Quote Originally Posted by 303808909
Lenny started with Industrial Strength and then split it into ISR and IST and also has industrial movement which is half of I.S. and Third Movement in Holland, as well as bastardloud.

He's always played and represented techno. in fact he started out in disco, then house (just play Grand Theft Auto San Andreas and turn on the SFUR acid house station to find one of his classics featured).

Being one of the main pioneers of Hardcore did have a -ve side. People forgot very quickly he was also a techno pioneer and was instantly pigeon-holed (unjustly) and has even been slagged for playing techno (probably by narrow-minded kids too young to remember his early days).

He's been pushing the techno side of things again recently to try and shake off some of that -ve pigeon-holeing by working with loads of people like K.Katz, Promo as well as collaborating on the London labels (Maximum Minimum, Powertools etc..) Ok, so he dosen't play or make the full on 303 madness of labels like Stay Up Forever but will hammer out some of the more techno-based imprints they have to offer.

Ok Serox, you may not like the recent collaborations and that's fine. Personal taste and all that..., but Lenny's never just stuck to Hardcore. He's always made and played music right across the board from disco to electro to the hardest, sickest s**t on the planet.
to be honest, i think he startd making more boring club techno around the same time Marc Acardipane stopped making hardcore.

i really think he would have been better off sticking to the hardcore stuff and leave this trance alone. :dontevengothere: