Blue Album

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Blue Album album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 51:55

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The Weakest...

Muse8

The weakest orbital album by far. Check the Brown album first if you don't know orbital...It's brilliant electronic music, almost symphonic in scope and development, and timeless as well.

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Not available??!!

coughie

Want in Australia/NZ. pls bitches.

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Too bad there won't be more...

nindigo

The All Music Guide review hints that this album is somehow inferior because it delivers exactly what fans expect of Orbital. I say that is exactly the reason to listen to it immediately, especially for those like me for whom Orbital II and the yellow album simply weren't enough and were left wanting more. "Pants" and "One Perfect Sunrise" are two of my favorite Orbital songs, but this whole album is worth it. Enjoy!

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A Solid Album

dan.orzechowski

pretty standard fare, serving well as an Orbital retrospective. Two tracks in particular stand out, one positively and one negatively. "Acid Pants" was too jarring and didn't feel like it belonged on the album. "One Perfect Sunrise", on the other hand, is absolutely amazing; it's like "Halcyon", only... more so. Overall recommended.

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It's all good but.......

Discmanden

Track 7 acid Pants, JMO but it is too repetitus for me . Could have been left off .....

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Go out with a bang

Tmack

This is proabably my favorite Orbital album. While most of my favorite tracks of theirs would be among their more famous ones on other albums, I like this album for the whole thing. It flows smoothly together and is rather polished. It's good to see them end on a high note.

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They Say All Music Guide

Electronica perennials Orbital faded very suddenly. In 1999 (circa Middle of Nowhere), ten years after their debut, the Hartnoll brothers sounded as invigorated and exciting as they had at the beginning of their career; two years later came The Altogether, which made them appear as confused as Eric Clapton’s ill-fated T.D.F. project and as uninspired as Juno Reactor. By mid-2004, they had announced their retirement and revealed that Blue Album would be their last. The announcement was a surprise (if not an unexpected one), but the sound of the record that followed isn’t. As could be predicted after the scattershot Altogether, Blue Album returns them to the green fields of their early days and positively brims with back-to-basics techno. The evidence peaks with “Pants” and “Acid Pants” (the latter is a collaboration with another famous brothers combo, Sparks). Both of the tracks revel in the type of glazed-eye acid patterns, ringing melodies, and stark rhythms that evoke decade-old Orbital singles like “Choice” and “Satan.” Another Orbital prototype is the dire-warning track, here titled “You Lot” and featuring a sample from Christopher Eccleston’s speech in the British TV movie The Second Coming (he’s weary at the ease with which scientists play God). A few tracks reveal (again) the Hartnolls’ early fascination with spy or sci-fi soundtracks, but here too there’s little ground they haven’t worked over several times before. When Orbital were busy collaborating with Metallica’s Kirk Hammett or attempting yet more aggro-techno fusions, this was exactly what fans begged for: a return to basics. Unfortunately, now that they have it, Blue Album will inspire little reaction other than an urge to return to brilliant records like Orbital 2 and Snivilisation. – John Bush

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