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Atkins's songs can be found on any number of compilations and mix CDs, from Warp 10+3 (the "Influences" disc includes Model 500's "Off to Battle") to Four Tet's recent DJ-Kicks (which incorporates Model 500's "Psychosomatic"). With regard to his own releases, the most widely available are The Berlin Sessions and 20 Years Metroplex. The latter, a two-disc set, assiduously documents highlights such as "Clear" and "No UFOs" as well as sensuous singles like "The Flow" and "I Wanna Be There." The Berlin Sessions, a dense electronic workout filled with crushing beats made on the fly, is only his second full-length album and first since 1998's Deep Space.
Both The Berlin Sessions and 20 Years Metroplex were released last year on German imprint Tresor and are distributed in the States via Massachusetts company Forced Exposure. But you're more likely to find a copy of Ellen Allien's Thrills in your local DJ store.
Still, Atkins's totemic achievements inspire documentaries like High Tech Soul: The Creation of Techno Music. A 2004 film directed by Gary Bredow, it will be shown at the Miami Beach Cinematheque on July 27 and is scheduled for a DVD release in September. It shows the baton passed from Atkins, Kevin Saunderson, and Derrick May, the "Belleville Three" (named after the high school they attended), who created Detroit's techno movement, to new-school producers like the Ghostly International clique (Matthew Dear, Tadd Mullinix). Atkins will spin at a PS 14 party the following night; both events are sponsored by Miami crew Pornograph. It should be a rare chance to hear music by the man himself instead of his legion of followers.