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Play

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (812 ratings)
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01
Honey
3:28 $0.99
02
Find My Baby
3:59 $0.99
03
Porcelain
4:01 $0.99
04
Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?
4:23 $0.99
05
South Side
3:50 $0.99
06
Rushing
3:00 $0.99
07
Bodyrock
3:36 $0.99
08
Natural Blues
4:13 $0.99
09
Machete
3:37 $0.99
10
7
1:02 $0.99
11
Run On
3:45 $0.99
12
Down Slow
1:34 $0.99
13
If Things Were Perfect
4:18 $0.99
14
Everloving
3:25 $0.99
15
Inside
4:48 $0.99
16
Guitar Flute & String
2:09 $0.99
17
The Sky Is Broken
4:18 $0.99
18
My Weakness
3:37 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 63:03

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Robert Christgau

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Folk + blues + beats = bliss.
Label: Little Idiot / Richard Hall Music

Although some techno futurists still disparage the gorgeous Play, it qualified as a futurist work simply by redefining the concept of "commercial." Clubs would never take a CD mega, and no way could these anonymously sung tracks crack any hit-based radio format. So Moby's handlers swamped the mass market through the side door, placing swatches of all 18 songs (most many times) on movie and TV soundtracks and in ads for the likes of Volkswagen, Bailey's Irish Cream and American Express. FM exposure followed. But the main reason this album will sound familiar the way Beethoven's Ninth does to a classical ignoramus is that little bits of it have seeped into most Americans 'brains. For this be grateful, because those bits are intensely pleasurable as melody or texture or sometimes beat, and because Moby has ordered, paced, and segued them and their intimate surroundings into something that suggests a surging and receding whole. A Treacherous Three rap powers "Bodyrock," but most of the identifiable sources are little-known blues and gospel singers first archived by folklorist Alan Lomax. Folk purists might well claim this re-use cheapens them. But here's betting musical folk like the singers themselves are plenty proud somewhere.

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South Side

PrincessRoy

WHY THE SHITTING MONSTER FUCK DOES THIS VERSION OF PLAY COME WITH THE WRETCHED GWEN STEFANI VERSION OF SOUTH SIDE?! GOD. FUCKING TERRIBLE.

user avatar

Not a dog on this CD

Grizzabella

One of my all time favorites. You can listen to this all the way through. A treasure. Download the whole thing, strap on your headphones, and you will NOT be disappointed. Everloving and Guitar Flute and String just take me away.

user avatar

Wonderful collection from an amazing group!

Dondi

I'd never heard of Moby until my nephew used the song "If Things Were Perfect" as background music for a video he made this past winter and posted on Youtube that involved his 6 year old son, the biggest snowfalls we've had in years, sledding, and wonderful memories captured against the backdrop of this unusual, new-to-me music. I am now a Moby fan and have downloaded most of their work.

user avatar

IT'S A TIMELESS CLASSIC!

SixxRoxx

2 Thumbs Up! Unfortunatly at 18 credits, your better off finding a copy on ebay.

user avatar

Simply Fantastic

curehead

Melodic, trancy bass lines combined with some of the best house beats I've ever heard. This is Moby's masterpiece.

user avatar

Something for everyone

jordancolburn

From grooving dance club songs, to slower, moody, textures, this album does everything, and does it well.

user avatar

Now this is one of my favorites

Drake3420

I can't believe how much I like this CD. If you like trancy music and melodic beats with viseral lyrics then you came to the right place. Try a listen and see what you think. You'll recognize many of the tracks.

user avatar

Full credit

EMUSIC-01BBB093

I do love the Moby songs and I adore his music. I like to see the revolution of his music from beginning to now. However, I hate that 3 of the songs were only 2 minutes or shorter and it counted as one credit. I eliminated those from my download and got lengthier downloads only. Great CD.

user avatar

I loved it so much I played it out...

brwnmamba

I had a friend who loved Moby, and because of his enthusiasm I became a fan of Moby when Play was released. Moby is unique, he is everywhere and there is no one like Moby. I'm not too into his earlier electrical stuff, but until I heard this album, I didn't think anyone could take so many unique songs and make them into crossover dance songs. Like I said, I listed to this so much, I haven't spun it in awhile, but every time I do, I marvel at how original it is.

user avatar

What I love about Moby...

NatureGal73

is the variety. You never get bored with an album that sounds all the same like some artists...

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eMusic Features

0

Moby Let’s Go

By Robert Phoenix, eMusic Contributor

While Virgo is often considered to be the one sign driven by an almost insane desire for perfection and purity, a fair number of the artists that fall under its arc - from August 23rd to September 22nd - can hardly be called Puritanical. A quick check finds Charlie Parker, the archetypal bebop mainliner, shooting junk while deconstructing the songbook of his day in blistering triple-times. Then there's Gene Simmons. While Simmons has eschewed alcohol… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Following a notorious flirtation with alternative rock, Moby returned to the electronic dance mainstream on the 1997 album I Like to Score. With 1999′s Play, he made yet another leap back toward the electronica base that had passed him by during the mid-’90s. The first two tracks, “Honey” and “Find My Baby,” weave short blues or gospel vocal samples around rather disinterested breakbeat techno. This version of blues-meets-electronica is undoubtedly intriguing to the all-important NPR crowd, but it is more than just a bit gimmicky to any techno fans who know their Carl Craig from Carl Cox. Fortunately, Moby redeems himself in a big way over the rest of the album with a spate of tracks that return him to the evocative, melancholy techno that’s been a specialty since his early days. The tinkly piano line and warped string samples on “Porcelain” frame a meaningful, devastatingly understated vocal from the man himself, while “South Side” is just another pop song by someone who shouldn’t be singing — that is, until the transcendent chorus redeems everything. Surprisingly, many of Moby’s vocal tracks are highlights; he has an unerring sense of how to frame his fragile vocals with sympathetic productions. Occasionally, the similarities to contemporary dance superstars like Fatboy Slim and Chemical Brothers are just a bit too close for comfort, as on the stale big-beat anthem “Bodyrock.” Still, Moby shows himself back in the groove after a long hiatus, balancing his sublime early sound with the breakbeat techno evolution of the ’90s. – John Bush

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