The year is 1990 and there’s a hole in the Berlin Wall. Quite a few, actually. Ellen Allien is 21 years old, and she watches open-mouthed as the block of concrete that’s defined much of her life crumbles before her eyes. Punks smash it with hammers. Kids clamber on top of it, yelling in triumph. Ellen cannot believe it. Her city is unifying.
Ellen isn’t yet a respected global DJ. She hasn’t founded BPitch Control (now known as BPitch), the seminal label that’s come to influence the sound of global underground music. She is not yet ranking in DJ Mag’s Alternative Top 100 DJs, nor throwing club nights at Berghain. But she is standing on the precipice of something great; a world beyond her imagination.
Over the coming months, Ellen walks down streets she’s never seen before. At night, bass reverberates out of former power plants, warehouses, and electrical substations. Anti-fascist slogans appear on walls and after midnight, young people dressed in black silently file into bunkers where they dance to a relentless, meditative beat until dawn.
Soon, artists like Carl Cox, Laurent Garnier and The Prodigy will make their way into these makeshift nightclubs. Ellen’s favourite is called E-Werk. Its multiple rooms showcase different DJs and styles, an experience that shapes her future in music.
Ellen Allien was one of the dancers, but soon graduates to DJ, playing rich, deep, techno sets at Tresor and E-Werk. Her love for these clubs extends way beyond music. This is where she gets to connect with the side of the city she was separated from all these years. These people aren’t just dancers, they’re neighbours.
In the late ‘90s, when the German government sold E-Werk and other venues to developers, Ellen was devastated—so she took matters into her own hands.
“I decided to do my own events,” she says. “We threw the first BPitch events in warehouses, with video art, our own light displays and sound systems.”
Ellen’s close-knit crowd and community soon started handing her demo tapes while she DJ’d.
“The tapes were from all the kids who went to E-Werk and Tresor, the same people I partied with over all those years,” Ellen says. “They were making the kind of music we were dancing to, but putting their own twist on it. And I knew it was very important to open a label because this is our sound and it needs its own space.”
That’s how BPitch, a label that continues to shape the sound of European techno, began. Ellen’s own 2001 debut album, Stadtkindt, was conceptually tied to Berlin itself. It reflected the city’s post-Wall urban landscape, with industrial textures and minimalist arrangement. The album showed Berlin’s identity as a hub of forward-thinking electronic music, stretching techno beyond what it was previously known for. BPitch released electronic music that was emotionally resonant, atmospheric, layered, and experimental, blending IDM, ambient, and glitch elements with straight-up techno.
In 2003, Berlinette harnessed the ideas from Stadtkind for maximum club impact, appearing on Pitchfork’s “Top 50 Albums of 2003” list. It pushed Berlin techno into international club circuits, most notably with “Engel der Nacht,” which became a kind of case study for people looking at techno as an artform.
And this was only the beginning. BPitch helped pave the way for a more musically eclectic future, releasing material from Apparat, Modeselektor, Pantha du Prince, T.Raumschmiere, DJ Koze, and Paul Kalkbrenner. These releases spanned electro, minimal, house, indie dance and IDM, connected by an energetic thread rather than a genre. It was an evolutionary leap, and the label continues to showcase music that stretches well beyond 4/4 techno.