Artist's albums
Füxa2000
2000 · album
Venoy: Bliss Out v.5
1997 · single
Very Well Organised
1996 · album
Covered in Stars
2022 · album
Help Me Please
2022 · single
Apollo Soyuz
2015 · album
Dirty D
2013 · album
Sun Is Shining
2013 · single
3 Field Rotation
2013 · album
Accretion
2013 · album
Inflight Audio
2013 · album
The Modified Mechanics of This Device
2013 · album
Electric Sound of Summer
2012 · album
Our Lips Are Sealed
2012 · single
Unexplained Transmissions
2007 · album
Similar artists
Crescent
Artist
Yume Bitsu
Artist
Pram
Artist
Experimental Audio Research
Artist
Bardo Pond
Artist
Flying Saucer Attack
Artist
Dadamah
Artist
Jessica Bailiff
Artist
Bowery Electric
Artist
Hood
Artist
Labradford
Artist
Movietone
Artist
Biography
Detroit-based experimental rock duo Füxa focused on a lo-fi, electronics-heavy blend of droning, treated guitars, vintage synths (most often the Hammond B-3), and sparse percussion in the vein of Loop, Spacemen 3/Spiritualized, and Amp. Comprised of Randall Nieman and Ryan Anderson, the group formed in 1995 after Nieman left Dearborn-based space-rock group Windy & Carl to purse other projects. He hooked up with Anderson, who'd recently severed his ties with another local group, Asha Vida, and a common interest in arcane instruments and electronics led the pair to each form a label -- Nieman with Mind Expansion and Anderson with Astro Lanes -- to put out collaborative material. What followed was a veritable flood of releases, not only on Mind Expansion and Astro Lanes, but labels such as Burnt Hair, Alley Sweeper, Che, and Darla, most of them meticulously conceived with an eye toward collectibility (hand-cut and numbered sleeves, colored vinyl, strategic split recordings, etc.). The result was Füxa's quick ascension to cult status, buoyed by split recordings with artists such as Orange Cake Mix, Flowchart, Bright, and Stereolab. The group were also featured on Virgin U.K.'s mammoth post-rock companion Monsters, Robots, and Bugmen in 1996 and conducted a brief U.K. tour as Stereolab's support that same year. The group released several full-lengths (including Three Field Rotation, which collects their first three singles and adds two new tracks). Though they were reportedly sitting on enough material for about a dozen more, the group disbanded before the end of the decade. ~ Sean Cooper, Rovi