Ad

Nathan FakeDrowning In A Sea Of Love

Tracklist

Stops4:34
Grandfathered3:15
Charlie's House5:29
The Sky Was Pink4:51
Long Sunny5:20
Bawsey0:59
Bumblechord3:10
You Are Here4:25
Superpositions2:31
Fell5:47
Falmer1:46

Credits (6)

Versions

Filter by
    5 versions
    Image, In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory
    Version DetailsData Quality
    Cover of Drowning In A Sea Of Love, 2006-03-20, CDDrowning In A Sea Of Love
    CD, Album
    Border Community – 10BCCDUK2006UK2006
    Cover of Drowning In A Sea Of Love, 2006-03-20, VinylDrowning In A Sea Of Love
    2×12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Album
    Border Community – 10BCLPUK2006UK2006
    Cover of Drowning In A Sea Of Love, 2006-03-20, FileDrowning In A Sea Of Love
    11×File, MP3, Album, 320 kbps
    Border Community – 10BCCDDAUK2006UK2006
    New Submission
    Cover of Drowning In A Sea Of Love, 2006-03-20, FileDrowning In A Sea Of Love
    11×File, FLAC, Album, Stereo
    Border Community – 10BCCDDAEurope2006Europe2006
    Cover of Drowning In A Sea Of Love, 2006-03-20, CDDrowning In A Sea Of Love
    CD, Album
    Border Community – BCCDJ-001Japan2006Japan2006
    New Submission

    Recommendations

    Reviews

    • Dreyk's avatar
      Dreyk
      If you love the sounds of Boards of Canada and Aphex twin but in a more psychedelic path, that's a perfect album for you! I personally adore every track of this release, and have no idea why people dislike this record!
      • mirko82's avatar
        mirko82
        Does anybody know if there is reissue coming? very, very needed!
        • PearOfSalamanca's avatar
          Edited 6 years ago
          What would happen if you took Boards of Canada, removed the darker aspects, emphasized the psychedelia of their sound and added shoegaze to it? You would only get one facet of what makes this release work. There are a lot of influences on this thing, and to explain them all would probably make this review longer than I intended. Suffice it to say, every influence clicks, and they all make this album kaleidoscopic. Hell of a debut.
          • goodbooking's avatar
            goodbooking
            wow ! ten years have gone by since Nathan Fake released this masterpiece in electronic music. You cane name it in one breath wit Boards Of Canada "Tomorrows harvest , Aphex Twin "selected ambient works" or Carl Craig "landcrusing" album . Brilliant and timeless. Great musician , that guy
            • salazr's avatar
              salazr
              Edited 12 years ago
              Much like buji wisely said, it's useless to try and put words together to describe DIASOL.

              5 or 6 years ago, this album helped me feel things i am still trying to understand, but things which i love feeling to this very day.
              • I think this release tries too hard to be something special in its simplicity. Not too many elements, but loud hihats and pads to create a collage of sorts. This had the makings of something good, but it never actually becomes good. In the end, you are left unsatisfied with a sound that didn't seem to do anything, just run in circles. The music seems pointless, as if there is no message in it besides just making noise that's a little harmonic. To picture what this track sounds like, take any IDM track, and take away all the hooks, samples, and leave it bare. You get some strange sounding song that's not very enthralling and doesn't seem to have a direction. If you want some good Nathan Fake, see James Holden's mix of The Sky Was Pink (single release).
                • anType's avatar
                  anType
                  Edited 18 years ago
                  Whereas I think "Drowning In A Sea Of Love" is quite lovely, I can't help but feel like Nathan Fake desperately tries to sound like M83. "Charlie's House" and "Superpositions" sound a lot like tracks from "Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts", "Long Sunny" could easily be an outtake from "M83", self-titled debut album, and "Bawsey" resembles one of the interludes from "Before The Dawn Heals Us".

                  The album structure itself reminds me a lot of M83's debut album - walls of noise followed by beatless ambient soundscapes. Sad tracks followed by happy ones. All in quite unexpected order.

                  Being a big fan of M83, I quite liked this album, because style-wise it's quite similar. But I just feel that they are able to produce same type of material with more depth and emotion. It's quite enjoyable nonetheless.
                  • ibbjamin's avatar
                    ibbjamin
                    Edited 18 years ago
                    I found that this release was almost as dissapointing as it was anticipated. I really enjoyed Outhouse; along with Holden's A Break In the Clouds, this album helped shape the evolving sound of Border Community which I really enjoy. The Sky Was Pink is a good album, but the Holden Remix dominates the album. When Silent Night came out, I really started to question how serious he was with his productions. They may be unique, but for me they do nothing to invoke my interest. Haven't lost all faith in the man, but he really is due up for a good rebound album.
                    • buji's avatar
                      buji
                      Edited 18 years ago
                      I'm trying to find some satisfactory combination of words to describe "Drowning in a Sea of Love", Nathan Fake's debut full length album released yesterday on the Border Community label, but I suspect my mission may be doomed even before I start. And it's not because I don't know what to make of the music; it is because there is such a clarity to the music that I understand it in a part of myself where words are of no use, & serve only to obscure and complicate.

                      "Drowning..." is an album that communicates directly on an emotional level, with both the simplicity of an old, battered music box and the raw power of a full symphonic orchestra. And though it is both electronic and full of emotion, I found it to be unlike other electronic music of that sort, which are oftentimes manipulative to the point of a kind of emotional violence. Instead of trying to steer listeners to a particular destination, Fake's music simply exists unto itself. But such is the beauty of "Drowning..." that it is like a glass which is overflowing, saturating everything around it in the process.

                      "Drowning..." is the soundtrack to some of the happiest dreams you've ever had... It is lullabies of innocence and wonder which existed before memory...

                      A part of me wishes that I understood the techniques Fake is using to create this sound. There is something unusual and haunting about the kinds of chords he is using, as if they have been twisted and are just Barely in harmony (or at least this is what it feels like is going on, to my musically uneducated self). But another part of me knows that sometimes it is just best to be left ignorant, so that we can still stand in awe of the almighty and powerful Oz.

                      I can't remember hearing a music that was both so simple and yet so powerfully moving since Moby's early ambient tracks off of "Everything Is Wrong". "Drowning..." doesn't really sound anything like that, but that's what it reminds me of anyway, deep down in that place where words get in the way.

                      Master Release

                      For sale on Discogs

                      Sell a copy

                      Statistics

                      • Avg Rating:4.21 / 5
                      • Ratings:374
                      Ad

                      Videos (13)

                      Edit
                      Ad
                      Ad