Las Vegas (album)

[1] Jorg Burger and Wolfgang Voigt first met in the early 1980s and began producing electronic music in the late 1980s.

In the early 1990s they co-founded the Trance Atlantic record label and opened the Delirium record store in Cologne, the latter also by Michael Mayer, Jürgen Paape, and Reinhard Voigt who would all co-found the minimal techno label Kompakt in 1998 alongside Burger and Voigt.

"[6] John Bush of AllMusic wrote: "Quite distanced from the legion of echo-chamber drumkick records in Mike Ink's catalog, Las Vegas presents a series of languid trance numbers that reprise the deep-sea dub of his Studio 1 recordings but without the straight-ahead four-four beats.

Writing for the article, Simon Reynolds stated that "[Las Vegas] marks a moment for IDM in which ideas were coalescing and new conversations were arising.

Some of its influence is circumstantial; few predicted the globally prominent rise of Cologne's dance music and Kompakt Records soon after its release, or that Matador's issuing of the album in the U.S. two years later would open its indie-rock listeners to electronic beats.