This timid compilation suffers from the eternal failing of dance's left field in mistaking an imitation of Eno, Reich etc for a genuine response. And where Herbert is a maverick provocateur, making music from McDonalds wrappers or lurching into revisionist big band music, his prodigies are more fain...
This timid compilation suffers from the eternal failing of dance’s left field in mistaking an imitation of Eno, Reich etc for a genuine response. And where Herbert is a maverick provocateur, making music from McDonalds wrappers or lurching into revisionist big band music, his prodigies are more faint-hearted. The majority of cuts (including those from Herbert himself) are sleepy and heavy-lidded-boring, even. There’s nothing wrong with this LP if you like smoochy post-dance or cocktail jazz, but it’s hardly sensual or murderous. Only three of the tracks really kick: The Soft Pink Truth (half of Matmos) produces a purposefully silly take on electro-house, Matthias makes efficiently narcotised post-rock, and Mugison’s “Sea Y” sounds like Robert Wyatt with a laptop. The rest is stillborn.