This piece was originally published by All About Jazz on November 8, 2011

Drawing from a well of inspiration that includes not only Herbie Hancock, Jean Michel Jarre and Windham Hill but also film, TV and commercial incidental music. The veil of nostalgia hangs heavily over this music. 


The trip backward begins with the artist's own name, "Jacob Two-Two" being the protagonist in a series of children's books by Mordecai Richler. This is the nostalgia of the 13th Generation, Robert Capa's Generation X: people who came of age in a time when the most powerful computers still had tape reels affixed to their fronts; when latchkey kids with self-absorbed Boomer parents were trading their Star Wars Underoos and sleepovers for parachute pants and trips to the shopping mall; when the drinking age was eighteen; and when abortion was the middle class teen's birth control method of choice (or so said the coming-of-age films of the day). 

Vintage synthesizers and drums machines dominate the preceding, with all of the big names of the era in the house: Korg, Moog, and of course, Roland. Their Juno 6 keyboard, with beats courtesy of the TR-808 drum machine, has been the workhorse combo for electro artists since at least Afrika Bambataa. 

Parts of this record are like stumbling across an old top-loading VHS machine running tape loops of the motion graphic sequences that wrap late-night movies and syndicated TV shows—all synth sweeps and swirling colors. Other times, it's classic electro jams in the style of Arabian Prince or Egyptian Lover. The artist has described his mission as finding the "missing link between '90s hip-hop and '80s new age/prog." Mission accomplished, Jacob. 

With 1950s "vision of the future" techno-optimism, Jacob 2-2's Fantasiarexia is vintage and familiar, robotic yet warm, and cheerful about its nostalgic melancholy.

Track Listing: Fantasiarexia; Vidnight Flight; Palaces / Bump In; Hallucid; Monitor(ed); Nanny Blaze; Earth In Reverse; The Dinosaurs of Cabazon (Starfawn Remix).


More music from the circuit boards:

Electronic Music - The Tonearm
The Tonearm is an online magazine devoted to music, arts, culture, and the creative people who make our world a better and more interesting place.