Reviewing the compilation for
The Independent, Laurence Phelan found
Influences as "slices of musical history that every household should have if it doesn't already – Phuture's "Acid Tracks", A Guy Called Gerald's "Voodoo Ray" and the one Warp tried to sign as their first release, Unique 3's "The Theme"." Pat Blashill of
Rolling Stone found the compilation "wild and often gorgeous" declaring the highlight to be the "slyly beautiful" "Voodoo Ray." Douglas Wolk of the
Village Voice commented on
Classics, stating that "Ten years later, a lot of it sounds like pretty average bleepity-bloopity acid house, A Guy Called Gerald's deathless "Voodoo Ray" aside." John Bush of
AllMusic alternatively proclaimed that "as compilations of obscure but important techno go, this could be the best ever produced" finding that it balanced the best tracks from early Chicago, Detroit and British scenes. Bush continued that though most tracks have been anthologized several times while more obscure tracks like "Computer Madness" by Steve Poindexter. Bush concluded that the electronic music had progressed in years with groups like
Autechre and
Aphex Twin, "but the energy and power of mid- to late-'80s techno is undiminished with time."
Track listing ;Disc 2 ==
Warp 10+2: Classics 89–92==