94 Diskont

[4] The review went on to note that group have been described in desperation as techno and critiqued this reference stating "try dancing to the sort of erratic pulsing and hiccuping that comes over like the read-out from a dying alien's electrocardiograph".

The album's centerpiece is "Do While," a 24-minute track originally composed for the group's 8-channel, 128-speaker modular sound installation named Wohnton (translates into home tone) in a stereo mixdown.

[7] Ben Tausig of AllMusic awarded the album five stars and stated, "94 Diskont is undoubtedly a standout in the field of electronically advanced, glitch-heavy music.

"[6] In their 1998 list of "100 Records That Set the World on Fire (While No One Was Listening)", The Wire wrote of the album: "From nothing but digital detritus, Oval construct a resonant holism of pure crystalline beauty.

Mark Richardson of Pitchfork declared, "Sounds appear as multi-layer holograms, with both sources and ghosted copies simultaneously vying for attention, a piece of sonic trickery used to create some of the most serene and aquatic music of the '90s.