ROBERT MUSSO - Engineer
LAYNG MARTINE Jr. - Digital Editing, Assistant Engineer
JOHN BROWN - Material Inc./Submeta
ROBERT SOARES - Material Inc./Submeta
DAVE MCKEAN - Cover Art
ALDO SAMPIERI - Design
Second Nature is a typical Bill Laswell excursion into the murkiest
depths of ambient experimentalism, meaning there's no danceable beats,
no hummable grooves, and virtually no firm melodic ground for listeners
to grab hold of. That said, patient listening will be rewarded in due
time. The 28-minute "Synthetic Forest" opens with a whispered hint of a
distant soundscape — gurgles, blips, and bleeps that are almost,
but not quite, there. You're 12 minutes in before being startled by a
recognizable beat on the horizon, 14 minutes before Laswell's
subterranean bass appears like a lumbering rhino rumbling in your
direction. This is some seriously crazy, experimental stuff; a bit too
subtle for casual listeners, but an interesting ride for those
passengers willing to ride it out to the end of the line.
If environmental sound be the food of ambient play on I say!
Taking as its inspiration a synthetic variation on the natural sounds
which often form the basis of ambient musics Second Nature brings
together three of the biggest talents in the FAX stable; Inoue, Laswell
and Atom Heart. In their alternate universe, not so very far from the
Aerial Service Area, lies a planet not unlike our own. It is lush in
tall vegetation which conceals most of the planet's surface. The
unusual green sea of this planet laps against enormous stretches of
silvery sand. No one has been here before but for the unmanned landing
craft that make occasional forays to unlock the mineral richness of
this place. Their moaning engines can be traced to the Synthetic Forest
where an emotive warbling sound accompanies our first glimpse. It's
concealed fauna chattering and clicking in the distance leads to a
curious and super-fast spoken voice and a movement of bending and
growing sound like an animal cry infinitely slowed-down. What is going
on? Things come clearer into focus with a coherent twittering chime and
a pedestrian bassline and steam-driven beat. Being on the Green Paste
of the sea is odd, aren't we near some kind of place of worship? Those
sounds are certainly calming but soon make way for the pulse of our
radar screen and shimmering patterns of light, the effect is hypnotic;
slow use of keyboards, uplifting atmospheres and nostalgia-inducing
scales. Altogether a relaxing place. The soundscape of the Artificial
Seaside is no less so. The reconstructed sound of a long lapping wave
is combined with gleaming sounds and an otherworldly theme. This is
built from the super-tweaked sound of a water droplet, deep bass and a
sentimental electronic refrain. The two steps forward and two back of
the bassline are covered with cracked chips of sound, fragments of an
exotic soundscape and whining screams hollowed out by the heat of the
sun. As we take our leave the Landing Cycle comes into view and the
ever-descending washes of its sombre engine glide by. The sounds are
subtle, mild even, but also melancholy with a hint of uneasiness. Given
time I could grow to like this place.
Rowland Atkinson
With "Second Nature", a trio of FAX personalities present us with a
highly theme-oriented disc and a captivating excursion into synthesized
organics. All three musicians involved (Tetsu Inoue, Atom Heart, Bill
Laswell) seem to take a background role all at once, allowing their
three distinct styles to interweave quite masterfully throughout the
entirety of the work. This disc is full of subtleties and harmonic
interaction, each artist producing consistently understated
contributions which results in the best form of collaboration: a
perfect meshing of musical styles which form a solid, unique whole. I
receive similar emotions from this disc as i do from Schmidt/Inoue's
"Flowerhead", but contrasted with the dreamy suede finish of that work,
"Second Nature" seems positively gritty. A scratchy, all-analog feel
throughout the disc strengthens the theme and provides a convincingly
raw emotion to all of the tracks presented here. Synthetic Forest - -
-This opening track is a lengthy one, but the experience starts up
quickly as a thicket of synthetic and distorted samples fade in,
providing us with a tranquil but intense nature setting. Echoing,
screechy synthetic birds surround us with electric wildlife, and there
are bugs everywhere! A calm and rather indecipherable melody pipes
along the the background and soon harsh but immersive noises pan in
from all sides. The forest is very much alive with a fuzzy form of
ambience that begins to include samples of a more human origin, along
with some bending and melancholy tones. Distorted human breathing
surges in the right channel and is rather disconcerting due to the fact
that one can't quite tell if it's synthetic or not. Whatever the case,
the effect is wonderful. Bright and shimmery melodies abstractly drift
along. Somehow our trio gives us a very "green" sound here, hitting
their intended mark dead on. More repetitive loops enter and the pace
begins to pick up playfully. The track is beginning to take on much
more structure as humming bass repeats softly from the lower regions.
