[4][5] Other early Skam releases came from Freeform (Simon Pyke), Bola, Jega,[6][7] Team Doyobi,[2] E.Stonji (Jens Döring), and Boards of Canada.
Skam has since stated on its website that future KMAS releases will feature purely exclusive tracks to complement full-length recordings of the same number.
Tim Haslett wrote of Skam in the October 1997 issue of CMJ New Music Monthly: "It looked for a while as though the minimalist electronic movement had simply disappeared into the valley of the self-indulgent and repetitive.
Having released early tracks by cult favorites Gescom and the Boards Of Canada, the Skam imprint has continued to thrive at the periphery of the crepuscular world of underground techno.
This might seem an elitist marketing move, an attempt to restrict the audience, but the Skam folks spend so much attention to detail in artwork and sound quality that it's easy to forgive them.