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Luxury Problems

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (40 ratings)
Luxury Problems album cover
01
Numb
6:30 $0.99
02
Lost and Found
6:07 $0.99
03
Sleepless
5:50 $0.99
04
Hatch The Plan
8:40 $0.99
05
Expecting
7:55 $0.99
06
Luxury Problems
5:04 $0.99
07
Up The Box
5:01 $0.99
08
Leaving
3:43 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 48:50

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eMusic Review 0

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Sharon O'Connell

eMusic Contributor

11.08.12
A bleakly alluring set-piece
2012 | Label: Modern Love / Revolver

“Touch, touch, touch…” says the heavily aspirated vocal that opens the second album from electronic producer Andy Stott. The extraordinary, forlorn voice – sounding like a distressed angel – belongs to his former piano teacher Alison Skidmore, and her multi-tracked rhythmic part sets out Stott’s stylistic stall. If the Salford native conjures darkly unsettling and decidedly dystopian urban landscapes, pockmarked with dread and isolation, then he redeems that world via intimacy and the warmth of communication.

Skidmore’s contributions are hardly whistle-along melodies, but they do set Luxury Problems apart from Burial’s Untrue, still very much the benchmark of UK post-dubstep/illbient house, while positioning him in a continuum that stretches from Coil to The xx via Kode9 and Raime. Stott also avoids Burial’s heavy sampling, building these eight charcoal-grey soundscapes with throbbing or ominously clanking beats and scratchy industrio-electronics, (bitter)sweetened with treated vocal drop-ins.

The album works as a bleakly alluring set-piece, but “Lost And Found,” where a malevolent fog swirls around Skidmore’s ecclesiastical vocal and the aptly titled “Sleepless” – a chunk of lurching doom-funk showered in shards of brittle synth – are standouts. The pace shifts for the madly skittering, jazz-’n'-bass glitch of “Up The Box,” but drops down again… read more »

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Wow...

Pieter

Just went for it because of the ratings and what a surprise. Striking and instantly likeable stuff. OK, that description won't land me a job with Rolling Stone, but the point is I like it.

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Desolate minimalism

donK

Great album, bleak yet touching. This album really polishes off where he has been heading in the last 2 EP's, Whilst you could argue the sampled female vocal ala burial has been done to death it truly works and its the right touch on this incredible album

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Activity

  • 04.21.13 Drizzle on the train windows. Must be back up north.
  • 04.20.13 Playing at scala in the next hour. Looking forward!
  • 04.18.13 Maps - I Heard Them Say (Andy Stott remix): http://t.co/OjIUaewNOu via @youtube