Tracklist
Viewed From Above | 2:34 | ||
Glacier (Part 1) | 8:56 | ||
Serengeti | 4:32 | ||
Colour Blind | 3:35 | ||
A Corner | 3:29 | ||
Newfoundland | 2:04 | ||
North Arctic | 3:19 | ||
Factories And Assembly | 5:04 | ||
Ice Formed | 4:17 | ||
Small Town | 3:14 | ||
Nearly Home | 3:38 | ||
Boca Manu | 2:22 | ||
Journey To The Centre | 3:41 | ||
Glacier (Part 2) | 6:22 |
Versions
Filter by
5 versions
Image | , | – | In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory |
|
Version Details | Data Quality | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Environments II
14×File, MP3, Album
|
fsoldigital.com – none | UK | 2008 | UK — 2008 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Environments II
CD, Album
|
fsoldigital.com – CD TOT 62 | UK | 2009 | UK — 2009 |
Recently Edited
|
|||
![]() |
Environments II
LP, Album, Reissue, 140 g
|
fsoldigital.com – LP TOT 62 | UK | 2014 | UK — 2014 | ||||
![]() |
Environments II
LP, Album, Limited Edition, Reissue, 180 g
|
fsoldigital.com – LPTOT 62 | UK | 2014 | UK — 2014 |
New Submission
|
|||
![]() |
Environments II
14×File, FLAC, Album, 44.1 kHz/16 bit
|
fsoldigital.com – none | UK | UK |
Recently Edited
|
Recommendations
Reviews
-
referencing Environments II (14×File, MP3, Album) none
FSOL were never ones to do things the in conventional manner - touring from their studio, album-length singles headed with tracks only tenuously linked to their LP namesakes - and so it's perhaps unsurprising that their return was never going to be done in a regular manner. Instead of a big promo campaign announcing their first electronic material since 1997, fans were instead invited to follow a breadcrumb trail of self-released albums, EPs and compilations in various, largely unexplained series, with news spread by word of mouth.
With Brian Dougans now acting as the creative lead of the project - Cobain simultaneously in charge of the direction of The Amorphous Androgynous - things moved in his more Situationist, 'always working' direction, and so there was no spectacle and, indeed, no real 'first new album in [xx] years' moment. Instead, new material began to seep out as a natural expansion of the ever-growing Archives project which had led to the eventual release of 1994's scrapped Environments album in 2007. At this point, the From the Archives albums themselves were little more than random collections of unreleased tracks with little theme or cohesion. However, it seems Dougans began to spot thematic links between some of these pieces, and realised that some would work well together as an album in their own right. And Environments got a sequel, and a low-key 'new album', albeit one largely consisting of older material.
12 of the 14 pieces on Environments II come from the group's time recording for Virgin Records - either in this form, or as unfinished demos completed in the '00s - and amazingly they do span the whole era, with pieces recorded between 1993 and 1997. It's remarkable that they really do sound like they could have been recorded during the same sessions. Clearly there was a strain of Dougans and Cobain's creativity that led towards a cool, icy melodic electronica, but in a way that meant none of the material in this vein ever fit the albums they were working on at the time. Choral samples, smooth digital synths, acoustic guitars and a generally arctic atmosphere permeate every track here, and the album creates as vivid a sonic world as their '90s classics do, with the album's titles equally suggestive of a chilly landscape of tundra and icebergs. It's also incredibly well structured, starting in ambient mode and very slowly working up to a more rhythmic run of tracks, before easing off into a more ambient coda.
Returning to the question of where this fits in the band's catalogue and history: I'd say Environments II is not, technically, a 'new' album, but it is the follow-up to Dead Cities. Stay with me on this one! In of chronological listening, I'd say the album works perfectly following on from Dead Cities for several reasons: firstly, it does contain very obviously Dead Cities era sounds ('Colour Blind' and 'A Corner', most notably, feature recurring sounds from the album, while the two parts of 'Glacier' were recorded for the scrapped third DC single 'Glass'; similarly, 'Ice Formed' has its origins in the post-DC/early Isness sessions); secondly, it takes the more melancholic, modern-classical oriented side of Dead Cities and expands upon it. Every FSOL record expands sonically on the previous, and that theme continues here. The album's two new recordings, 'Viewed from Above' and 'Small Town', are the most obvious pieces in this direction. So if I was introducing somebody to FSOL, or an old fan to their FSOLDigital era, I'd definitely recommend Environments II comes straight after Dead Cities chronologically.
Regardless of its position in the band's discography, the most important aspect of Environments II is its musical quality, and on that level, I'd say it sits very comfortably alongside their Virgin era material. Indeed, with the majority of the From the Archives albums lacking a thematic consistency, and the band's later material veering strongly away from their '90s sample-heavy sound, this album is one of only a couple of opportunities to revisit the sound that made them so beloved to fans of ambient and experimental electronica at the peak of the decade. -
Edited 4 years ago
referencing Environments II (CD, Album) CD TOT 62
Probably one of the most incredible records I have ever heard. A mix of classical, ambient, and IDM. Blown away the first time I heard it. This is the kind of music that expands the mind. -
referencing Environments II (CD, Album) CD TOT 62
Simply wonderful; a vast, expansive journey through the farthest reaches of humanity's industrial uprising. There are sounds on here that not even "Lifeforms" could fathom. Whereas that was more of an organic affair, Environments II is the result of flora melding with cold steel. Journies through overgrown establishments and ancient outposts long-forgotten, yet still rife with faint, flowing energy and the dreams of slumbering Artificial Intelligences. It even brings about melodies and samples previously encountered through works past; "Ice Formed", in particular has a distinct, crystallized "Calcium"-esque synth providing much of the draw to the former's composition. Think of this as a fusion of their entire back-catalogue, yet re-worked and shaped into a sound never before encountered from this dynamic duo.
This is not to be missed by anyone -- even those outside the current FSOL fanbase. Kick back and let the music take you. -
referencing Environments II (CD, Album) CD TOT 62
Much better then Environments 1 in my opinion. If I had to guess, the first Environments appeared to be old material while this album is seemingly composed of new material (The first Environments had much more of the electronica funk from their 90's music). I say that because the music is unlike any previous FSOL music. The style is much more ambient and vast then all other albums they've created. There are no true standouts to me, as this album must be listened to as a whole... Keep it coming FSOL!
Master Release
Edit Master Release
Recently Edited
Recently Edited
For sale on Discogs
Sell a copy
16 copies from $17.84