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Emily Faryna

Emily Faryna

Emily Faryna has been played on NTS in shows including NTS Guide to…, featured first on 12 August 2016. Songs played include Propaganda, Cows In The Field and My Wife, She Loved The Butcher.

Emily Faryna is a solo multi-format Vancouver artist, whose visionary digital mythics have been obscured by Canada’s under-documented vintage cassette scene. Ambitious, singular, forward-thinking, powerful, intense, and prodigious.

destructive guitar congruence / menacing synthetic tones / echo-to-infinity vox processing

By 1984, she was working under the Mo Da Mu records label out of British Columbia in Canada. Her debut album, I've Got A Steel Bar In My Head (Mo Da Mu 10), was released that year. A sophomore offering followed in 1985 titled Neat And Tidy In Your Mind (Mo Da Mu 15) and 5 years later a third tape called The Return Of The Repressed was released on Spiral records.

Her conical prose hovers darkly through whole work minor-key delirium, brewing the magnetic urgency coursing through its self-producing ether; a last, desperate attempt to convince the world that the mind’s ailments exist on the outside. It’s a gateway drug into the underbelly of a hyper intimate experimental underground torn from the pages of Neuromancer and, to me, the flagship vehicle for the vanguard of fringe-Canada.

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Emily Faryna

Emily Faryna has been played on NTS in shows including NTS Guide to…, featured first on 12 August 2016. Songs played include Propaganda, Cows In The Field and My Wife, She Loved The Butcher.

Emily Faryna is a solo multi-format Vancouver artist, whose visionary digital mythics have been obscured by Canada’s under-documented vintage cassette scene. Ambitious, singular, forward-thinking, powerful, intense, and prodigious.

destructive guitar congruence / menacing synthetic tones / echo-to-infinity vox processing

By 1984, she was working under the Mo Da Mu records label out of British Columbia in Canada. Her debut album, I've Got A Steel Bar In My Head (Mo Da Mu 10), was released that year. A sophomore offering followed in 1985 titled Neat And Tidy In Your Mind (Mo Da Mu 15) and 5 years later a third tape called The Return Of The Repressed was released on Spiral records.

Her conical prose hovers darkly through whole work minor-key delirium, brewing the magnetic urgency coursing through its self-producing ether; a last, desperate attempt to convince the world that the mind’s ailments exist on the outside. It’s a gateway drug into the underbelly of a hyper intimate experimental underground torn from the pages of Neuromancer and, to me, the flagship vehicle for the vanguard of fringe-Canada.

Original source: Last.fm