Although only the pair's first release, Matmos' microscopic abuse of sourcings as varied as electric guitars, freshly cut hair, the amplified neural activity of crayfish, and the human voice (there are a few synthesizers and drum machines in there as well) was instantly distinguishing, conveying an experimental ardor several flow diagrams removed from the more dance-entrenched U.K. electronica scene. While with Matmos that experimentalism is elevated to method, in fact both Schmidt's and Daniel's musical pasts are littered with strange associations, the most bizarre of which is probably King G and the J Krew, a "white funk/rap" outfit which also included Jason Noble (currently of indie salon/string quartet group Rachel's). Schmidt was a founding member of avant-garde electronic group X/I and worked with San Francisco-based experimental music collective IAO Core alongside current members of groups such as Amber Asylum and Tipsy. Matmos began as a long-distance tape exchange project while Daniel was living in London (he's originally from Kentucky), with the pair settling in the San Francisco Bay Area (where Daniel is pursuing a Ph.D.) in the mid-'90s. Schmidt, a visual artist, also co-manages the San Francisco Art Institute's New Genres department. Several releases followed prior to the new millennium: Quasi-Objects (1998) and West (1999). A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure followed in 2001.
Biography by Sean Cooper on www.allmusic.com