Tracklist
Lifeforms (Path 1) | 4:43 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 2) | 6:37 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 3) | 5:24 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 4) | 9:15 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 5) | 5:19 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 6) | 3:31 | ||
Lifeforms (Path 7) | 4:02 |
Credits (7)
- Buggy G Riphead*Artwork
- YageEngineer
- The Future Sound Of LondonProducer
- Talvin SinghTabla [Tablatronics]
- Elizabeth FraserVocals
- Elizabeth FraserWritten-By
Versions
Filter by
15 versions
Image | , | – | In Your Collection, Wantlist, or Inventory |
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Version Details | Data Quality | |||
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Mixed
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Virgin – vscdt 1484 | UK & Europe | 1994 | UK & Europe — 1994 | ||||
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Promo
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Virgin – VSCDXJ 1484 | UK | 1994 | UK — 1994 |
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Lifeforms
12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single
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Virgin – 7243 8 92377 6 4 | UK | 1994 | UK — 1994 | ||||
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Lifeforms
7", Single, Picture Disc
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Virgin – 7243 8 92377 0 2 | UK | 1994 | UK — 1994 |
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Lifeforms
Cassette, Single
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Virgin – 7243 8 92377 4 0 | UK | 1994 | UK — 1994 | ||||
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Lifeforms
12"
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Astralwerks – ASW 6114-1 | US | 1994 | US — 1994 |
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Mixed
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Virgin – VSCDT 1484 | Europe | 1994 | Europe — 1994 |
New Submission
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Lifeforms
CD, Maxi-Single, Mixed
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Virgin – 7243 8 92373 2 0 | Canada | 1994 | Canada — 1994 |
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Lifeforms
CD, Single
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Virgin – ASW 6114-2 | US | 1994 | US — 1994 |
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Mixed
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EBV – ASW 6114-2 | US | 1994 | US — 1994 |
New Submission
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Lifeforms
Cassette, Promo
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Virgin – VSCDJ1484 | UK | 1994 | UK — 1994 |
Recently Edited
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Mixed, Repress
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Astralwerks – ASW 6114-2 | US | 1995 | US — 1995 |
Recently Edited
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Lifeforms
7×File, MP3, 320 kbps
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EMI – none | 2007 | — 2007 |
New Submission
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Lifeforms
CD, Single, Mixed
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Virgin – ASW 6114-2 | US | US | |||||
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Lifeforms
Cassette, Single, Unofficial Release
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Always Records – ALR 247 | Russia | Russia |
New Submission
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Recommendations
Reviews
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referencing Lifeforms (Cassette, Single) VSC 1484
Used to be found in the Our Price bargain bin for 99p. Which for the quality of music was exceptional. Plays the same on both sides so after your flight you can take off again with a quick flip. -
referencing Lifeforms (CD, Single, Mixed) 7243 8 92373 2 0
At least as good as the LP and arguably even better. I feel this release (specifically the 7 track CD version) is much overlooked. I guess people just think it is a standard single release of the 5 minute track from the LP, but it is a true "extended play" 40 minute work in its own right. Essential. Best thing they did! -
referencing Lifeforms (Cassette, Promo) VSCDT 1484
Guessing the 1P version is the album version, but then what is the 'Full' version? There's an extended radio edit on the Teachings compilation that runs to 4:36, so that's a possibility I suppose. -
referencing Lifeforms (Cassette, Promo) VSCDT 1484
Anyone any idea what the track lablled as '1P' is? -
referencing Lifeforms (CD, Single, Mixed) ASW 6114-2
As reviewed by me in August 1994, when I couldn't offer praise without pairing it with insults:
Summary: A diverse, relatively engaging EP of sample-oriented arrangements based on the title track from their latest double-CD.
Okay, I was the guy who panned the Lifeforms album. In the months since writing that review, I've tried listening to it in the car, at home, with & without headphones, on drugs, during the day, late at night, or while doing something else—nothing seems to make it any more appealing to me. The only reason I called it the future of electronic music is because so many people do like it that the record companies will make it into a bandwagon to be jumped on with dollar signs in their eyes. Hopefully I'll be wrong about this —I was saying two years ago that raves in the USA were a ing fad, after all—but at this point I think that FSOL are establishing a marketing pipeline for similar-sounding music to be delivered to the masses in the coming years.
