|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Blue Lines

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (78 ratings)
Blue Lines album cover
01
Safe From Harm
5:19
$1.29
02
One Love
4:49
$1.29
03
Blue Lines
4:22
$1.29
04
Be Thankful For What You've Got
4:09
$1.29
05
Five Man Army
6:05
$1.29
06
Unfinished Sympathy
5:08
$1.29
07
Daydreaming
4:14
$1.29
08
Lately
4:27
$1.29
09
Hymn Of The Big Wheel
6:37
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 45:10

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Marc Hogan

eMusic Contributor

Marc Hogan has been occasionally getting paid to write about music since 2003. His music writing has appeared, with enormously varying degrees of regularity, in...more »

05.18.11
A classic late-night album
2006 | Label: VIRGIN

Released several years before critics coined the term "trip-hop," Massive Attack's 1991 debut is a classic late-night album; part of a long line of records that reconfigured boisterous, uptempo styles into restrained, introspective headphone listens. Where a younger group like the xx transforms the club-friendly strains of funky house into an intimate indie-pop dialogue, Blue Lines conjured its heady atmosphere from vintage hip-hop breaks, laid-back dub rhythms, brassy soul-diva vocals, noir-ish film scores and drawling, English-accented rapping.

As for how this all fits into the scene Blue Lines helped spark, trip-hop isn't necessarily a bad phrase to convey the blunted B-boy sensibility on display here — it's just too limiting. "Unfinished Sympathy," in particular, stands apart from any specific historical context, with its tear-jerking strings and Shara Nelson's delicately powerful vocals recalling the orchestral soul of Isaac Hayes and Gamble and Huff. The free-association dialogue between 3D and Tricky (then known as Tricky Kid) on "Daydreaming" would be just as casually hypnotic even if it hadn't preceded Snoop Dogg's blazed nonchalance on Dr. Dre's The Chronic by more than a year, and the Streets' U.K. rap landmark Original Pirate Material by more than a decade. Reggae singer… read more »

Write a Review 0 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

The first masterpiece of what was only termed trip-hop much later, Blue Lines filtered American hip-hop through the lens of British club culture, a stylish, nocturnal sense of scene that encompassed music from rare groove to dub to dance. The album balances dark, diva-led club jams along the lines of Soul II Soul with some of the best British rap (vocals and production) heard up to that point, occasionally on the same track. The opener “Safe From Harm” is the best example, with diva vocalist Shara Nelson trading off lines with the group’s own monotone (yet effective) rapping. Even more than hip-hop or dance, however, dub is the big touchstone on Blue Lines. Most of the productions aren’t quite as earthy as you’d expect, but the influence is palpable in the atmospherics of the songs, like the faraway electric piano on “One Love” (with beautiful vocals from the near-legendary Horace Andy). One track, “Five Man Army,” makes the dub inspiration explicit, with a clattering percussion line, moderate reverb on the guitar and drums, and Andy’s exquisite falsetto flitting over the chorus. Blue Lines isn’t all darkness, either — “Be Thankful for What You’ve Got” is quite close to the smooth soul tune conjured by its title, and “Unfinished Sympathy” — the group’s first classic production — is a tremendously moving fusion of up-tempo hip-hop and dancefloor jam with slow-moving, syrupy strings. Flaunting both their range and their tremendously evocative productions, Massive Attack recorded one of the best dance albums of all time. – John Bush

more »

Activity