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Tuesday, 3 February 2015

B(IF)TEK



In 1994 in Canberra Kate Crawford and Nicole Skeltys formed B(if)tek as an electronic music group, and began writing material for their first album, 'Sub-Vocal Theme Park' (1996). Biftek comes from French le biftek, which is borrowed from the English "beefsteak", while the English "beef" is originally from the French le bœuf. It was sourced from Jean-Luc Goddard's 1961 film, Une femme est une femme. According to the band's website the album was recorded by the duo during 1995 and 1996 in a local suburban garage and was released as a limited edition of 500 copies on the independent Geekgirl label.

Blatant Propaganda's reviewer felt that 'Sub-Vocal Theme Park' showed "a range of cruisey analogue-synth based tracks... Trippy listening music, with lots of burbling bass, mellow grooves, occasional samples and spluttering filtered percussions." B(if)tek had a close association with the Clan Analogue collective. By 2000 the duo was based in Melbourne, they had signed with the Murmur label, distributed by Sony Music Australia. For their 2003 album 'Frequencies Will Move Together' the band received a grant from the Federal Government to investigate the effects of low frequency sounds on people. They finished up in 2004.

After the split, Nicole Skeltys changed musical direction, forming the psychedelic folk band Dust and releasing the album Songs in 2007. In late 2007, she formed the band The Jilted Brides and released the album Larceny of Love. Since 2008, she has been based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 2006, Kate Crawford began hosting an experimental music television show Set on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. She is also an author and academic and lives and works in Sydney.







References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%28if%29tek


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