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Chuck Nelson - "Fable": http://www.mediafire.com/?bsxrxxftjed 1. Prelude in Orange Flat Minor (0:56) 2. Flower Golem (5:23) 3. Peace In The Labyrinth (6:08) 4.Gloom Orange (8:24) 5. Endless Ritual (14:23) 6. Bloom (A Funeral March) (3:04) My co-conspirator in sonic manipulation, Chuck Nelson (aka Chris Wahamaki) finished his 2nd album "Fable" about a month ago. Chuck Nelson is a vehicle of sound like a David Lynch movie falling apart gracefully through blips and waves of noise. Fable is meant to be listened to out in the heat, where the combination of summer ambience and manipulated guitar, bass, and drum programs turn the world around you instead of you turning around it. 6 tracks, coming in at just under 40 minutes, are definitely differently tuned than his first album "Sentimental Abstractions." There is a lighter sentiment to them, one not so oppressively tragic. "Prelude In Orange Flat Minor" is a good introduction to the forthcoming album, showing off the impressive manipulation skills of guitar under a distant piano line. Immediately afterwards, "Flower Golem" is one of the most rhythmic and upbeat songs of the Chuck Nelson catalogue. His time spent as the bassist in Crash City Saints gave this a shoegazey twist, one that has this reviewer smiling. "Peace In The Labyrinth" is probably my favorite on the album, as you can feel the lead line get swallowed up by bursts of blips and doppler-effected guitar, panning to and fro, echoing Fennesz. "Gloom Orange" almost sits