NOWOŚCI CHAT
Moby - 18 (2002) (APE) [Lossless]

Dodano:
2008-10-06 07:00:10

Język:
angielski

 Polski opis

Gatunek :   Electronica 
Rok Wydania :   2002 
Jakość :   APE  
Okładki :   Nie 
Ripper :   Music4U 

Opis:
Moby, mający wśród swoich przodków autora Moby Dicka - Hermana Melville (stąd pochodzi pseudonim artysty), to postać nad wyraz ciekawa.
Ortodoksyjny katolik, niezbyt pasujący do mocno hedonistycznego, klubowego światka, muzyczny dziwak grzebiący w starych nagraniach, a zarazem (dzięki sukcesowi albumu Play), gwiazda światowego formatu. Nowa płyta nowojorczyka, lakonicznie zatytułowana 18, jest równie intrygująca co jej autor. Zawiera chłodne, ambientowe przestrzenie, filmowe orkiestracje, melancholię i szczyptę gospel. Moby śpiewa sam (zimnofalowy We Are All Made Of Stars może stać się dużym przebojem), ale zaprosił również gości - między innymi śpiewającą w Harbour Sinnead O'Connor.

Źródło: muzyka.onet.pl

 English description

Genre :   Electronica 
Year :   2002 
Quality :   APE  
Covers :   No 
Ripper :   Music4U 

Description:
In one of the two essays in the liner notes for 18, Moby alludes to his past as a "rigid" idealist about life and music, expressing that he's tried to open himself and hoping that he's succeeded. In a way, he already succeeded with his previous album, Play, a remarkable record that cannily used field recordings and blues as the basis for an expert set of modern electronica -- through repeated exposure (every song was licensed for a commercial or a movie) and sheer hard work, it became a massive hit, unlike most albums in its genre, establishing Moby as one of the few electronica superstars. It also gave him the freedom to make a record as meditative and assured as 18, a quietly seductive set that capitalizes on his status as a star in the sense that he takes complete freedom to make music that isn't necessarily hip. Essentially, this is a lateral move away from Play, abandoning its attention-grabbing musical thesis of turning the past into the present -- there are still hints of roots music, yet they're usually telegraphed through soulful vocals that have always been a staple of house and dance music -- and returning to his bedrock of dance and electronic music, yet presented with the skill he illustrated on Play, a new open-heartedness and, yes, a maturity previously unheard in his music. Maturity is often seen as a death-knell criticism, especially in a perpetually fashion-conscious genre like electronica, but this is only a good thing here, because it means that Moby not only creates a shimmering, reflective mood from the outset, but that he sustains it throughout the 18 songs, as the album shifts from pop and soul songs to soaring instrumental stretches, letting the sound deepen and change colors with each new track. Cynics could snipe and say this is coffeehouse, yuppie electronica or claim that he's done nothing new with this record, and they'd be right only in the coldest, literal sense that it would appeal to upscale urban listeners and that he's not really breaking new ground, only consolidating his strengths. Yet that is no small thing -- he has created a record that might not be as wildly eclectic on the surface as Play, and it certainly lacks club hits on the level of "Bodyrock" or "South Side," but it's a warm, enveloping, humanistic record with real emotional resonance, which surely is a noteworthy artistic step forward.

Source: allmusic.com

Tracklist:
01. Moby / We Are All Made of Stars
02. In This World
03. In My Heart
04. Great Escape
05. Signs of Love
06. One of These Mornings
07. Another Woman
08. Fireworks
09. Extreme Ways
10. Jam For The Ladies
11. Sunday (The Day Before My Birthday)
12. 18
13. Sleep Alone
14. At Least We Tried
15. Harbour
16. Look Back In
17. The Rafters
18. I’m Not Worried At All