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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Robotic electro, July 4, 2005
This review is from: Fyuti (Audio CD)
I've just listened to this album for the first time. The second that I played the first song I was blown away. The smooth electrosounds mixed with robotic hard, is amazingly beautiful and every song gives me goose bumps. Listen to this album and become as happy as me.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
From harsh mechanical sounds to lush ambient journeys you get an amazing audio ride from Fyuti, January 15, 2010
This review is from: Fyuti (Audio CD)
This is an album that might take you a couple of listens to begin to appreciate the beauty behind all of the things that are happening. its rather minimal in structure, but what is there is quite fantastic. It has a wide range of IDM styles ranging from fusion of steril and cold mechanical sounds that are layered on wonderful melodies down to simple and groovey melodies. All of this is somehow combined and fused to create a fantastic ambient/trancey/idm listening experience with a track quality range from very good to excellent. If you could transform the universe of Myst into sound, then this is what it would sound like... A-
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Bola - Fyuti, December 3, 2011
This review is from: Fyuti (Audio CD)
Bola's second album, FYUTI, treads much of the same area as SOUP did, though with some distinct differences. First, the melancholy strain that ran through the first album is even more evident here, as on the opener "Vertiphon," which feels like midnight on a lonely planet. Second, there's more of a hip-hop influence, as the modulated vocals which almost take center stage of "Pae Paoe" show. These two influences oftentimes come together in fascinating ways, as on "Veronex Cypher," which is the sound of a funk machine's heartbreak. "Magnasushi" takes it one step further, with some harsher industrial edges to the sadness. (In comparison, the melody on "Soleiele" is relatively jolly.) But Bola has other tricks up his sleeve as well: "Shoob,e" has a shuddering warmth to it, while "O, Chuma" delves into its scuppering rhythm. "Horizophon" seems headed nowhere, at first, but then backs into its lovely melody quite deliberately, and the final track, "VM8," is beatless, a track that slips out into the black void of space. A mournful success for Bola.
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