Shine On: Ben Watkins

by coldwarnightlife
Ben Watkins

There are artists who build a career in straight lines – and then there is Ben Watkins, whose catalogue sprawls like a circuit board. The copper lines trace a complex circuit that takes in 80s new wave, post-punk studio experimentation, proto-techno, psy-trance, soundtrack work, and full-blown multimedia spectacle.

Best known as the force behind Juno Reactor, Watkins has spent decades playing with genres; treating each of his projects less as a reinvention than part of a strategy of tension. Before the Goa beaches, festival stages, and Hollywood soundtracks, Watkins was cutting his teeth in London bands and playing venues like The Hope and Anchor. The Hitmen, whose work brought him into the orbit of producer Martin Rushent, combined punk energy, new wave sharpness and synth-minded production.

From there, Watkins moved deeper into electronic territory. The Flowerpot Men and later Sunsonic pushed drum machines, sequencers and studio processing to the front. With these acts, Watkins was building tracks that now sound like missing the links between post-punk, industrial funk, and the first outlines of rave culture. These projects were foundational experiments in groove hypnosis, sonic collage and scene-setting atmosphere – all of which would become core to Juno Reactor’s mission.

Long before psy-trance became a durable genre label, Juno Reactor were already making electronic music that felt ritualistic, visual, and narrative-driven – as if every track were soundtracking an unseen film. Albums like Transmissions stretched dance music across timelines and cultures.

Even at Juno Reactor’s peak, Watkins’ path kept splitting outward. He brought his aesthetic into other people’s work, including the scandal-prone actress, Traci Lords. Later, his work on The Matrix sequels, along with the orchestral score for Brave Story, confirmed that Watkins was never simply writing tracks for clubs – he was building worlds.


10. The Hitmen – Bates Motel

The Hitmen are best known as the band that Alan Wilder played with before he joined Depeche Mode. He didn’t stay long, but the band found its own way towards electronics. “Bates Motel” puts Watkins at the centre of The Hitmen’s nervy new wave – a structure he struggled with, commercially. The foundations of Juno Reactor were built in reaction to the lessons learned gigging in London.


9. The Flowerpot Men – Jo’s So Mean to Josephine

“Jo’s So Mean to Josephine” catches Watkins in the act of crossing from band logic into machine logic. Armed with equipment bought with a £200 bequest, Watkins managed to combine Suicide with Bauhaus. The guitars still jab and the vocals still carry post-punk abrasion, but the real drama is in the mechanised pulse underneath. Watkins had been listening to a lot of DAF, at the time, and it is revealed in the dramatic bassline.


8. The Youth and Ben Watkins – Incompressible Megalaurians


7. Sunsonic – Innocent Man

By the time Watkins reached Sunsonic, rhythm had become less a backing element than the organising principle itself. “Innocent Man” feels like a bridge between post-punk’s wiry experimentation and the body-focused momentum of late-80s electronic culture, with groove and texture pushing to the front.

The track matters because it captures a producer’s mentality taking over from a songwriter’s. Rather than serving a conventional chorus, the arrangement serves accumulation, pressure and release, which is one of the clearest clues to how Watkins would later build Juno Reactor tracks.


6. Juno Reactor – High Energy Protons (Orion Mix)

The power of “High Energy Protons” lies in pacing. Watkins arranges the track like a sequence of revealed environments, opening space and then clamping it shut again. Even early Juno Reactor feels ready to fill warehouses.


5. Juno Reactor – God Is God

“God Is God” is Juno Reactor at their most overtly apocalyptic. Driving forward on martial rhythm, choral force and a melody that pushes against Western club orthodoxy, it sounds enormous without becoming blunt. It’s one of the best examples of Watkin’s instinct for movement and action.


4. Juno Reactor – Pistolero

“Pistolero” remains one of Watkins’ smartest acts of stylistic theft. Like Colourbox and Acid Horse, Watkins lifts the iconic motifs of spaghetti westerns and rewires them for late-90s electronic culture. Twanging guitar, gunshot effects, and psy-trance propulsion collide in a way that could feel gimmicky but does not.


3. Traci Lords – Control

“Control” is one of the most revealing detours in Watkins’ career because it shows how effectively his sonic identity could travel outside his own name. The song was produced by Juno Reactor, and Ben Watkins is credited as a songwriter, placing his stamp directly on Traci Lords’ major-label dance material.
As a career marker, it matters because it proves Watkins was not only building a cult project; he was already exporting underground electronic ideas into pop-adjacent territory. The instrumental version especially reveals the chassis beneath the vocal, and that chassis is unmistakably his: sleek, pressurised and slightly dangerous.


2. Apollo XI – Peace (In the Middle East) (Sea of Tranquility Mix)

Watkins teamed up with members of The Orb, including Alex Paterson, Andy Falconer, and Thrash in a cross-pollinating attempt to make ambient dance music. Apollo XI appeared just as the first Gulf War broke out, and Neil Armstrong’s message of “for all mankind” inspired both the name of the group and the single they made.


1. Juno Reactor – Navras

“Navras” is the closing track to the film, The Matrix Revolutions. It features a choir singing the Asato Ma Sadgamaya shloka from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, a Sanskrit mantra. One of the themes of the prayer is, “Lead us from the unreal to the real.”

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