Fog
Ether Teeth

Cover art for Ether Teeth by Fog Description: LP on Ninja Tune
Format: LP (vinyl)
Genre(s): Hip-Hop/Rap
Label: Ninja Tune
Price:
£12.89
Availability: Dispatched within 2-5 days (on average).

4Rating: 4
...according to our on 31 December 2006.

The NME said this about Ether Teeth (the new Fog album on Ninja Tune) "this would be pretentious wank if they didn't come from a hip hop background". What? How does that excuse it? The only thing I liked about the last Fog LP was the appearance of Sweep (from the Sooty show) on a few tracks. 30 seconds into the first track he's here again. The second track is pretty mad like a turntable friendly Neutral Milk Hotel. Otherwise file under Sparklehorse pissing about. Different but quite possibly rubbish, I'm too confused to decide.

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What their label says...

Ether Teeth, Fog's second LP, is, in his own words, "a heavy-headed hopeful opus, an urban vaudevillian symphony about birds, war, mystery, jealousy, old tyme dudes and most importantly, L-O-V-E. (I know, I know…)."

Recorded in sequence to 2 inch tape at Third Ear Studios in Minneapolis with Tom Herbers (perhaps best known for his work with Low), "Ether Teeth" finds Broder both expanding the range of his sound and becoming more focussed in his approach. And while often dark or melancholy, his lyrics never lose their sense of humour or thought-provoking imagery. He feels that, this time around, his vision of a collison of turntables, piano, poetry and god knows what else are fully realised.

The turntable is used extensively on "Ether Teeth" but Broder is confident that he has found a way to put it on an absolutely equal playing field with all other instruments on the record. "It’s not thrust in your face or romanticized, but used with restraint and subtlety." Running turntables through different amps, and using different rooms, mics and effects was crucial to the recording process of the record and we think you'll agree that (if you can even tell when you are hearing them) you have never heard turntables used like this before.

So what does it sound like? We could give you some trite Bonny-Prince-Billy-meets-Kid-Koala-and-Randy-Newman-at-the-Anticon-house straw to grasp at, but it would only piss you off and wouldn’t get you any closer to where Broder’s going. Let’s just say that it’s a pretty unique record from a pretty unique man, a great big American symphony made ot of scraps and after-thoughts, somehow sophisticated and naïve in equal measure. And it’s exactly the record Broder wanted to make. Exactly his own record. As personal and as big as that…