0
Buckethead
Buckethead
American musician and songwriter
1
Praxis
Praxis
experimental rock band led by Bill Laswell and Buckethead
2
DJ Disk
DJ Disk
American DJ
3
Bill Laswell
Bill Laswell
American musician
4
Bryan Mantia
Bryan Mantia
American musician
5
Material
Material
American band led by Bill Laswell
6
Gigi
Gigi
Ethiopian musician
7
Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez
Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez
American musician
8
Liquid Stranger
Liquid Stranger
Swedish musician
9
Mick Harris
Mick Harris
British musician
10
Nils Petter Molvær
Nils Petter Molvær
Norwegian jazz trumpeter, composer and music producer
11
David J
David J
British alternative rock musician, producer, and writer
12
Melissa Reese
Melissa Reese
American musician
13
Wild Beasts
Wild Beasts
British rock band
14
Trüby Trio
Trüby Trio
German musical group
15
Blind Idiot God
Blind Idiot God
band
16
SOJA
SOJA
American reggae band
17
The High Dials
The High Dials
Canadian indie rock band
18
Deli Creeps
Deli Creeps
band
19
Kenneth James Gibson
Kenneth James Gibson
American musician
20
Jack Dangers
Jack Dangers
British musician
21
DJ Dan
DJ Dan
American musician
22
Xan Tyler
Xan Tyler
British singer
23
Guillermo E. Brown
Guillermo E. Brown
musician
24
Kid Harpoon
Kid Harpoon
English singer, songwriter, musician and record producer
25
Roots Radics
Roots Radics
band
26
The Notwist
The Notwist
German band
27
Numb
Numb
Canadian electro-industrial band
28
Bootsy Collins
Bootsy Collins
American musician
Intro
Music

Ben Wa was an American electronic band from Oakland, California comprising Anthony "House" Chaba (programming and bass guitar) and Eric Ware (programming and keyboards), who had worked together before in bands such as Limbomaniacs, Big Janitor, and MCM & the Monster.

After releasing a four track EP 1 full of breaks and electro in 1998 they began recording their debut album Devil Dub featuring guest musicians such as guitarists Buckethead and M.I.R.V., drummer Bryan "Brain" Mantia and turntablist DJ Disk, plus Scientist live on stage for the release party in January 1999. Chaba and Ware had met Scientist when opening for Bill Laswell's Praxis in San Francisco.

Reviews for Devil Dub were positive with URB calling it "one of the most crucial records of any genre released this year" and Michelle Goldberg of Metro Silicon Valley stating: "The lazy pace is lulling, but like Tricky's music, it's more edgy and creepy than ethereal." Rick Anderson of Allmusic gave 4,5 out of 5 stars, writing: "This is remarkably pleasant stuff." Noah Wayne of online music magazine Splendid wrote: "It's campy, it's twisted, it's dub!"

Two of their tracks, "Re-Dub" and "Ephedream", were included on Laswell's releases Reanimator: Black Market Science and Tetragrammaton - Submerge. They also contributed tracks to a few other dub compilations.

Another EP called Elektro-Krazy followed in 2000, again concentrating on breaks and electro and described on Epitonic as "the gap between Detroit techno and funky dance floor breaks in a most ingenious way". Their next album Disciples Of Retro-Tech was released in 2001 as a double vinyl and single compact disc, featuring explorations of pure electro and synth-pop terrain. Stephen Cook of Allmusic wrote: "The hybrid mix is so inventive that suspect pastiche and old-school chic absolutely do not figure into it". He gave the album 4 out of 5 stars. Daiv Whaley of music newspaper Hear/Say concluded his review: "This is cool, accessible music for every child of man and machine. File under 'electro-funk,' file under 'fantastic.'"