Silent Movie

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (236 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 59:54

eMusic Review

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Michaelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

Michaelangelo Matos is a former eMusic editor and one of its chief contributors, a staff critic for Resident Advisor, and he writes for Spin, Rolling Stone, Vil...more »

04.29.08
Head-spinning sample-slaw exotica, courtesy of the artist also known as Radio Slave.
2008 | Label: !K7 Records

In dance music, the pseudonym reigns supreme. So it's not surprising to learn that half of the duo Quiet Village is Matt Edwards, the British DJ-producer who's worked under numerous monikers; he's best known for the frequently brilliant singles he's put out as Radio Slave. (He also issued a legendary Kylie/New Order mash-up under that name.) The attention to detail Edwards shows on Radio Slave tracks like "Bell Clap Dance" and "My Bleep" makes Silent Movie, the first album he's released with Quiet Village partner Joel Martin, less surprising than it might be — but only slightly. Martin is a former film editor who venerates cutout soundtrack and cheesy-listening vinyl as much as his partner does, and they fill Silent Movie with enough out-of-nowhere snippets to turn even obviously familiar elements on their head.

The album is an exercise in opulence. "Victoria's Secret" opens things with gulls and waves lapping ashore alongside serene strings and woodwinds. But it's also slightly seasick, befitting its despondent source material, the Chi-Lites '"Coldest Day of My Life." Similar strings underpin "Circus of Horror," but the main attraction there is a guttural guitar riff reminiscent equally of blaxploitation-soundtrack funk and hairy '70s sludge-rock.… read more »

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I'm Wondering if I'm Listening to the Same Album

Shinzakura

Reading the other reviews, I'm wondering if I'm listening to the same album as others. Made of (as I've read elsewhere) a collection of public-domain samples, this album is a perfect showcase of what can be done with enough imaginations and a lego block collection of bits and bites of sound. Many other artists could do the same thing, admittedly, but it takes an exceptional talent to take dross and spin gold from it. And the "Alan Parsons" sample is actually from an 70's Italian soundtrack called Patrick, which has slipped into public domain.

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bleh

anistropsim

As if the world needs another generic "downtempo" cd of coffeehouse anthems. Buy almost any 2 albums from Ninja Tune and you`ll never need another redundant "chillout" album again.

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Pillow Talk is stolen from Alan Parsons

aegolius14

This song is good but an almost exact copy from the Voyager/What Goes Up... songs on the Pyramid album of The Alan Parsons Project. If you start that record and listen after about 1 minute playtime you will hear it... no creative force here, not even a unique spin on the original

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Yo!

Cazwell7

Not bad, interesting. But I heard Pillow Talk in a movie I saw on TV over ten years ago.

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fallin a sleep

JOHNNYDEEP

kinda of album u can find 4 $5 in the bargain bin. huge fan of down tempo, broken beats, lounge, but this album is full of forgettable jams

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Huh?

aphexbr

@stein067: I don't understand your comment. The album is listed as "downtempo" not ambient or chillout and it definitely fits into that category. As for "wasting" your downloads, why would you not listen to the samples before buying? As for me, it's a fairly decent album with some tracks better than others. Some of it sounds like a cool movie soundtrack, others a little muzak-ish.

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CRAPPY MUZAK

stein067

My title says it all. Not chillout or ambient. Waste of my downloads. ---- Update for aphexbr: You are correct that the category is not chillout/ambient and music4thesoul says that he/she would not call it that either. However, that same reviewer said that you could be "chilling out on the beach" and allmusic.com says that "Silent Movie is, for lack of better categorization, a chillout album." Like you said, I should have listened to samples before buying. That said, this still sounds mostly like weird Muzak to me. So, if that is what someone is looking for then that is what they will get. Just not what I was thinking this was going to be.

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not to keep harping on this...

blrn

...but when you guys say it has a 'skip' do you mean that the first track is almost 30 minutes long instead of 4? cuz that's what i got. though i have to admit i don't think it's that big of a deal. really, 30 minutes of gorgeous, blissful music on endless repeat? that's one of your happy problems right there.

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Crate Digging

wattsup

You can find one hell of an obscure track judiciously sampled for the track 'Gold Rush' available on emusic. The track is 'Buffalo' by Writing On The Wall, a classic slice of early 70's mellotron-driven pysch/prog rock. The version of Buffalo you want is from the album "The Power Of The Picts", and is track 3 on the second of the two albums available. From all the cracks on the sample they've used it sounds like they may have an original version of the record, which is worth quite a few £'s/$'s these days!

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skip it

futurelevel

I emailed Emusic about the skip in the first track 3 days ago still no reply. I love Emusic and want to get this album but without knowing that they fixed the skip problem why would I download it?

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They Say All Media Guide

Joel Martin and Matt Edwards take their alias from Martin Denny’s exotica landmark, yet their approach can be likened — not just through the title but in its sound as well — to “Quiet Pillage,” the slack but unease-inducing interpretation of “Quiet Village” by experimentalist post-punks 23 Skidoo. Beneath the track list of Silent Movie, an album highlighted by material released in small runs on 12″ during 2005 and 2006, the duo thanks “everyone that’s been involved in making this album. You know who you are.” It’s probable that not everyone knows who they are, at least not in this case. The most creative and affecting sample-reliant album since the Avalanches’ Since I Left You, Silent Movie plucks from numerous forms of marginalia, whether obscure, loathed by the stereotypical record store clerk, or loved by legions of geeks who were dealt wedgies in high school by Van Halen-loving jocks: prog rock and yacht rock punch lines, new age pin cushions, unhip singer/songwriters, largely unknown Italian film-music composers, and several others. For the most part, these sources are not so uncool that they are cool. They are so uncool that they are… extremely uncool. Unlike the giddy non-stop carnival atmosphere of Since I Left You, Silent Movie is, for lack of better categorization, a chillout album, even though it is just as much a creep-out, its most tranquil scenes seemingly on the verge of being washed away by a sudden ecological catastrophe. With the exception of “Circus of Horror” — scuzzy hurtling-through-a-dustbowl psych rock, replete with the howls of a man who sounds like he has been pitched into the Grand Canyon — and “Gold Rush” — a dead ringer for Scenic’s epic, tribal desert scores — everything passes with the force of a light breeze, evoking swaying hammocks, sun-bleached picnics, beached isolation, states of half-awake delirium, and the slowest-moving groups of stoned dancers imaginable. Though the new tracks, including the impossibly lush “Broken Promises” and the sparkling but arid “Singing Sand,” could hardly be accused of weighing down the album, it’s the previously released material that stands out most. Best of all is “Pillow Talk,” a reconfiguration of the Alan Parsons Project’s “Voyager/What Goes Up…” that can be disorienting in the most sterile environments. Bonus: it sounds like it was put together to flow directly into the Passions’ “I’m in Love with a German Film Star.” – Andy Kellman

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