|
UK
Release Date: |
31
March 2008 |
Track
Listing: |
1. Ooh Yeah
2. I Love To Move In Here
3. 257.zero
4. Everyday It's 1989
5. Live For Tomorrow
6. Alice
7. Hyenas
8. I'm In Love
9. Disco Lies
10. The Stars
11. Degenerates
12. Sweet Apocalypse
13. Mothers Of The Night
14. Last Night
15. Lucy Vida (Hidden track) |
|
Moby
- Last Night (Mute)
Published:
musicOMH,
March 2008
Original
article:
http://www.musicomh.com/albums/moby-3_0308.htm
One
of the intriguing things about Moby used to be that you
never knew what he would come up with next. From Twin Peaks-sampling
rave anthem Go to the calm minimalism of his Ambient collection,
from the exuberant variety of Everything Is Wrong to the
thrashing rock strains of commercial flop Animal Rights
and on to the multi-million selling, ubiquitous downtempo
hit that was Play, he always seemed to be moving the musical
goalposts.
Success
seemed to have brought Moby into some kind of creative comfort
zone, however. It was as if he'd discovered a formula with
the electro blues and gospel samples of Play, stuck with
it on 18 then varied the theme slightly with the more song-driven
approach of last offering, Hotel. Perhaps that phase is
now over though as Last Night, his sixth studio album, is
largely uptempo and sees the New Yorker wilfully striking
out into different genres.
Last
Night wears its heart on its sleeve, sometimes to ecstatic
or moving effect and at others so blatantly it's almost
cringeworthy. Some tracks touch upon old territory, like
the buzzing, piano-led techno stand-out The Stars and I
Love To Move In Here, which are trademark Moby creations
that he could have easily released over ten years ago.
You
get the feeling this re-creation of the rave vibe is intentional
though, especially when vocal bursts like, "old school
taking you back", crop up. Grandmaster Caz
may have been responsible for co-writing hip hop anthem
Rapper's Delight but his rap on I Love To Move In Here does
little to add to what is otherwise a fantastic, understated
dance track with its hypnotic piano hook and seductive vocal
sample. A far more effective rap is offered by Aynzil
and the 419 Squad on moody lead single
Alice, incidentally one of only a couple of tracks that
feature Moby on vocals.
The
musical variety on show is very much the album's strength.
Hyenas is a sublime slab of drifting downtempo warmth, with
French and English vocals intermingling, I'm In Love is
a Donna Summer-styled electro-disco anthem
while Disco Lies provides a driving, diva-led burst of dancefloor
energy. Meanwhile, the warm ambience of Degenerates, tribal
trance-inducer, Sweet Apocalypse, and gentle balladry of
the title track counterbalance the amphetamine-rush of much
of the rest of the album.
Last
Night is more of a natural successor to 1995's Everything
Is Wrong than what followed with its rave influences and
mix of different styles and genres. The piano breakdowns,
euphoric vocal samples and Moby's trademark orchestral strings
aren't just subtle nods towards the white-gloved excesses
of the late 80s and early 90s, the influence is explicit.
Naming a track Everyday It's 1989 says it all. This is not
necessarily a bad thing though - especially if you're an
old raver - and is offset by the forward-thinking dance
music and rich electronica that surround it.
If
you're one of those people that rued the day Moby stopped
producing storming, hook-heavy dance music then you'll welcome
Last Night with open arms, if you're looking for another
Play or 18 then you'll be sorely disappointed. Overall this
is an unpretentious and varied album of rave stompers, hands-up
disco and sedate moments of beguiling ambience that combine
to form probably his best and most cohesive album since
Play. This is the sound of Moby moving forwards while taking
the occasional, lingering look over his shoulder.
-
Ian Roullier |