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Last Night

Moby

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Reseña de álbum

On Last Night, Moby is as blissfully out of touch with modern club music as he is current. As he explains (of course) in the album's liner notes, he has been in the thick of New York City club culture since the early '80s, and he takes the opportunity here to pay tribute to a number of dance music strains that have fallen in and out of fashion — in a couple cases, they've recently fallen back into fashion — including some angles he hasn't taken in well over a decade. The sturdiest, most appealing tracks tend to be where Moby breaks out with some highly energized combination of rollicking pianos, stabbing keyboards, and random divas, mixing and matching rave, Hi-NRG, and disco: "Everyday It's 1989," "Stars," and "Disco Lies" (featuring a vocalist who is nearly a dead ringer for a young Taylor Dayne) would've had no place on any of the last five Moby albums. What is long maligned and what is trendy sometimes occurs simultaneously, as on "I Love to Move in Here" (featuring Grandmaster Caz), a mid-tempo house track that can be sub-categorized as both hip-house (inciting wicked flashbacks for most haters of either component) and Balearic (as it causes that loosey-goosey, anesthetized-but-still-beaming sensation, prevalent in several of the hippest dance tracks released during 2007 and 2008). The poorly timed, not-so-appealing moments — "257.zero," "Alice" — with their distant transmission spoken bits and droning raps, might sound in step whenever the Soul Jazz label gets around to releasing rarity compilations with contents resembling Astralwerks' late-'90s compilations for MTV's Amp program. The disc's latter 20 minutes, containing contemplative, string-laden tracks, would be as suited for the Pure Moods series (i.e., beside Yanni, Dave Koz) as past tracks "Porcelain" and "God Moving Over the Face of the Waters." A good number of Moby fans who began to follow the producer's moves well before Play will be inclined to think of Last Night as the best Moby album since Everything Is Wrong. That the album involves several unself-conscious, rush-inducing tracks (rather than the once-expected token track or two) is enough for that opinion to have validity. Ditto the sensible and drastic reduction of Moby's own vocals.

Reseñas de clientes

INCONFUNDIBLE...

No se puede decir más de un tipo genial como este. Simplemente a la espera de más creaciones suyas.

Electronico, experimental, muy Moby!

Sonidos y ritmos geniales, muy Moby. Totalmente distinto al album anterior en el que incluso él mismo cantaba en algunos temas. En este predomina la electronica de teclados y la programacion de ritmos ante todo. Las voces en los temas mas interesantes son femeninas, suaves, claras y calidas dan cierto toque elegencia y calidad al album. Al escucharlo se denota cierta madurez lo que redunda en una mejor calidad en los temas. En general muy electronico, muy experimental, muy fresco, distinto como siempre. Me gusta. El album tiene tres o cuatro temas que sobre salen del resto. Aconsejo escuchar tranquilamente Live for tomorrow, Disco lies, Mothers of the night y Last night. Cuando termines ya te habrá enganchado el album, no hay escapatoria, ;-).

EL AMO

Cada vez mejor Moby, eres el mejor musico del mundo sin duda

Biografía

Nacido/a: Harlem, New York, NY, 11 de septiembre de 1965

Género: Electrónica

Años de actividad: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Moby was one of the most controversial figures in techno music, alternately praised for bringing a face to the notoriously anonymous electronic genre and scorned by hordes of techno artists and fans for diluting and trivializing the form. In either case, Moby was one of the most important dance music figures of the early '90s, helping bring the music to a mainstream audience both in England and in America. Moby fused rapid disco beats with heavy distorted guitars, punk rhythms, and detailed productions...
Biografía completa
Last Night, Moby
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