eMusic Review
Imagine Kate Bush running up a hill with a groove box — having just torched the trip-hop village in the valley below. Incendiary electronic soul.
Imagine Kate Bush running up a hill with a groove box — having just torched the trip-hop village in the valley below. Incendiary electronic soul.
Dear Emusic- Lamb is beloved downtempo by many, but it ain't D 'n B. Please hire someone who knows a bit about modern electronic music because your "drum and bass" category is all over the place and you don't even have a dubstep/grime field. Putting Hyperdub and Thievery Corporation together in "electronic dub" makes ya look silly. I've got 2003 on the phone for you, and it wants you to catch the hell up.
Lamb hit its peak with this album. Excellent chill out music.
...but lamb is not drum & bass or jungle. How is it no one at eMusic caught this error?
Please don't listen to any negative reviews of this album. Lamb will not let you down. Especially if you're looking for "trip-hop" or for your synapses to fire like never before.
this sucks - don't waste your time
Anyone who has issues with Louise Rhodes lyrics has issues of their own - an amazing album, as always, from a top notch band. To me, Lamb combine the groove of Massive Attack with the lyrical intensity of Portishead, while managing to avoid triphop for the most part - but even their triphop sounds are worth exploring, and age much better than their contemporaries. Try Gold from the first album, called lamb, or What Sound from the same-named album, or Cotton Wool, TransFatty Acid, Alien etc. from their respective albums - magic!
As someone recovering from Catholocism (five years of hard time at St. James Elementry), I find the Christian themes and phrases in the lyrics frustratingly distracting. The music is great, the vocals are great, but the words chosen for the lyrics ... have strong unpleasant associations for me. For anyone who likes or isn't bothered by Christian imagery and phrases, this is probably a great album. My favorite tracks are "What Sound", "Sweet", and "Night of a Thousand Eyes". I can't even listen to "Gabriel".
I saw Lamb live before I'd heard any of their music - they blew me away. 'Gabriel' on this album and 'Gorecki' on 'Best Kept Secrets' were the best tracks played live. 'Gabriel' still send shivers up my spine when I hear it. Lou has an amazingly captivating voice.
An intricate, distinctive soundscape and a voice which ties it all together, nicely! A voice which from time to time approximates the wonderful Marrianne Faithful! 5 Stars, anything less would be folly!
Beautyfull work, even when it's much calmer than it, it reminds me of Roni Size's "Breakbeat Era" experiment, where the beats are complemented with not only voice, but a progressing melody, which makes it much less monotonous than other exponents of D&B or electronic music in general. On the same side, the sound is not overloaded, every detail is definible, and this is certainly not a disc to snooze to, it fills me with energy without overloading me.