In 1994, Future Sound of London (FSOL) released their sprawling double CD opus, Lifeforms. At the time I first heard it, I thought that I'd never heard FSOL before, however, I would later discover that they'd cracked my sphere of perception as far back as 1988 with the Stakker Humanoid single, released under the Humanoid alias.
Coming from the UK Acid House explosion of the late 1980s, Brian Dougans & Garry Cobain were on the forefront of pushing electronic music into the far reaches of deep space experimentation. Along with the likes of Autechre, they had their sights set far beyond the familiar balm of 4x4 dance grooves. With Lifeforms, FSOL cast off from those shores and set the course of their synthesizer spaceship off into the nebulous galaxies of the sweepingly ethereal.
Lifeforms took electronic music well away from the rigidity of fixed beats into something much more organic. Like the title suggests, these sonic creatures are alive and amorphous, another term they'd put to use with another alias. There's nothing static or rigid about these sounds. They all seem to grow and twist like exotic flora & fauna. Songs don't start and stop, they emerge from the jungle and then slink back into the murk after having weaved their spell. Everything from start to finish hangs together as a single, expansive landscape, populated by any number of strange beasts. It's an album that fully exploits the capacity of the medium of the day, the CD. I know the vinyl purists out there may scoff at this, but this really is an album properly enjoyed on compact disc, mostly because you don't want to have to keep getting up every 20 minutes to flip sides. You want to sink into this environment and soak in it, undisturbed.
Though it wasn't always explicitly apparent, there was always a connection between the UK Acid House movement and the preceding experimental, "Industrial" scene. The fact that Psychic TV were one of the premier early adopters of the Acid House genre should be enough of a clue, but FSOL sort of took the flow of influence back to complete the circle with this album, pulling in Industrial's more dark ambient aspects and often directly sampling sources such as Throbbing Gristle and Chris & Cosey. This album is a vital link in that chain.
Lifeforms also makes the psychedelic facets of the electronic music of the day most fully realized, doing more than paying lip service to the experience by virtue of the graphics and design aesthetics. This really is music for serious tripping, well off the grid of the dance floor. Dougans' & Cobain's commitment to this culture would become much more explicit in later years as they dove headlong into full on psychedelic "acid-rock", sometimes to the dismay of fans more committed to electronic music.
In the long run, Lifeforms still stands up to serious listening to this day, sounding just as alive and organic as it did the day it was released.
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