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Nowhere Faster (Yellow Vinyl)
We like to believe our lives can be shaped into storiesâclean arcs, legible meaningâbut life refuses the outline. Instead, it moves bluntly and without apology, indifferent to our sense of order. El Ten Elevenâs Nowhere Faster, the duoâs 16th release, was forged within that unease. Across eight tracks, it considers not just nothingness but velocityâthe strange urgency that propels us forward even when the destination remains unclear. The 33-minute album slows just long enough to pose the harder questions: what are we running from, and what do we think we can outrun?
Nowhere Faster emerged from Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogartyâs longest break from touring and recording in their 23 years together, though âbreakâ is something of a misnomer. Dunnâs famously restless creative pace never slowed. Instead, he began writing for not one but two drummers, handing Fogarty one of the most demanding
challenges of his career. The record also marks a first for the band, weaving real strings and piano throughout, deepening the palette of what is already one of their most layered works.
Nowhere Faster is not a retreat into nostalgia. El Ten Eleven remains invested in risk and reinvention. The record continues to center Fogartyâs propulsive drumming and Dunnâs bass-driven experimentation: the first four tracks (âside Aâ) feature electric bass, while the latter half (âside Bâ) shifts to acoustic bass processed through pedals,
subtly altering the albumâs emotional weight.
Ultimately, Nowhere Faster is an album about reckoningâabout time, endurance, and the uncertainty of how long a band, or a life, can last. We are all fumbling toward finitude. The question is not whether weâll arrive, but what we want to hear on the way there. What will we dance to as the ground begins to shift beneath us? If nothing else, it may sound something like Nowhere Faster.
Nowhere Faster emerged from Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogartyâs longest break from touring and recording in their 23 years together, though âbreakâ is something of a misnomer. Dunnâs famously restless creative pace never slowed. Instead, he began writing for not one but two drummers, handing Fogarty one of the most demanding
challenges of his career. The record also marks a first for the band, weaving real strings and piano throughout, deepening the palette of what is already one of their most layered works.
Nowhere Faster is not a retreat into nostalgia. El Ten Eleven remains invested in risk and reinvention. The record continues to center Fogartyâs propulsive drumming and Dunnâs bass-driven experimentation: the first four tracks (âside Aâ) feature electric bass, while the latter half (âside Bâ) shifts to acoustic bass processed through pedals,
subtly altering the albumâs emotional weight.
Ultimately, Nowhere Faster is an album about reckoningâabout time, endurance, and the uncertainty of how long a band, or a life, can last. We are all fumbling toward finitude. The question is not whether weâll arrive, but what we want to hear on the way there. What will we dance to as the ground begins to shift beneath us? If nothing else, it may sound something like Nowhere Faster.
$39.28
Nowhere Faster (Yellow Vinyl)â
$39.28
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Description
We like to believe our lives can be shaped into storiesâclean arcs, legible meaningâbut life refuses the outline. Instead, it moves bluntly and without apology, indifferent to our sense of order. El Ten Elevenâs Nowhere Faster, the duoâs 16th release, was forged within that unease. Across eight tracks, it considers not just nothingness but velocityâthe strange urgency that propels us forward even when the destination remains unclear. The 33-minute album slows just long enough to pose the harder questions: what are we running from, and what do we think we can outrun?
Nowhere Faster emerged from Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogartyâs longest break from touring and recording in their 23 years together, though âbreakâ is something of a misnomer. Dunnâs famously restless creative pace never slowed. Instead, he began writing for not one but two drummers, handing Fogarty one of the most demanding
challenges of his career. The record also marks a first for the band, weaving real strings and piano throughout, deepening the palette of what is already one of their most layered works.
Nowhere Faster is not a retreat into nostalgia. El Ten Eleven remains invested in risk and reinvention. The record continues to center Fogartyâs propulsive drumming and Dunnâs bass-driven experimentation: the first four tracks (âside Aâ) feature electric bass, while the latter half (âside Bâ) shifts to acoustic bass processed through pedals,
subtly altering the albumâs emotional weight.
Ultimately, Nowhere Faster is an album about reckoningâabout time, endurance, and the uncertainty of how long a band, or a life, can last. We are all fumbling toward finitude. The question is not whether weâll arrive, but what we want to hear on the way there. What will we dance to as the ground begins to shift beneath us? If nothing else, it may sound something like Nowhere Faster.
Nowhere Faster emerged from Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogartyâs longest break from touring and recording in their 23 years together, though âbreakâ is something of a misnomer. Dunnâs famously restless creative pace never slowed. Instead, he began writing for not one but two drummers, handing Fogarty one of the most demanding
challenges of his career. The record also marks a first for the band, weaving real strings and piano throughout, deepening the palette of what is already one of their most layered works.
Nowhere Faster is not a retreat into nostalgia. El Ten Eleven remains invested in risk and reinvention. The record continues to center Fogartyâs propulsive drumming and Dunnâs bass-driven experimentation: the first four tracks (âside Aâ) feature electric bass, while the latter half (âside Bâ) shifts to acoustic bass processed through pedals,
subtly altering the albumâs emotional weight.
Ultimately, Nowhere Faster is an album about reckoningâabout time, endurance, and the uncertainty of how long a band, or a life, can last. We are all fumbling toward finitude. The question is not whether weâll arrive, but what we want to hear on the way there. What will we dance to as the ground begins to shift beneath us? If nothing else, it may sound something like Nowhere Faster.

















