Fizz Vol. 1: Difference between revisions
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Fizz Vol. 1 is the first album by phonon and Israel Strom (IJ & phonon) and the first album in the Fizz genre. It was released on April 17, 2025. The album served as a seminal “flag in the ground” for the launch of the Fizz movement, as was made clear by the livechat spamming fancy fs at the end of the premiere on April 16. Due to the absurd amount of effort put into the project, Fizz Vol. 1 maintains a sort of cult-following. | [[File:Fizz Vol. 1 album art.jpg|thumb|Fizz Vol. 1 album art]] | ||
'''Fizz Vol. 1''' is the first album by '''phonon''' and '''Israel Strom (IJ & phonon)''' and the first album in the [[Fizz]] genre. It was released on April 17, 2025. The album served as a seminal “flag in the ground” for the launch of the [[Fizz Movement|Fizz movement]], as was made clear by the livechat spamming [[Fancy f|fancy fs]] at the end of the premiere on April 16. Due to the absurd amount of effort put into the project, Fizz Vol. 1 maintains a sort of cult-following. | |||
The entire album was created by the 4 artists, phonon, Israel Strom, Benjamin Francis and Noa Denton sending audio files back and forth to each other over the Internet. The creation process of Fizz Vol. 1 was notoriously agonizing. Because of how important they knew the project was, months were spent polishing, refining and arguing over details in the album, which took over 2 years in total. | == Background == | ||
The entire album was created by the 4 artists, phonon, Israel Strom, '''Benjamin Francis''' and '''Noa Denton''' sending audio files back and forth to each other over the Internet. The creation process of Fizz Vol. 1 was notoriously agonizing. Because of how important they knew the project was, months were spent polishing, refining and arguing over details in the album, which took over 2 years in total. | |||
“I’ve never heard of anyone having a worse time making an album than we did making Fizz Vol. 1.” - Israel Strom | <blockquote>''“I’ve never heard of anyone having a worse time making an album than we did making Fizz Vol. 1.”'' - Israel Strom</blockquote> | ||
The album featured orchestral arrangements from Noa Denton and Benjamin Francis, preformed by session instrumentalists including Dr. Dave Eggar, one of the most prolific session cellists in the world, who arranged and performed the strings on Viva la Vida by Coldplay. | The album featured orchestral arrangements from Noa Denton and Benjamin Francis, preformed by session instrumentalists including '''Dr. Dave Eggar''', one of the most prolific session cellists in the world, who arranged and performed the strings on Viva la Vida by Coldplay. | ||
[[Category:Fizz Community]] | |||
Latest revision as of 18:27, 14 June 2026

Fizz Vol. 1 is the first album by phonon and Israel Strom (IJ & phonon) and the first album in the Fizz genre. It was released on April 17, 2025. The album served as a seminal “flag in the ground” for the launch of the Fizz movement, as was made clear by the livechat spamming fancy fs at the end of the premiere on April 16. Due to the absurd amount of effort put into the project, Fizz Vol. 1 maintains a sort of cult-following.
Background
The entire album was created by the 4 artists, phonon, Israel Strom, Benjamin Francis and Noa Denton sending audio files back and forth to each other over the Internet. The creation process of Fizz Vol. 1 was notoriously agonizing. Because of how important they knew the project was, months were spent polishing, refining and arguing over details in the album, which took over 2 years in total.
“I’ve never heard of anyone having a worse time making an album than we did making Fizz Vol. 1.” - Israel Strom
The album featured orchestral arrangements from Noa Denton and Benjamin Francis, preformed by session instrumentalists including Dr. Dave Eggar, one of the most prolific session cellists in the world, who arranged and performed the strings on Viva la Vida by Coldplay.