Pan Sonic
[Mika Vainio, Ilpo Vaisanen, (Sami Salo)]

1994 Panasonic - Panasonic - Sahko
1995 Panasonic - Vakio - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1996 Panasonic - Osasto - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1997 Panasonic - Kulma - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1998 Pan Sonic with Alan Vega - Medal - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1998 Vainio Vaisanen Vega - Endless - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1998 Pan Sonic - Arctic Rangers - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1999 Pan sonic - A - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1999 Pan sonic - B - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
1999 Pan sonic + Hayley Newman + David Crawford - Rude Mechanic - Piano
1999 Vainio & Vaisanen - 20' to 2000 - Raster-Noton
2000 Panasonic - Mort aux vaches - Staalplaat
2000 Pan Sonic - Aaltopiiri - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
2004 Pan Sonic - Kesto - Blast First/Mute Records Limited
2005 VVV [Vega / Vainio / Väisänen] - Resurrection River -
Mego
2006 Merzbow & Pan Sonic -V - Victoriaville
The most famous act to originate from Sahko Recordings,
Panasonic (now called Pan sonic), first came into being in the summer
of 1993 through the meeting of two creative minds, Mika
Vainio and Ilpo Vaisanen. Vainio had worked as a DJ in the 80's
and created his own music with Pertti Gronholm, as Corporate 09. Vaisanen
was originally from Kuopio, Finland and ended up in Turku because of
his studies, where he joined the members of the Hyperdelic Housers group
organising rave parties; Vainio and Tommi Gronlund -- who was to found
the Sahko label -- among them. Ilpo Vaisanen had been responsible for
the official Down By The Laituri 1990 festival poster, and was during
that time also a member of Ultra 3, an artistic group of wide-ranging
interests which, after Mika Vainio joined, was renamed to ø.
The one-time third member of Panasonic, Sami Salo, finally joined in
1994 after having come to contact with Vainio and Vaisanen through Sahko
(for which Salo had recorded a 12'' as Hertsi), and their first EP was
also released that year. Paul Smith, the main man of Mute's sublabel
Blast First, saw Panasonic's gig in England at a club called Vox in
autumn 1994 [NOTE: press release notes for their second album, Kulma
claim this happened in New York's Disobey club in early 1995], and eventually
signed the act to his label. So far there has been three Pan sonic albums
from Blast First, Vakio in September 1995, Kulma in January 1997 and
A in February 1999; with also one EP, Osasto out in July 1996. Furthermore,
they broadcast a live session with John Peel for BBC in autumn 1995.
Other memorable Pan sonic prank was, of course, the group's original
name nicked from the famous electronics manufacturer, which must have
caused many frustrations to their record label. As Toshiba, the Panasonic
Electronics' biggest competitor in Japan had plans to licence the group's
music from Blast First, the change of name seemed to become more probable
all the time. The latest news tell that after having been contacted
by the lawyers of Panasonic USA, who threatened the act and their record
label with legal actions, from spring 1998 onwards the duo is officially
to be called Pan Sonic. Thus were also crushed Ilpo's hopes that the
band would have been sponsored by their electronics giant namesake...
Pan sonic cite as their influences, first of all, Alan Vega's and Martin
Rev's legendary proto-techno duo Suicide (with which they were gigging
in March 1998; not to mention the recorded collaboration with Alan Vega),
industrial pioneers Throbbing Gristle and Einstorzende Neubauten, the
French ''musique concrete'' composer Pierre Henry and the eccentric
cult rockabilly musician Hasil Adkins -- Mika Vainio has sometimes jokingly
called Pan sonic's music ''horsemeat rockabilly''. Their sound is, according
to Mika, increasingly moving away from the regular 4-4 techno, and is
now, for example, inspired by old Jamaican dub reggae and ska. And of
course rockabilly, which Mika likes with a late-70's Eno-ish twist.
Mika isn't really into today's ''electronica'' and its computer-driven
sound. Furthermore, Mika and Ilpo are into Hurriganes [sic], a ''legendary''
Finnish power trio of rock'n'roll Neanderthals back in the 70's (the
band's drummer-singer Remu couldn't speak English, so the lyrics were
written phonetically for him, and so on).The group also has an ''extra
member'' called Jari Lehtinen who's responsible for building Pan sonic's
instruments with which their extraordinary humming sounds have been
created. Mika describes their custom equipment: ''We have a synthesizer
which is one big box that has twelve oscillators on it; you can connect
them to each other and modulate them together. We also have this small
synthesizer which is built to an old typewriter -- we call it 'typewriter'.
We have several drum modules to make rhythmic sounds which we are using
with an 808. Jari Lehtinen is also building us this large synthesizer
that will have eight oscillators and a cross connection board, like
the early 70s, late 60s synthesizers.'' Pan sonic now use also samplers
and a computer based sequencer, MPC2000. So they can leave the ''fishing
box'' back home since it doesn't travel well. Mika says he doesn't really
know anything about computers or MIDI-based music nor does he want to.
He is very much into sounds felt by the body and the effect of frequencies
on the brain. As to Pan sonic's live presentation, they opt to stay
true to their harsh, minimalist nature. On stage the band is illuminated
by blue light and stand behind their equipment, intently tweaking knobs
and levels. Another creation from their engineer friend provides the
one changing visual. ''We have this oscilloscope which is connected
to a video projector. It's just a simple white line on a black background
behind us which reacts to our frequencies and the sounds that we are
making. That's the only visual thing but I think it works really well.''