Fang Island - Fang Island - New Mint & Pink LP

Fang Island - Fang Island - New Mint & Pink LP

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Format: New Mint & Pink Vinyl Label: Joyful Noise Cat. No. JNR485LPC1 Barcode: 602309899325

 Released: 13/12/2024


Fang Island’s only two full-length records, long out of print and back in stock via Joyful Noise, defined the sound of dance-y/math-y indie rock of the early 2010s alongside contemporaries Lightning Bolt, Titus Andronicus, and Japandroids. Recommended If You Like: Fang Island, Tera Melos, Japandroids, Lightning Bolt, Andrew WK, Don Caballero, Titus Andronicus, Maps & Atlases, Marnie Stern, No Age, Cloud Nothings, Giraffes? Giraffes!, Battles, Parts & Labor. Fang Island described their music as the sound of “everyone high-fiving everyone.” No matter where they went, Fang Island’s up-with-people approach made them a subversive art project by default. At a time when the belligerent noise-rock of Lightning Bolt and The Body defined Providence, Fang Island played major-key guitar harmonies and flashy tapping riffs. When people tried to call them “math rock,” they thought of themselves as “recess rock.” Fang Island shared bills with uber-buzzy bands like Yeasayer and Chairlift at Cake Shop and Santos Party House, crucibles for Brooklyn hype at the turn of the naughts; but their most impactful co-sign came from Andrew WK. At least until Fang Island earned an unexpected Best New Music review at Pitchfork; in the style of the time, the group - now including drummer Marc St. Sauver and guitarist Nick Sadler - were thrust from playing “literally empty shows” at hot dog stands in Ohio to becoming the toast of SXSW and starting their North American tour with psych-rock idols the Flaming Lips in an Atlantic City casino. They would later play sprawling amphitheatres with Stone Temple Pilots, and in perhaps the best demonstration of their ability to wield pop smarts to guitar pyrotechnics, both Matt & Kim and Coheed & Cambria. Two years after Fang Island released what they expected to be their first and only album, Major became the “highly anticipated sophomore LP.” The songs were bigger, shinier and hookier, forged under the pressure that comes with being a band rather than a couple of weekend warriors - label pressures, gruelling tours and the frequent personnel changes that ultimately brought the band to their amicable end. Fang Island began with the crackle of fireworks and, as the band heard fireworks going off in the distance as they played in Barcelona, they took it as a supernatural sign that this show would be the perfect bookend to their career. “We were getting older, we were in serious relationships, we were getting tired, and that just felt like the right way to end it.”