If you want to play some extreme firm and fast golf, go play The Rawls Course in Lubbock, TX before the current drought gets broken.
I played there last week in a U.S. Am qualifier and the fairways were the firmest and fastest I have ever played--far beyond what I've ever experienced on links courses or anywhere else.
The amount of roll that the ball was getting was amazing--380-yard drives downwind, 325-yard drives into the wind, and 290-yard irons off the tee. Three par fours--#1, #7, and #11--were driveable, although it wasn't possible to actually keep it on the 1st green because of the slope.
Yet it was windy enough that the course could still defend itself, as 4-under for 36 holes was medalist. But in a tournament played there (the West Texas Amateur, a mid-level state championship) a couple weeks ago, the wind didn't blow and the winning score (by a 54-year-old, not a college kid) was 19-under for 3 rounds, including a 63 the last day, with several others double-digits under par. No wind + firm/fast fairways + soft greens (when it's 100 degrees every day, you have to keep them watered) = low scores.
So wind or no wind, The Rawls Course is especially fun to play right now. [As an aside, I know there are many on here who want to reign in the distance the ball travels, but seeing the ball fly a long way (3200 feet altitude), land and kick up dust, and then roll 80-100 yards, is pretty fun!]