On GameSpot: Wii Fit tells 10-year-old she's fat

Search:
Go!


The premier source for free music 111,052 FREE MP3s
FeaturedOther
Crossfade

For the latest songs, albums, videos, playlists, and artist news, bite into our music blog Crossfade.

advertisement
Click Here

advertisement
Fauxliage

Fauxliage

  • Avg user rating: 5 stars Out of 9 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Delerium, Halou, Leigh Nash

Playlist

All Alone (5:11) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 2,078
Rafe (Gabin Remix) (4:11) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 1,274
All the World (4:41) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 1,238
Someday the Wind (4:12) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 1,257
Draw My Life (4:03) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 872
Let It Go (4:45) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 1,676
Magic (3:39) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 847
Without You (4:58) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 830
Rafe (5:15) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 633
Vibing (5:27) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 621
Rafe (Pacha Remix) (4:40) Date added: 08/09/07 | Total listens: 2,553

User reviews for Fauxliage

Average rating5 starsOut of 9 votes

Electronic & Dance artists you may also like

Foscil

Avg user rating:
4 Stars
Out of 8 votes

Deadbeat

Avg user rating:
3 Stars
Out of 6 votes

ZONK

Avg user rating:
3 and one half Stars
Out of 9 votes

Enigma

Avg user rating:
4 and one half Stars
Out of 136 votes

Bumps

Rate this artist!

Editor's review

If you were into music in the late '90s, you'll instantly recognize the superfeminine voice of Sixpence None the Richer's Leigh Nash, who collaborates with Delerium as Fauxliage. The trio don't take themselves nearly as seriously as Delerium, and here, that's a good thing. Pop-friendly but slightly capricious, the music coyly winks at the listener and beckons her to sing along.

Biography

Fauxliage is the first full length collaboration between former Sixpence None the Richer singer, Leigh Nash, and Bill Leeb and Rhys Fulber of Canadian ambient pop outfit Delerium.

Nash's voice will be instantly recognizable to Delerium fans, having sung on their hit single “Innocente (Falling In Love)” from the album Poem and contributed two songs, “Run For It” and “Orbit of Me” to the band's subsequent Chimera.

Fauxliage was recorded in Vancouver while Nash contributed ideas and vocals from her home in Nashville, and also features multi-instrumentalist Roy Salmond, bassist Leah Randi and Sarah McLachlan drummer Ash Sood.

“It was a project created to always have female singers,” says Bill Leeb. “And Leigh has always been a personal favorite of mine.”

The fusion of Nash's evocative vocal style, which harks back to classic country heroines Loretta Lynn and Patsy Cline, and Leeb and Fulber's organically created electronic soundscapes, isn't an obvious one but somehow fits perfectly.

“The first time I wrote for a Delerium track (Innocente) I was very nervous and intimidated,” says Nash. “I had never done anything like that before with this kind of music. I found it to be such an enjoyable challenge.”

Opening with the upfront pop and restless hooks of “All the World” and “Someday The Wind”, Nash gives the album it's emotional depth, from the celestial harmonies of “Draw My Life” to the simmering anger of “All Alone”.

Nash's lyrics touch on universal themes of love and loss but often have a basis in personal experience, most notably “Rafe” the first single to be taken from the album. “Rafe is about my cousin who was very ill at the time and needed comfort,” she explains. “He used to be a very successful ballet dancer, that's why there are references to him dancing under light. The song was written to be a hand for him to hold in what I thought might be his last moments. Thankfully he is now doing well.”

Leeb and Fulber also conjure the ornate, almost baroque instrumental “Magic” and the lush lounge-influenced “Vibing” with it's Rhodes piano recalling the classically constructed ambience of William Orbit. Yet despite Fauxliage's unabashed pop stylings the album still retains a melancholic if seductive air.

“Music always reflects the artist's state of mind otherwise it's not realistic,” says Leeb. “At this particular moment in my life I am feeling very introspective and this album became part of that persona and that is why the album has a very moody ambience to it. And the lyrics add to this mood by "taking of stock of one's personal life."

A subtle slice of dream pop that's far removed from Delerium's darker roots, like their esoteric name suggests, Fauxliage are a hidden gem, waiting to be discovered.

Expand to read more Collapse

Where to buy

Amazon
advertisement


© 2008 CNET Networks, Inc., a CBS Company. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use