Industry (Dom & Roland album)

Produced using a range of equipment, including a Roland sampler and a Yamaha 01 digital mixer, the album incorporates experimental techniques and draws on influences from science fiction.

Dom & Roland produced Industry at the Moving Shadow label's studios, which had previously served as David Bowie's writing room.

[2] Inspired by science fiction films such as Blade Runner, he sought to create innovative and unique sounds, often manipulating and processing audio through unconventional methods.

[2] Angas described his process as driven by a need to create for himself rather than for an audience, blending science fiction elements with the technical precision of drum and bass production.

[2] Similarly, "Remote View" incorporated experimental techniques, such as playing sounds through speakers and recording their output in enclosed spaces to create unique textures.

[2] The two producers exchanged samples using ZIP disks and worked with tools like the Sequential Circuits Pro-One and the E-mu sampler to develop the track.

[2] "Elektra" incorporated classical music elements, with patterns repeated across instruments and a dynamic structure that contrasted light and dark sections.

In Drum 'n' Bass: The Rough Guide, journalist Peter Shapiro criticised the album for relying on familiar elements of the techstep style.