Innervisions

Visions And Ideas In The Making

Innervisions is an electronic music label. It was founded by Steffen Berkhahn, aka Dixon, and Kristian Rädle and Frank Wiedemann of Âme, in 2005. Together they form Innervisions’ unique audio-visual universe. With Berlin as its home, Innervisions evolves from within the city and evokes impressions from all over the world with its releases. Yet Innervisions‘ name reflects something more personal. It reflects the intuitive push towards certain ideas. The name was chosen out of the belief that all art forms, not just music, are a materialized sphere of ideas. The encounter with such a materialized sphere of ideas in a book, an exhibition or a track triggers certain sensations and sensibilities. Following on from this, an inner vision not only allows sensations and sensibilities to evolve inside one’s mind. It keeps on spinning from there to generate new ideas.

Founding Member Of Innervisions - Dixon by Davit GiorgadzeInnervisions

Dixon

"Together We Dance Alone"



Founding Members Of Innervisions - Âme by Katja Ruge and Alexx and AntonInnervisions

Âme

"Soul 2 Soul"

Permanent travelling helps the Innervisions crew to stay engaged in the loop of generating new ideas. Whether continent-hopping from Bogotá to Bombay or taking a train ride from Mönchengladbach to Arnhem, the loop does not start with a deliberate search. Like finding a coin in a pool of mud, it’s about letting yourself be thrown into situations where spotting the precious comes by chance. In January 2010, Dixon travelled to India for the first time. In Mumbai he went to Crawford Market, letting the traders drag him from stall to stall. Finally he ended up sat down on exactly the roll of cotton fabric that would become Innervisions’ iconic 2010 shawl: checkered with hand-stitched, polymorphic flowers in colours so sharp they could almost poke your eyes out. Yet what turned a piece of cotton into a shawl – or a fabric into an Innervisions fabrication – was the logo: a hand-stitched red rectangle that blends into the lovely loudness of the shawl without disrupting it. That the rectangle spelled out the label’s name was only visible at second glance.

Innervisions Wortmarke, TaTrung, From the collection of: Innervisions
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An example closer to the core of Innervisions’ productions is the release of Dele Sosimi Afrobeat Orchestra’s “Too much information” remixes right at the end of 2015. In a year when Frankey & Sandrino’s “Acamar” effortlessly scored one superlative after the next, “Too much Information” could have been just that: too much, diverting attention. Yet the far less driving, less swirly and quirky, but heavy in agendas track is evocative of Innervisions’ diverse roots. It’s a testimonial to the auditory amicability the label has cultivated toward West- and South-African influences, encountered not only by travelling but by imbibing through the senses in clubs, bars, museums and friends’ kitchens. So “Too much information” was picked up because it beautifully reflects many aspects of Innervisions’ journeys: the courage to transgress genres, to disrupt trends, to give in to impulsiveness and to taste the untasted. What’s more, all these aspects demonstrate an ignorance toward planned hits.

Music

Innervisions’ audio output reflects, first and foremost, the musical cosmos of Dixon and Âme. Innervisions releases the kind of music that Dixon and Âme play in their sets. To continue the algorithm metaphor: Innervisions is what its protocol is until it becomes what the protocol wants to become. As much as Innervisions runs recursively, it is Dixon and Âme who repeatedly disrupt an otherwise endless cycle. There is no Innervisions sound. Several tracks released by the label over the years might have given some the impression that things are repeating. On closer inspection, recursion is far more intricate than repetition. And treacherous, because it doesn’t cause any easily perceivable transcendent change. It causes minute changes constantly. In German there’s a word for it: changieren. Changieren denotes gradual change, as seen on the iridescent layer inside a mollusc shell or in a smooth baton transfer in a relay race. If you don’t tilt the shell in your hand, nothing changes. If you don’t look closely, you don’t see the baton changing hands on the screen.

IV02 - Âme ‎- Rej EP, TaTrung, Âme, Innervisions, 2005, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV16 - Laurent Garnier ‎- Back To My Roots EP, TaTrung, Âme, Innervisions, 2008-05-01, From the collection of: Innervisions
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In relation to music, Innervisions is about finding and uncovering tracks that capture the instant of changieren, the instant of change at work.Taking this a stage further, we can say that Innervisions subscribes to a certain philosophy of sound. It’s the philosophy of house. More than thirty years after its first introduction to the music scene in Chicago, Detroit and New York there are very few labels, producers and artists today who can still capture the progressiveness of this philosophy. Some try to take up the role of the conservator, dragging music into regress. What is lost today is the immense openness house had toward different styles. Its attitude was to acknowledge the future and be willing to push for change. Nonetheless, that very same philosophy led to a fragmentation and compartmentalization of house. More and more subgenres were formed and separated themselves from the main stream of house. Compared to decades ago, the protagonists of these micro-house genres are quite narrow-minded.

