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Originally Posted by BrotherLovesDub
i I am a Fluke fan but feel they began to lose it immediately after the Bullet 12", Six Wheels being the highpoint. this 2Bit Pie nonsense is horrible. Musically it sounds stuck in 98 and on top of the stagnant sounds, there are god awful vocals all over this. The worst part about Fluke has always been the vocals but it's amplified to the extreme on this release.
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Sorry you didn't dig it, BLD
i hear what you're saying about latter-day Fluke not living up to earlier promise. Seems most fans agree that Six Wheels on My Wagon is quality. Perhaps because it is all over the place in style and is very catchy. Later releases weren't nearly as well-received. Oto is very dark and kind of slow-paced. It took me many listens to get into. Risotto is often lumped as big-beat,with remixes of OTO with"Atom Bomb" and "Absurd" being overexposed. And Puppy, which i feel is a return to dark, driving bass similar to Bullet and Tosh, was hardly noticed on release.
Jon Fugler's vocals have always been an acquired taste...raspy, snarly, half-spoken. Personally, i like 'em, as it adds some humanism into what could be too-sleek production. On 2 Bit Pie, he does sing a lot, and on the singles "Nobody Never" and "Here I Come" as well as "PIL", these are very amplified as you say. But there's vocal variety, too: Yuki, a Japanese girl, sings duet or solo on a couple cuts, Jan Burton (of the other Fluke spinoff Syntax) on another and an opera-singer whose name i forget is the vocal signature on yet another.
As for the stuck-in-98 feel, i dunno...maybe it's closer to Risoto than Six Wheels, though i think it's a natural follow-up to Puppy.