These lush-sounding organic textures juxtapose nicely with their own
electric sources, with wonderful reference again to the title of the
piece. This is convincing stuff! :) Elements intensify and recede like
the sun shining through foliage, accenting and subduing. Some soft,
snappy double-percussion invades the right channel like two robotic
woodpeckers having a conversation: Uwe's here! They're joined by a
third companion, a more present snare in the middle pipes up and
*eep!*, a sudden thumping bassline jumps in! The track immediately
gains lots of rich structure as we're visited by the first of Laswell's
bass. In the course of the past couple minutes our track has progressed
from abstract, melodic ambient to a funky, drum-filled textural jam!
The movement of the rhythm is very steady and not overbearing
whatsoever, as Inoue's masterful backgrounds prove equally important as
Atom Heart's asymmetrical rhythmic work. Our artists continue to paint
a vivid picture: Laswell describes the thick forms of the forest-the
rugged terrain, redwoods and logs stand looming, Atom Heart shows us
the wildlife of the forest-birds, rodents and bugs fill up the
airspace, while Inoue provides a sense of space, the light filtering
between all the physicality in a hazy drifting. We're treated to a
warbling solo of some kind as the thumping excursion continues. Things
progress nicely for several minutes (the elements thinning and
thickening like the forest), until a sudden decomposition tells us
we've reached a clearing. A rest is needed after that rugged journey,
time for a lie in the grass. Some kind of live instrumental samples and
the recurring bending tones provide a calmer, still organic feel as
Inoue takes the reins for the track's finale. Clouds roll by in a
summertime haze and the memory of wildlife returns with the breeze. The
track's total 28:42 passes in no time. A wonderful opening experience.
Green Paste - - -A soft Inouean vista opens before us and the
intangibility of the melody is strikingly beautiful. This is somewhat
of a night piece, and we can see a massive forest filled with
futuristic air traffic, the air is very clean. Floating staticy noises
and tones drift like fireflies in the dark, together with intrusive
elements that vanish as quickly as they appear. A garbling insectile
whisper fills the left channel, with a matching oddity in the right,
and a sweetly meandering moonlight melody fills it all out peacefully.
Intermittently, sounds like jets traverse the night sky high above and
in places the energy of this environment becomes somewhat chaotic.
There are wonderfully processed textures here. Harmonic washes and
computerized ramblings fill the air. The moonlight melody returns, but
by now the track has entered into a state of fragile unrest..the
sunrise is imminent. Some warmer analog synths take the forefront in a
night breeze, the fireflies dancing in its gusts. The beautiful Inouean
expanse again makes itself known as the sun rises....
Artificial Seaside - - -Synthetic gulls and tidal washings open the
track in an amusingly accurate interpretation, along with some subdued
and grand echoes. A vast-sounding tone gives a nice sparse but massive
sea view. More vocal samples make a return appearance, and this track
in general appears to be a more laid back return to the emotions of
"Synthetic Forest". A gusty, sandy and dry feel predominates and some
bubbly preliminary percussive sounds begins to filter in. Drawn out
tones and stretched synths combine with a shimmering watery texture and
some ghostly washings: Inoue is at work. The interesting harmonic
tapestry effect that characterizes this cd is exemplified here. Notes
that seem unrelated establish links somehow. Gently vibrating bass and
airy, electric analog melodies fade in with a ticking hi-hat. Tasty
subtle percussive interaction begins to knock and softly cycle and soon
another round of Laswell bass begins to throb. The light beats play
around the plodding bass playfully, with an odd and pleasing time
signature. It's very relaxed here :) Elements return and leave
dreamily. The gentle rolling of sand dunes and the windswept grooves
are described here. Things float around gently until gradually fading
away, leaving the lingering bass wobble pulsing along with the tide and
wind-swept tones.
Landing Cycle - - -A much darker ambient piece ends the disc. This
seems much more technological than the rest, focusing on the
aforementioned air traffic above our synthetic landscape. Deep and dark
drones contain a wonderful doppler effect as aircraft come and go,
invisible in the nightscape. Beautiful bending harmonic progressions
intrude. A deep, slow, repeating melody adds a super-subtle underlayer
to lingering drones and one of Inoue's trademarks: thin, stretched
notes which seem to implode upon themselves as they gain their highest
pitch. The dark cyclings continue and then fade as some more lonely,
calling instruments join the deepening night-mesh.
