Moving Cities, the American debut of English group Faze Action, opens with a magnificent string arrangement. All well and good, one thinks, but the publicity people said it was a dance album. And then the bassline appears, the drums join in, the title song really kicks in, and you find yourself snapping your fingers, tapping the table and bingo! You're dancing. And now that damn string arrangement won't go out of your head.
Interestingly enough, this is the first album the brothers Simon and Robin Lee have recorded together in the studio, their previous works having been created with one brother in Japan and the other in England. That internationalism pervades into the album, which layers African singing over jazz- and Latin-influenced four-four house beats, throwing in a touch of disco along the way. The production is flawless, and the percussion work and lush flute on "Kariba" is infectious. And their dance music credentials come to the fore when the album finds its groove, as it does with the deep vocals of "Got to Find a Way." There's a too-much-of-the-sameness in the last few instrumental tracks, which seem indistinguishable, but that's a minor quibble compared to the quality of the rest of the album. If they're really Moving Cities, one can only hope they come to Cambridge. B+
Read more in Arts
If I Told You Once, It Would Be EnoughRecommended Articles
-
Same Old Juice From the Cranberry BogZom-bie... Zom-bie... Zom-bie. Oh wait, that was the last album. But the Cranberries' new album, To the Faithful Departed, is
-
Bromberg's AbandonN OT TOO LONG AGO, studio artists were the unsung heroes of the music industry. Respected for their technical mastery,
-
Something Old, Something NewY OU KNOW HIM and I know him. He is that thin, handsome, frizzled mass of energy who jumps, spins,
-
Real Estate Return With Sun-Soaked AlbumThough the band stays true to the relaxed ambiance of their earlier work, they have undoubtedly developed a more refined sound than that of their eponymous debut LP, and they successfully add a more mature element of nostalgia for baked skin and windswept sand. The result is a lovely and cohesive album that straddles the reality of today and the dream-state of summer’s yesterday.
-
Seven Beautiful Songs for Winter
-
Swift Shines Brightest on Latest