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    Nathan Fake - 'Hard Islands' (Border Community) Released 18/05/09

    more like 'Drowning in A Sea of Teutonic Wankery'...

    April 30, 2009 by Mark Perlaki
    Nathan Fake - 'Hard Islands' (Border Community) Released 18/05/09
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    It's all very mod-errrrn, but on 'Hard Islands', the parameters, the peripheries that Nathan Fake was pushing at on 'Drowning In A Sea Of Love' have been rent in favour of the oppressive regime of 4x4 ubiquity. 'Hard Islands', hard surfaces more like. 'Drowning In A Sea Of Love' felt like a work drawn from memories - a re-tread of synth-rock with vintage synths, junior Casio, and a lot of leftfield experimentalism that took soundscaping into undrafted polyphonic areas. Live, he'd beef his sound and provide an audio-visual cup-cake. Lots of people's ears were duly pricked, and rightly so. The Norfolk-born Fake was but 22 years old with the electronic scene his glass onion.

    Then followed extended post-music school tours alongside Squarepusher,and Kieran Hebden and Steve Reid. Now 25, and his follow-up album 'Hard Islands', has a toughened programming held together by a tech-house zeitgeist tedium that was born from Fake's ticking off the club circuits around the world. The club audience is his buzz, and on 'Hard Islands' the aim is the dance-floor (and the loos are shocking). Soundscapes feel nailed in abeyance to pre-fab beats, modulated spurs wrestled to a framework of mdf techno assaults.

    The warbly, pulsing sequencers of 'The Turtle' feel obedient to the 4x4 fascism of time frames as vintage Moog-y business makes for an Magic Roundabout of the dance-floor, while 'The Curlew' is a short piece of digi-noodle. The shrill, modulated organ-grinding of the minimalist Boards Of Canada-esque 'Basic Mountain' feel like early 70's forays into synthesised sound - it's weirdy, and time-travelly, and likely to clear a dance-floor. It could also garner bemused faces as persons unnamed realise just what junket they've taken. Some really good twangy bits at the end though, like ruler twangs on a table feel shot through Neptune's orbit. 'Fentiger' with its' acidy-tech-house takes time to build - a work of acid and bassy throbs with direction-changes, there's the all too-late signals of Fake's repro-trademarks in vintage noodliness and modulations.

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    (8)
    • Mark, I’m not sure what’s more painful...the polish decorators drilling into hardened concrete centimetres from my head, or trying to understand what on Earth you are talking about in your review. I think actually writing ‘A Sea of Teutonic Wankery’ is, ironically, pretty ****ing wanky. I’m curious to know exactly how many explosive/ bomb/warfare like terms you can shoehorn into two pages of drivel before my head does actually BLOW UP LIKE A GRENADE in a DROPZONE. Exciting stuff.

      ~ by Dave 4/30/2009 Report

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    • my eyes are bleeding

      ~ by bleeding eyes 4/30/2009 Report

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    • Ha! Spot on!

      ~ by Kaboom! 4/30/2009 Report

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    • boom boom shake the cloakroom!!!

      ~ by megawat 4/30/2009 Report

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    • Dave - all is well. The drilling is purposeful. You are amongst friends. And 'Hard Islands' is a rank outsider...

      ~ by megawat 5/1/2009 Report

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