If only the trail was being blazed by the innovativeness of their art alone. The IDM mailing list is testament to the explosion of groundbreaking new electronic music coming from the same psychedelic dance roots as the FSOL duo. Yet the laurels are being heaped on FSOL by the mainstream press and Internet groups (the Space-Music and Tangerine Dream mailing lists, for example) while equally innovative electronica from Richard Kirk and scores of lesser known artists are, to put it mildly, being ignored. It's criminal.
"Lifeforms" the maxi-single is a welcome relief from the aimless meanderings of the Lifeforms album. It's still got more samples than it knows what to do with, but this time a little more attention has been paid to constructing accessible songs out of the sound fragments rather than throwing them all at you amidst an unimaginative barrage of bubbling glorps and zaps. It's nothing the Art of Noise weren't doing better 10 years ago, and you'll still be wondering when the song is going to start when it's really almost done, but it's definitely a more coherent journey than the album from which it is derived. Nearly 40 minutes long, the uninterrupted "paths" (...rolling eyes) are tinted with snippets of Liz Fraser's voice. I thought it was going to be some unflattering smatterings of out-of-context harmonies. To my pleasant surprise her voice is used throughout the mini-album in many different ways and in large enough doses to lend a much needed breath of humanity to the otherwise soulless, semi-organic sonic soup.
"Path 1" is much like the album filler, though it picks up toward the end. "Path 2" is an alarmingly cerebral manipulation of headspace, to the point of being worthy of a remix CD of its own. "Path 4" is a sweet epic dominated by flowing sounds, Fraser's phonics practice and, in an apparent tribute to their forerunners, a sample borrowed from Pink Floyd's "On The Run". (That same sample from Dark Side Of The Moon was also used by the KLF on the immortal Chill Out.) "Path 5" is an amalgam of "Central Industrial", the Tales of Ephidrina album, truer to FSOL's post-Accelerator sound. "Path 6" is a piano & vox interlude (don't worry, synths and samples still abound) leading into the dub-influenced lovemaking theme "Path 7".
Like I said, nothing the Art of Noise weren't doing better 10 years earlier. (Does saying that qualify me for the Too Old To Be A Music Critic club? Or is hip in the Just Because You Sent Me A Promo Doesn't Mean I Have To Sing Your Praises club good enough? Heh, I better watch it or I won't get anything.) -
referencing Lifeforms (7", Single, Picture Disc) VSP 1484
FSOL on 7" picture disc, hilarious.
"LOOK OUT POP-PICKERS, HERE'S THE LATEST SMASH FROM THOSE CRAZY FUTURISTIC GUYS FROM THE CAPITAL...
IT'S THE FUTURE SOUND OF LONDON!"
smh lol wtf what is this i don't even o_0 -
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referencing Lifeforms (CD, Single, Mixed) 7243 8 92373 2 0
i may be wrong, but i'm pretty sure i have a tape somewhere from 92 that has colin dale play path 3 on his outer limits kiss show....shares a fair amount of dna with papua new guinea, what with its rolling breakbeats n'all, but this time there is a lot more detroit in it, from the hi hats to the bass and its one of my favourite tracks by them. this and 'theme from hot burst' work pretty well together (if you also have a copy of earthbeat) and starts mapping out part of the blueprint for intelligent jungle which soon followed........as far as the other tracks go, i think its been said pretty well by others on here already and for £1.29 you cant really go wrong.... -
referencing Lifeforms (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single) VST 1484
This turned out to be my "cleaning up" record :D
My mum had an automatic record player ( an RFT model made in GDR ) which was capable of
repeating.
Thus, after hosting one hell of a New Years Eve party I threw this baby on the deck and let it spin
for hours and hours while cleaning up the place until the sun rose.
If you want a benchmark for what ambient music is ... THIS is IT! -
While un-enticing, the single proves to be a solid head and heels above the expectations of one owning the double cd of the lifeforms lp. Extremely important is path 4. It sounds like prehistoric America where Mayan civilisations sacrificed women and children in hopes of fertile soil and rich crops. Utterly beautiful and undescribable by words, the singing is so raw and sinful-sounding that the artwork on the back and front would make sense. A hidden gem this one is, but there is nothing that compares to this, even in national geographic films or other professionally produced soundtracks to hauntingly mesemerising sequences, or just anything else.
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