IV29 - Emmanuel Jal & Henrik Schwarz ‎- Kuar Remix EP (Re-Issue), Innervisions, 2019-12-19, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV35 - Osunlade ‎- Envision Remixes, Jan Paul Evers, 2011-07-11, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Osunlade - Envision (Âme Remix), 2011-07-11, From the collection of: Innervisions
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They replace the philosophy of house with a dogma of distinctiveness. Innervisions’ success is based on the refusal of this dogma. Instead, the label endeavours to explore the full breadth of house by subscribing to its versatility. This is a way of paying respect to the grand philosophers of house like Lil’ Louis and Masters at Work without falling into nostalgic tribute. Simultaneously, it is a path to true distinctiveness, the distinctiveness of versatility house always embraced. Regardless of “genrefication”, afro house, tech house, vocal house and deep house remain equal elements of Innervisions’ musical cosmos.

IV39 - Ry & Frank Wiedemann ‎- Howling EP, Frank Wiedemann, Steffen Berkhahn, 2012-07-27, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Ry/Frank Wiedemann - Howling (Âme Remix), 2012-07-27, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV46 - Agoria ‎- Scala EP, Christian Aberle, 2013-09-09, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Agoria - Scala, 2013-09-09, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Artists

This versatility is incorporated into the work artists release with Innervisions. The label, however, never works with the same artists again and again. Innervisions is not a collective; it’s more like a school. Human-centred thinking automatically equates schools with teaching the young and inexperienced. This is not the case in non-human societies, which display multilayered actions when grouping up in a school. In a school of fish, for example, species share a form, information and skills while navigating through the ocean streams together. Yet they only stay together for a moment in time. By choosing the school format, Innervisions invests in two areas: firstly, it invests in artists, usually for one single release. Secondly, it invests in an almost bespoke editing process, and in unique visual design. What’s more, this is done for an extremely small selection of releases – typically six per year. Both investments disassociate Innervisions from market strategies sustained by the music industry, like generic production and promotion, and too many redundant releases.

IV50 - David August ‎- Epikur, Populo Batik, Irma Cirikovic, From the collection of: Innervisions
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David August - Epikur, 2014-03-17, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV62 - Dele Sosimi Afrobeat Orchestra ‎- Too Much Information (Remixes), Miroljub Todorović, Ana Ofak, 2015-12-11, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Dele Sosimi Afrobeat Orchestra - Too much Information - Laolu Remix (Edit), 2015-12-11, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Both these investments keep the format fresh for artists while also making it rewarding for Innervisions. In the music industry the rewarding effect is commonly measured by a release’s placement and time spent in international online charts. And of course by revenue, which is linked to chart success and subsequent re-signing for compilations, record companies, etc.. Another kind of durability is forgotten in the process: durability in the history of house. History in this case is a body of knowledge that incorporates change in order to be able to envision the future. For Innervisions it’s rewarding to see how durable its first hit – “Rej” by Âme – still is. A marching band remake of “Rej” is one example of how a track can still break the internet a decade after its release and facilitate the sudden success of a community and its artists who, for a moment in time, connected up to the history of house.

IV69 - Trikk ‎- Florista EP, Shannon Bool, 2016-12-09, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Trikk - Florista, 2016-12-09, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV70 - Franky & Sandrino - Wega EP, Bojan Šarčevič, 2017-02-10, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Frankey & Sandrino - Wega, 2017-02-10, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Innervisions signs works for its visual design on similar terms. Each year a different artist either produces original pieces or permits the label to reuse existing works. So far there have been collaborations with Jan Paul Evers (2011), Christian Aberle (2014), Miroljub Todorović (2015) and Shannon Bool (2016), Bojan Šarčevič (2017), Nina Kurtela and Hana Erdman (2018), Clay Apenouvon (2019), Claudia Rafael and Pascal Wiemers (2020). In between these collaborations, Innervisions commissioned graphic designers to visualize the intuitive push toward certain ideas. Pierre Becker of TaTrung has worked with the label as often as Ana Ofak and Frank Wiedemann himself, graphic design being his lesserknown profession. So far Innervisions has explored abstract photography, concrete poetry, collage, outsider art and constructivism with its covers. Over time, an aesthetic is being assembled that, in combination with the releases, makes an essential contribution to Innervisions’ versatility and changeability.

Text by Ana Ofak

IV77 - Marcus Worgull ‎- Broad Horizons, Nina Kurtela, Hana Erdman, Rafaela Drazic, Ana Ofak, 2018-02-02, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Marcus Worgull - Broad Horizons, 2018-01-19, From the collection of: Innervisions
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IV87 - Rampa - They Will EP, Clay Apenouvon, Rafaela Drazic, Ana Ofak, From the collection of: Innervisions
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Rampa & WhoMadeWho - Tell Me Are We, 2019-05-31, From the collection of: Innervisions
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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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