Future Sound of London returned to active recording with The Isness, a record that trumpets a host of through-the-ages psychedelic influences, from the Beatles to Gong to...
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Having indulged in more explicitly ambient realms with the Amorphous Androgynous side project, FSOL returned to full action with Lifeforms, a double-disc effort that ranks...
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Originally, Elizabeth Fraser of the Cocteau Twins was going to appear on this song, a highlight of the similarly titled album, but record company hoo-hah meant it turned up...
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Documents one of their groundbreaking live transmissions from Earthbeat headquarters to radios worldwide. Edgier than Lifeforms; hints at the malevolent road ahead....
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Originally released on white-label, this four-track collection of highlights from the group's ISDN concerts hit like a genrecidal bomb, working jazz, hip-hop, funk, and...
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Upon its belated U.S. release (a full five years after its initial U.K. issue on a tiny indie, and after three other Future Sound of London albums had been issued in the...
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The title of Papua New Guinea alone tells the story -- the record contains eight mixes of the track, one of the group's earliest singles. Included are remixes from the likes...
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Feeling the waters in early '96 with a typically anonymous 12-inch entitled "We Have Explosive," FSOL mark their follow-up this time, both lexically and stylistically, by...
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Compared to where most of the band's career would later go, Accelerator is a fairly conventional debut from the duo -- certainly it's the most explicitly commercial-minded...
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