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I sat down with Nathan Fake , one of the UK’s most distinctive electronic music producers , to chart his journey from rural Norfolk to the forefront of techno, IDM and experimental electronic music — and to unpack Evapor...
Nathan Fake is an episode from Lost And Sound by Paul Hanford. I sat down with Nathan Fake , one of the UK’s most distinctive electronic music producers , to chart his journey from rural Norfolk to the forefront of techno, IDM and experimen...
This episode belongs to Lost And Sound.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Feb 11, 2026, 62:43 long, audio available.
I sat down with Nathan Fake , one of the UK’s most distinctive electronic music producers , to chart his journey from rural Norfolk to the forefront of techno, IDM and experimental electronic music — and to unpack Evaporator , his seventh studio album . The record marks a clear pivot away from drum-heavy habits toward mood, melody and atmosphere , growing out of an intentional “ambient-only” brief . We dig into the nuts and bolts of music production : why Nathan still sketches ideas in old versions of Cubase , how cassette saturation, cheap gear and sonic imperfections add human friction, and where modern plugins genuinely earn their place. He talks about contrast as a compositional tool — lush pads against tough drums — and traces a lineage from Border Community’s trance-tinged techno through to echoes of Warp-era electronic atmospherics . There’s also a candid look at playing legacy tracks live , reshaping classics like “The Sky Was Pink” and “Outhouse” through improvisation, memory and feel , rather than carbon-copy recreations. Beyond sound design, the conversation opens out into bigger questions about electronic music today . Do long-form tracks still survive in a scroll- and swipe-first ecosystem ? Nathan answers by doubling down, placing a nine-minute centrepiece at the heart of the new album. We reflect on working with small independent labels versus larger music organisations , and he shares pragmatic advice for staying singular: ignore trends, set your own constraints, and let the idea dictate the tool . We also probe the monoculture of online tutorials and ubiquitous DAWs . If you enjoy Lost and Sound and want to help keep it thriving, the best way to support the podcast is simple:
You can listen to Nathan Fake online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Nathan Fake is an episode from Lost And Sound by Paul Hanford.
This episode is 62:43 long.
This episode was published on Feb 11, 2026.
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Nathan Fake is from Lost And Sound by Paul Hanford.
Published Feb 11, 2026 and 62:43 long