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The Future
Sound Of London are Garry Cobain and Brian Dougans, one of the most influencial and
outstanding electronic acts of the last 15 years.
After meeting in Manchester in the mid 80s, Garry and
Brian started looking into electronic music. Brian had
already started making electronica, while Gaz was more
into the late 80s indie bands. They first began working
in clubs, and in their early days worked close to the
early Stone Roses for a short period.
In 1988, Brian embarked on a project for the Stakker
graphics company. He created a track called Stakker
Humanoid, which was accompanied by a mad video. Gaz got
involved with the project and its accompanying album,
featuring some 80s style vocal house.
The following 3 years resulted in Gaz and Brian's
partnership growing, in the form of many different
alias's, and a lot of early techno and hardcore tracks.
With Stakker Humanoid re-entering the chart in 1992,
followed by the breakthrough ambient dub track Papua New
Guinea (the first full "Future Sound Of London"
release), they were getting more recognition. After
hearing Papua New Guinea, Virgin Records were eager to
snap them up in order for more succesful techno. They
waved goodbye to their former record company, Jumpin'
& Pumpin', and were happy to join the larger company,
as they were likely to be less restricting than J&P.
They immediately lurched into experimentalism with their
"Tales Of Ephidrina" album under the Amorphous
Androgynous alias, the link between the old FSOL, and the
new FSOL.
At this point, ISDN hit off. They began broadcasting to
Kiss FM on a fairly regular basis, playing a mix of
ambient and techno, not dissimilar to Aphex Twin's work
of the time.
When "Lifeforms" came out in '94, it was
obvious where FSOL had gone. The reviewers loved it, it
hit top 10 in the UK album chart, and went down as one of
the greatest ambient/electronica albums of the 90s. By
this time the number of ISDN broadcasts was growing, and
each time they included more and more new material. A
release of this material came out in the form of limited
edition album ISDN, which was later re-released as a full
LP.
In 1996 they returned again, with a tale of urban decay
and hell on earth, Dead Cities. A mixture of the flavours
they included before, and something new, this album was a
success again. Another ISDN world tour followed, ending
with a John Peel session of even more new music. Was this
to be released? Alas, no. The continual stream of FSOL
music came to an end with this. And a pretty abrupt and
unexpected end it was. Two 12" records appeared with
the EBV name on them - from Oil and Headstone Lane, on
FSOL's own EBV label.
Later in '97 band themselves returned briefly for a DJ
set on Kiss FM entitled A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble
Exploding In Your Mind. When the station heard it for the
first time, during the live transmission, they were
surprised and shocked. A mix of Psychedelic sounds and
Acid Rock was coming from Earthbeat Studios.
And then...nothing. Were they embarrased by the Monstrous
Psychedelic Bubble show, gone into hiding and split up?
Nothing like that, infact. After Dead Cities, they had
realised that they were slowly heading in the wrong
direction. They were getting more noisey, and yet they
were hiding behind these sounds. Showing off. Making
music they didn't really want to make. They began to
write more song based music. Gaz went to America for a
while. He was also beginning to worry about his health.
Infact, he was slowly dying. His fillings were slowly
giving him mercury poisoning. Luckily the doctors found
this, took the fillings out, and he was more healthy. But
this wasn't enough. A spiritual journey followed,
completely rebuilding his life and his body. Influences
came from this intercontinental journey, which
contributed to music when he came back to the UK. Meeting
back up with Brian after many months without contact,
they began to make music again.
And once again, the studio doors shut. Except this time
it's for the last time. Earthbeat is no longer. They move
to the new studio, Galaxial Pharmaceutical.
And then in 2001, suddenly they reappear almost as if
they never left. Psychedelic DJ sets, countless Papua New
Guinea remixes, an entirely new mini-album of
re-interpretations of Papua New Guinea entitled
Translations, and news of a new full length album. The
new sound is very much that of the Monstrous Psychedelic
Bubble show. Backwards guitars, sitar drones, vocals.
Very ethnic sounding rather than the urban, clean
finished sounds of the previous material. They add to
this a website based around their new material. And then
leave us high and dry once more, without news of the
album. Since they parted company with Virgin (who payed
them £500,000 to make an album which they didn't like
and caused them to leave the label) they signed a new
record deal and announced that the new album would be out
in June. However, rumours of a new album or an album
title change surfaced soon after.
And finally, on August 5th, 'The Isness' appears on
European shelves. Even though some have already come
across the album with a previous tracklist, this is an
updated version - in a wonderfully designed pop-out
luxury digipak case. The album was followed by a single
release of The Mello Hippo Disco Show, which, in a
similar vein to the old singles, contained several
versions by FSOL, all mixed together.
2003 was a quiet year for FSOL, with only two re-releases
of Brian's old acid house material on Rephlex: Stakker
Eurotechno and Humanoid Sessions. These proved to be
FSOL's only activity of the year, with things picking up
again in 2004. After a long delay, the release of The
Isness & The Otherness, an Isness re-release with
bonus remix disc, finally happened in January. The bonus
disc contained many of the tracks previously only
available on promo or vinyl releases. The CD was then
released as a seperate entity in the US. The group
re-emerged fully with new material shortly after,
including the Divinity single, originally announced in
Summer 2004, and talk of a new album. An official follow
up to The Isness, Alice In Ultraland was planned for
release in the second half of the year, with some tracks
previewed on their first radio show in over a year, the
SixMix show in May 2004..
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