Regis is a name that has become synonymous with techno and like those before him --
Jeff Mills,
Robert Hood,
Joey Beltram -- it has also become a sign of quality. The pseudonym of Birmingham, U.K.-born Karl O'Connor,
Regis' story began in the early '90s. With a grounding in the post-punk and industrial scene of the '80s, O'Connor favored the rapidly increasing British techno sound being pioneered by the likes of
Sweet Exorcist,
Renegade Soundwave, and
Cabaret Voltaire's
Richard H. Kirk, and in 1993, along with Peter Sutton (
Female), he founded Downwards. Approaching the label with true D.I.Y. aesthetics, Downwards released music from like-minded artists such as
Surgeon and
Female, but it wasn't until 1995 that the first
Regis release appeared. The 12" Montreal was made up of three loop-driven slabs of industrial-techno, taking influence from
Jeff Mills and
Dave Clarke, a sound that
Regis would become known for throughout the '90s.
After a slew of singles,
Regis released his first album, 1996's Gymnastics. It continued with the dark, cold, industrial-techno sound that had appeared on his previous 12" releases and was followed in 1998 with his second album, Delivered into the Hands of Indifference. That year also saw
Regis work with his childhood heroes
Robert Görl and
Chrislo Hass of German industrial outfit
D.A.F. and saw him round out the end of the '90s with the recording of a prestigious
John Peel session.
With collaborations influencing his output,
Regis' sound moved away from the loop-based techno he'd produced in the '90s, and with the beginning of the new millennium, O'Connor took field recordings and drones and incorporated them into his own brand of techno on his third album, 2001's Penetration. That year
Regis teamed up with fellow techno artist
Surgeon to form the British Murder Boys. Their mix of industrial drones, broken beats, and harsh loops helped redefine the techno landscape, spearheading a new direction in the genre.
Alongside longtime collaborators
Female,
Silent Servant, and
Function,
Regis helped form Sandwell District in 2002. Part label/part DJ collective, the mission was to continue with what had been started with Downwards, creating a truly D.I.Y. setup with like-minded individuals. The Sandwell collective went on to inform one of the biggest shifts in techno, with their sound influencing a whole new generation of producers and clubbers alike, particularly at Berlin's famous Berghain nightclub.
Focusing on the Sandwell District project,
Regis' solo output slowed throughout the noughties but in 2011 he reappeared with the single In a Syrian Tongue on the newly formed
Blackest Ever Black label. Toward the end of 2011, the three-disc retrospective Adolescence: The Complete Recordings 1994-2001 was released on Downwards, collecting together all of
Regis' early work for the first time. Further EPs followed on both Downwards and
Blackest Ever Black, including the double 12" Death Head Said (2012), Turin Versions (2013), and Blood Witness Versions (2014). In 2015,
Blackest Ever Black released Manbait, a collection of
Regis' remixes for the likes of
Ike Yard,
Vatican Shadow, and
Tropic of Cancer, as well as selections from his singles and EPs for the label. ~ Richard Wilson