About

An independent record label based in Brighton, UK. If you wanna get in touch / send a demo then drop us an e-mail.

artists

Ale Mania
An Emergency
Cold Pumas
Fair Ohs
Friendo
Farewell, Appalachia!
Hookworms
Lab Coast
The Light Sleepers
Male Bonding
Sauna Youth
Skiptracer
Super Tennis
This Town Needs Guns
Women
YouMeTheSwitch

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Mailing list

12 February 10
Happy New Year! Wow it’s been a while and it’s gonna be a little while longer until Faux Discx puts something out again, probably not until the Summer. Something IS lined up though and I’m incredibly excited about it. Do some digging and you may find what’s round the corner.
Back to the present, long time FD associates Super Tennis have finally released their debut album The Quiet Finale. Although this release (digital only) is not actually released on Faux Discx I still wanna draw your attention to it. If you’re a fan of Super Tennis you don’t wanna miss out on this. In their own words “The Quiet Finale’ is the debut full-length from North London trio Super Tennis, previously seen playing out with like-minded contemporaries Hot Club de Paris, Johnny Foreigner and Tubelord. In a style labelled ‘wrong-pop’ (Kruger Magazine), Super Tennis have crafted a record packed with tunes but without choruses, reflecting the short attention spans of their authors by surging from hook to hook, matching the joyfully throwaway with the calmly introspective without ever losing their sense of fun. Shared vocals are shouted and sung against tight rhythms while guitars chime, jab and swirl, bringing to mind influences from Q And Not U and Les Savy Fav to Devo and The Replacements.
Written around the ‘concept’ of the rise and fall of a house party, these twelve songs capture the rush and fall of early-hours shenanigans in their opening sequence. From pure pop (‘Pushinsky’) to ragged yelp-pop (‘B. Purdie’), these songs aren’t afraid of living-room dancefloors, collapsing into the epic-in-miniature (‘B-Rad’, ‘L. Ron Hubbard’) and ending in the hushed ‘Quiet Finale’ of the title. Elsewhere, ‘Theme Song’, a bona-fide ‘hit’ last released on Banquet Records in summer of last year, brings wide grins and bubblegum nonsense. Lyrically, Super Tennis stick to what they know (work, friends, ex-Liverpool ace Steve McManaman), all the time giving the impression of three friends for whom playing this music is the reward for the working week.”
You can download it now from iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.

Happy New Year! Wow it’s been a while and it’s gonna be a little while longer until Faux Discx puts something out again, probably not until the Summer. Something IS lined up though and I’m incredibly excited about it. Do some digging and you may find what’s round the corner.

Back to the present, long time FD associates Super Tennis have finally released their debut album The Quiet Finale. Although this release (digital only) is not actually released on Faux Discx I still wanna draw your attention to it. If you’re a fan of Super Tennis you don’t wanna miss out on this. In their own words “The Quiet Finale’ is the debut full-length from North London trio Super Tennis, previously seen playing out with like-minded contemporaries Hot Club de Paris, Johnny Foreigner and Tubelord. In a style labelled ‘wrong-pop’ (Kruger Magazine), Super Tennis have crafted a record packed with tunes but without choruses, reflecting the short attention spans of their authors by surging from hook to hook, matching the joyfully throwaway with the calmly introspective without ever losing their sense of fun. Shared vocals are shouted and sung against tight rhythms while guitars chime, jab and swirl, bringing to mind influences from Q And Not U and Les Savy Fav to Devo and The Replacements.

Written around the ‘concept’ of the rise and fall of a house party, these twelve songs capture the rush and fall of early-hours shenanigans in their opening sequence. From pure pop (‘Pushinsky’) to ragged yelp-pop (‘B. Purdie’), these songs aren’t afraid of living-room dancefloors, collapsing into the epic-in-miniature (‘B-Rad’, ‘L. Ron Hubbard’) and ending in the hushed ‘Quiet Finale’ of the title. Elsewhere, ‘Theme Song’, a bona-fide ‘hit’ last released on Banquet Records in summer of last year, brings wide grins and bubblegum nonsense. Lyrically, Super Tennis stick to what they know (work, friends, ex-Liverpool ace Steve McManaman), all the time giving the impression of three friends for whom playing this music is the reward for the working week.”

You can download it now from iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.

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