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Dark Matter

111.8K streams

111,775

Cobalt Blue

70.9K streams

70,905

Projections

59.4K streams

59,434

Jack Out EP

58.9K streams

58,903

Live At Scand

52.4K streams

52,350

Field Lines

51.3K streams

51,271

Bioroid

45K streams

45,036

Skoda Banger EP

39.5K streams

39,496

Revelations

33.2K streams

33,224

Mr Machine PT 2

17.8K streams

17,772

Biography

Silicon Scally is the moniker Carl A. Finlow reserves for his purest electro material, mainly eschewing the new wave-influenced vocals and more club-friendly rhythms of his work as Random Factor and under his own name. Succeeding his short-lived Voice Stealer alias from the late '90s, Silicon Scally debuted in 1998 with the album Electrocide, and remained one of Finlow's most productive monikers, issuing albums like 2007's Bioroid and 2022's Field Lines. Finlow was born in Liverpool in 1970. Inspired by vintage electronic artists like Tomita, he started making computer-based music as a teenager, and began releasing records in the early '90s, after moving to Leeds. One of his earliest productions was Circle City's "Moments of Inertia," a progressive house single released by Warp in 1993. He formed a long-lasting partnership with Leeds-based DJ Ralph Lawson, founder of the 20:20 Vision label and resident at Back to Basics, and the two have produced music together as Urban Farmers, Wolf n' Flow, and several other projects. Additionally, Finlow worked with Daz Quayle as Black Labs during the mid-'90s, and the two later produced more IDM-leaning work as Scarletron and IL.EK.TRO. Finlow's first major solo project was Random Factor, which debuted in 1994 with the ambient/downtempo full-length Purist Images from Conceptual Reality. Finlow debuted his Voice Stealer alias with 1997's All-Electric House, an acclaimed album that influenced numerous modern electro producers. He followed it with the 1998 EP Electromotive Force, then dropped the alias in favor of Silicon Scally, which first surfaced with 1998's Electrocide. While Finlow's work as Random Factor moved into more of a song-driven, new wave-influenced style, he largely kept his Silicon Scally work free of vocals, exploring more alien terrain akin to artists like Drexciya. The 2000 EP Curvature preceded 2001's The Silent Years, his first release on New York's Satamile Records, and a split EP with Kalamazoo-based techno producer Jay Denham. Mr. Machine, Silicon Scally's second album, was released in 2002 by SCSI-AV, which also issued the project's debut. Satamile released the next two albums, 2005's Dark Matter and 2007's Bioroid. Silicon Scally digitally self-issued 2011's Unreleased, the 2013 EP Augment, and the 2016 full-length Machine Bias. A collaboration with Sync 24 (on Cultivated Electronics) appeared in 2016, and Innerspace Records released a split EP between Silicon Scally and Morphology in 2017. The acid-leaning Live @ Scand was issued by Electrix Records in 2018. Silicon Scally first appeared on braindance/electro label Central Processing Unit with 2018's Projections EP, followed by 2019's Cobalt Blue, and Skoda Banger was issued by Cultivated Electronics. The 15-track full-length Crushed was digitally self-released; 20:20 Vision later released an EP of tracks taken from the album. Cymatics Operator, a split EP with Telephasycx!, was released by Rator Mute in early 2020. Silicon Scally continued issuing music on CPU, with the EPs Dormant (2020) and Revelations (2021) followed by the 2022 full-length Field Lines. ~ Paul Simpson, Rovi