Eraser, Virtuosity, Lost In Space, the Romeo + Juliet trailer, Beowulf and even Once Upon a Time in Mexico. Juno Reactor soundtracks have also been played during baseball, basketball, and gridiron football games, the Japanese Grand Prix, and appear on the PlayStation 2 games Jet Moto 3 and Frequency, as well as the Xbox game Mad Dash Racing. Juno Reactor also scored the entirety of the Mark of Kri game.
In the game Final Fantasy VII, there is a device called a Mako reactor in a place called Junon; thus, it is referred to as the Junon Reactor. It is unclear whether this was a deliberate reference. [In the original Japanese version of the game, the reactor was referred to as ジュノン海底魔晄炉 (Junon Kaitei Makouro), or Junon Underwater Mako Reactor.]
[edit] Trivia
- The name Juno is the name of an Ancient Roman goddess. In this fashion, Juno Reactor symbolizes a "powerhouse of the ancient religions". One of the band's logos is actually a form of the symbol associated with the asteroid Juno.
- The title of the album Beyond the Infinite could be a reference to 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the sequence "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite". This may be related to the several occurrences of their sampling of this movie on the Transmissions album.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Main Albums
- Transmissions (NovaMute Records 1993)
- Beyond the Infinite (Blue Room Released 1995)
- Bible of Dreams (Blue Room Released 1997)
- Shango (Metropolis Records 2001)
- Labyrinth (Metropolis Records, Universal Music 2004)
[edit] Singles & EPs
- Luciana (Inter-Modo 1994)
- Laughing Gas (1993)
- High Energy Protons (1994)
- Guardian Angel (1995)
- Samurai (1996)
- Conga Fury (1996)
- Jungle High (1997)
- God Is God (1997)
- GOD IS GOD!! (Front 242 Mixes) (1997)
- Pistolero (Blue Room Released 2000)
- Masters Of The Universe (2001)
- Hotaka (2002)
- The Zwara EP (2003)
[edit] Live Recordings & Compilation Albums
- Odyssey 1992-2002
- Shango Tour 2001 Tokyo (Live In Tokyo) (2002)
[edit] External links
- ReactorLeak.com - Juno Reactor official website
- DMoz.org category: 'Juno Reactor'
- Interview with Ben Watkins by Special Radio
- Extensive Juno Reactor discography at Discogs
- Juno Reactor on Last.fm, a social music profiling service