Showing posts with label fragment factory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fragment factory. Show all posts

Ice Yacht - Pole of Cold

Side A

1 Pole of Cold 08:17

2 Racing the Arctic Shadow 06:56

3 Snow Drifter 04:17

 

Side B

1 Summer with the Snow Bees 04:20

2 Vostock Station Hallucinations 09:10

3 Whiteout Woman 05:26

 

Credits:

Format: Cassette tape,100 copies.

Release Date: 2015

Label: Fragment Factory

Catalogue Number: FRAG34 

Sleeve Design: Philip Sanderson & Michael Muennich 

 

Review:

by Aquarius Records

aquariusrecords.org/bin/search.cgi/2%7C25/Keyword=FACTRIX%20

Philip Sanderson has told more than a few tall tales in his time. Back in the early '80s, he produced a handful of industrial-dirge-drone tracks under the pseudonym Claire Thomas and Susan Vezey, nearly convincing the nascent Cherry Red Records to publish a full album from Claire and Susan until they found out that two women were not behind the project. Sanderson and his cohort Steven Ball were the miscreants behind The Storm Bugs and they ran the very impressive Snatch Tapes imprint, much of whose back catalogue had been finely reissued by Vinyl On Demand. Sanderson had also been the author to the project Ice Yacht, which had only released a single track on one the Snatch Tape compilations. The story behind this tape reads as follows - Sanderson (or as the press release states, just Ice Yacht) had the daft idea of retracing the journey of Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen to the North Pole sometime in the early '80s. Here's where the story breaks down, as Sanderson / Ice Yacht somehow lost the only recording of an unreleased album while on that journey, only to have the 'vacuum-sealed tape' find its way into the hand of Fragment Factory in Germany. Hardly plausible, but then, many were convinced of the authenticity of those Jurgen Muller recordings. While there could be something about there being a long-lost Ice Yacht recording from back in the '80s, it's more likely that Sanderson has recorded in this day and age. Thankfully, he's bolstered his fictions with a deliciously vintage sounding album of crude/cold sequences for oblique metallic synth-noise monotone. Somewhere between Factrix, Thought Broadcast, and of course Sanderson's own Storm Bugs. Numbered tapes of just 100 copies.