Overall this is one of my favorite and most comfortable-feeling FAX
releases. The wonderful collaboratory aspect of it is a particular
draw, and the way the theme is so subtly executed make this an
outstanding collection of music. The subdued psychedelia present here
is highly entertaining and immersive, but anyone hoping for same ol'
same ol' from Atom Heart or Inoue here will be disappointed. Fun,
interesting, and fuzzy!
Auraphage@aol.com
The opening measures of this release provide great promise as Atom
Heart and Tetsu Inoue begin to carefully construct a three-dimensional
facade of sonic pleasantries. But, unfortunately, the walls come
tumbling down early. Unexpectedly and irritatingly, thunderous bass
bombs are leveled against the wonderfully sculpted architecture. Being
a fan of _Psychonavigation_, I thought Laswell might shed more of his
rhythmic wizardry, but the only magic here is between the basslines.
Inoue and Heart let a great effort go the way of typical thud-thuds and
a Led Zeppelin bass riff. Did someone mention a sequel minus one?
2/5 - review by zig
Three masters unite for a very nature-oriented album. Titles include
"Synthetic forest" and "Artificial seaside", and as usual with Fax the
thing here is not the melody or the chords, but the textures and the
"sonic landscape", if I may say so. Very tranquil (spelling?) and
relaxing. (I have to find new words for the Fax reviews.) And higly
recommended!
Christian
I was really looking forward to this disc. Here we have Tetsu Inoue,
Atom Heart, and Bill Laswell all rolled into one. Being a huge Inoue
and Atom Heart fan, I knew this disc could do no wrong. Synthetic
Forest starts out with sounds very much in the MU vein- abstract in
some ways, very floaty and formless. Some strange beats break in- and
finally merge into this almost industrial rhythm. It didn't go over the
edge, which is good since I'm not an industrial fan at all. But the
beats and sounds managed to stay slightly eerie, and that was cool.
Then about 15 minutes into the track, I found myself thinking about
FSoL with those nice stomping beats on ISDN. Same sorta thing in some
respects. The Laswell bass in this track works really nice. The track
then fades away into this nice ambiance that is very signature to Inoue
and Atom Heart. Great track. Green Paste (what a name) starts with more
floating melodies with a little bit of distortion added in- which fades
into a darker sound which is formless- but very deep. Midway through,
the darkness gives way to a more peaceful sound. Serene is a better
word. The track finally closes with the same ambiance it started with.
Artificial Seaside starts with some of those ocean wave snyth sounds
that sweep in- and thankfully they don't last very long. This tracks
has alot of great elements in it...dub, sweeping snyths, eccentric
blips and bleeps, abstract sounds...but the bass seemed to over power
the other sounds a bit too much...my only complaint. Landing Cycle
closes the disc with some creepy space sounds which fade off into the
far reaches of the galaxy. On the whole, this disc is more
environmental than other stuff I've heard. Since I'm not as familiar
with Laswell (excepting in recognizing his bass) as Inoue or Atom
Heart, I can say how Laswell fans would take this disc. But I think
that fans of Inoue and Atom Heart will definitely enjoy it a great
deal. Each individual's style is well mixed and works together for a
unique sound. A great release.
rdudley
Full performer name: Atom Heart/Tetsu Inoue/Bill Laswell. What do you
get when put together the bossman of the bass, one of the progenitors
of progressive ambience, and an experimental-minded wunderkind? Nothing
like you'd expect. Bill Laswell's status in music circles (ambient,
noise-jazz, electro-funk, etc.) has already become legendary. Tetsu
Inoue, though still operating on the fringes of the underground, is
well revered on both sides of the Atlantic for his broadly expansive
sound canvases. And Atom Heart (real name: Uwe Schmidt), though he
still remains notoriously underground, has been quietly reinventing
electronic music for much of the '90s. With SECOND NATURE, these three
studio wizards collectively released a record examining more the sound
sources of inner rather than interstellar space. Amid strange
synth-chirps and ovulating tones reside tiny groups of voices
half-whispered and half-sensed, and shifting billows of grey
electronics blowing across isolated climes. Laswell's bass is mere
adornment in this surreal macrocosmic soup, but not to worry: both his
bass and his penchant for gritty, organic beats arise roughly 13 or so
minutes into the proceedings. It's a mesmeric trip into hitherto alien
lands, at once unsettling and compelling.