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View Poll Results: So, how is it then? | |||
Uber-cool | 2 | 25.00% | |
Pretty good | 2 | 25.00% | |
Meh | 2 | 25.00% | |
Not that great | 2 | 25.00% | |
Craptacular | 0 | 0% | |
Voters: 8. You may not vote on this poll |
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05-29-2010, 08:16 AM | #1 (permalink) |
why bother?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 4,840
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UNKLE - Where Did the Night Fall
1. Nowhere 2. Follow Me Down (featuring Sleepy Sun) 3. Natural Selection (featuring The Black Angels) 4. Joy Factory (featuring Autolux) 5. The Answer (featuring Big in Japan) 6. On a Wire (featuring Elle J) 7. Falling Stars (featuring Gavin Clark) 8. Heavy Drug 9. Caged Bird (featuring Katrina Ford of Celebration) 10. Ablivion 11. The Runaway (featuring Elle J) 12. Ever Rest (featuring Joel Cadbury of South) 13. The Healing (featuring Gavin Clark) 14. Another Night Out (featuring Mark Lanegan) (for the benefit of whoever's never heard of these guys) Tell you what, I'm very impressed with what I'm hearing on the first listen. I'll go into more detail when I've had the chance to get a couple of end-to-end listens in. I'd recommend getting the hard copy of this like I did too, as there's some great artwork in the CD inlay. |
05-29-2010, 09:05 AM | #2 (permalink) |
thirsty ears
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Boulder
Posts: 742
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i gave it a solid meh
given it several listens now, and no track really sticks with me. really does not hold up to their previous releases...
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05-29-2010, 09:17 AM | #3 (permalink) |
why bother?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 4,840
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I agree it's not truly spectacular like Psyence Fiction or Never Never Land, and there is a little bit of a lull from tracks 5-9, and the closing track's pretty weak, but I still think it's fairly impressive myself (I made my 'very impressive' remark as I was listening to the fourth track). Follow Me Down, the Joy Factory, Ever Rest and Ablivion are probably my favourites at this early stage.
I'm gonna say it's pretty good stuff myself. It's at least worth a go in my opinion. Plus, as far as new albums from the giants of 90s British electronica goes, it's so much more worth the fuss than the last Crystal Method one. |
05-29-2010, 11:24 AM | #4 (permalink) |
Cardboard Box Realtor
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Hobb's End
Posts: 7,648
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I voted meh. While I've only given it two full spins with headphones, I've had the damn thing for like two months now so it obviously didn't do that much for me if I could go to all the trouble of finding a leak.
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07-01-2010, 08:23 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Groupie
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 5
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UNKLE subtly always happen! Unlike many other groups, they did not 'try' for good or different, they just are. Their musical collaboration with other artists and compositions break all barriers and they never seize to amaze.
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07-01-2010, 12:52 PM | #6 (permalink) |
Model Worker
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,248
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I wish I could change my vote from "Not That Great" to "Pretty Good" because upon a 2nd and 3rd listening a lot of the songs held together well. My dilemma is that 15-20 new releases come across my desk on a weekly basis and there's not enough time to give each release a fair hearing. My bias against UNKLE stems from the fact that every album they've released in the past decade has disappointed me. With each new release since 2000, UNKLE's lack of a creative vision became more apparent.
In the bigger picture of things, UNKLE's first generation trip-hop peers like Massive Attack, Portishead and Zero 7 have long since disavowed the trip-hop tag and developed a more organic approach that spans multiple music genres and they've defied those critics and marketing specialists who've attempted to place their music in the trip-hop category, by default. UNKLE has seemed content to rest on it's trip-hop laurels and release a passable product every two years, however mediocre that final product ended up being. Where Did the Night Fall is marks a big improvement for UNKLE's career path because co-founder Richard File has exited his partnership with the other co-founder James Lavelle. File's replacement by Pablo Clements as Lavelle's sideman has finally broken the decade long impasse in UNKLE's musical development. The newly constituted Clements/Lavelle duo has andandonned UNKLE's overworked trip hop template and UNKLE's reliance on digitally skewed breakbeats has fallen to the wayside. Pablo Clemments brings a denser, darker, heavily orchestrated Brit-rock sound that won't please everybody but the revamped UNKLE sound is a marked improvement over UNKLE's predictable old school downtempo sound of the past decade. In the brave new world of post-millenium electronic music, UNKLE was beginning to sound quaint and Lavelle was losing ground to a younger and hungrier generation of deejays. There are a half dozen tracks on the album that are worthy efforts especially the two tracks that feature Elle J. as vocalist (The Runaway & On A Wire). I also liked both of Gavin Clark's two featured vocal tracks (The Healing & Falling Star). Follow Me Down the track posted by Bulldog at the top of the thread is also a very stong track. I'm on my fourth listening to Joy Factory right now as I writing this and I'm thinking it may be the best track on the album. All of UNKLE's studio releases (including the much ballyhooed Psyence Ficton) are uneven and there's no such thing as a perfect UNKLE album. UNKLE's gears have been stuck in neutral since 1998 and they've gained a good deal of musical traction with Where Did the Night Fall, which is as good or better than Psyence Fiction. The flip-side of the equation is that that my praise is by no means unconditional. The problem with both Where Did the Night Fall and Psyence Ficton has to do with the quality of the musical selections. More than 50% the material on both Where Did the Night Fall and Psyence Fiction misses the mark and UNKLE has a longstanding history of padding their studio album releases with content filling throwaway songs. I'd rather see Lavelle & Clements release a first rate 30 minute EP with 5 or 6 cherry picked selections that are worthy of repeated listenings, rather than a full length 60 minute LP where half of the 14 songs are mediocre content filler. Maybe UNKLE should take 5-10 years to release a picture perfect studio album with 15 flawless selctions, in the same unhurried manner as Portishead & Massive Attack. Music executives hate bands that take forever to produce a product but a lazy work ethic in the recording studio can produce some amazing results. |
07-01-2010, 07:02 PM | #7 (permalink) |
why bother?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 4,840
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^ Great post there Gav (I'd expect no less), and I agree with all of it except where you say all of UNKLE's album releases prior to and including this one are uneven as far the overall quality goes - Psyence Fiction, in my eyes at least, is fully deserving of its classic status. War Stories comes close to being a wall-to-wall, end-to-end great album for me as well, but just falls that little bit short (plus it doesn't have Lonely Souls on it). I find it strange (maybe that's a bit too strong a word - a little odd) that people, not only this thread, have said that this album lacks any truly memorable tunes when there are some that just kinda leaped out at me and stuck with me. I haven't played this album for a while, but I've got through a few end-to-end listens and I do think it's an album that improves withj repeated plays, or at least for me.
This here's probably my favourite moment on it; Basically, I stand by my 'pretty good' rating of it! |
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