JEFF MILLS
THE TRIP TO VEGA
AXIS RECORDS

Few figures have shaped Detroit’s pioneering electronic music scene in the 1980s as profoundly as Jeff Mills. Among other things, Mills developed a distinctive artistic vision that fused minimal techno with themes of science, space exploration, futurism, and human evolution.
The Trip To Vega continues this longstanding fascination with outer space and speculative futures. Set in the year 2097, the album imagines humanity abandoning Earth after catastrophic phenomena render the planet uninhabitable. What follows is an interstellar journey to Vega, a star system located 25 light-years away.
Traveling in a space capsule that has turned into a time capsule, the passengers arrive at Vega, dead.
The planet pulses and emanates the sounds they heard so faintly on the journey from Earth. Initially, it was so still, faintly heard, and crackling. A brief respite from the intolerable din of cacophonous noise that chased them from earth. Like tuning a radio channel in a 1950s-era sedan, the sound improved as they neared its source.
Were these songs, from Vega, designed to lure earthlings out of their discomfort zone? Or was it just a subliminal message, heard repeatedly, that, surprise, this trip was fated, and things are exactly the same here as they were on earth? Whatever the answer, this is one long road trip, and The Trip to Vega is its soundtrack.
This album is one track, neatly divided into chapters; a soundtrack that becomes clearer with repeated listens. There are loads of washes of minor chords playing over persistent rhythms that are more metronomic than dancefloor. “Destination Bright Star” and “Ten Cycles” start the journey. Anxious, they offer no comfort or viable promise, only crisp, starched rhythms beneath challenging melodies.
Standout tracks include “Equinox,” with its precise and sophisticated drum and percussion loops dancing over rhythmic yet friendlier minor chords. “Orbiting the Star” provides a sense of arrival, the promise of something whose promise may have already passed.
The sounds fit but are discomforting. What have they gotten themselves into? Was the hell they thought they were leaving being replaced by heaven exactly the same?
As a psychotherapist might say, “geography does not solve problems”. As someone else said, “it’s the journey, not the destination”, even if you never make it all the way there.
That said, The Trip To Vega is art. It is both journey and destination. It is brought back to Earth in triple-vinyl and digital formats.
Artist Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JEFF MILLS – THE TRIP TO VEGA
Paul van der Werf












