Fiendish

Fiendish
Studio album by
Phideaux Xavier
ReleasedNovember 25, 2003
RecordedNYC & LA
GenreProgressive rock
Psychedelic rock
Length44:58
LabelBloodfish Music
ProducerMark Kramer on Tracks 1-10; Gabriel Moffat on Track 11
Phideaux Xavier chronology
Friction
(1993)
Fiendish
(2003)
Ghost Story
(2004)

Fiendish is the first album released by composer Phideaux Xavier. (Their previous album Friction isn't considered official by the band.)

In 2002, Phideaux began to work with Gabriel Moffat on a series of new demos. He got back together with drummer Rich Hutchins and recorded songs for what would become the album Fiendish. The finished work was described by Phideaux as "progressive space folk".

The longest track, "Soundblast," took its lyrics from a leaflet dropped over Japan shortly after the detonation of the Little Boy atomic bomb at Hiroshima.

This album was released in 2003, despite 2004 being referred to as the copyright year on the artwork.

Tracks

  1. "Fragment" (04:12)
  2. "Animal Games" (03:30)
  3. "100 Mg" (03:12)
  4. "100 Coda" (02:24)
  5. "Hellphone" (02:10)
  6. "Little Monster" (05:12)
  7. "Headstones" (04:15)
  8. "Fiendish" (02:59)
  9. "Vultures & Mosquitoes" (04:18)
  10. "Soundblast" (07:17)
  11. "Space Brother" (05:23)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Phideaux Xavier
Studio albums
  • Friction
  • Fiendish
  • Ghost Story
  • Chupacabras
  • 313
  • The Great Leap
  • Doomsday Afternoon
  • Number Seven
  • Snowtorch
  • Infernal

References


Stub icon

This 2003 rock album–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e