Play

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Moby
Play

[ Mute Records / CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 27 May 1999

Polished and musically well-rounded, both conceptually and sonically, well-thought-out and catchy

Life's only constant is constant change - a dorky truism to be sure, but also one which happens to apply perfectly to Moby. From trance and techno to ambient to alt-rock to gospel (well, sort of), there aren't many genres in modern music the kid hasn't tried. You have to hand it to him for reaching across the spectrum.

Moby doesn't know how to rest on his laurels, so even when he's preachy or the music doesn't hit it, overall he's rarely boring. And you have to admit that he's an artist with remarkable integrity, because, unlike a lot of musicians who make the claim, Moby actually does use his music to explore his world. Whatever he's into, whether it's homespun Christianity, veganism, techno-futurism, or plain old romance, it's gonna be at the center of his work, and not just in the form of essays in liner notes.

With all this in mind, it's easy to cut Moby some slack even when he's not quite on-point (Animal Rights anyone?). When he is, it's enough to make any musician with a shred of ambition green with envy. Note to anyone with remotely jealous tendencies: stay as far away from Play as you can, because this LP may be Moby's most polished and musically well-rounded work to date, both conceptually and sonically. It's a well-thought-out, catchy, and complex body-rocker of a record from beginning to end, with only one or two minor missteps.

The selection of folk, blues, and spiritual field recordings sampled throughout Play are not only its sonic underpinning, but they also nicely parallel Moby's earnest, hands-on (you could almost say craftsman-like) approach to his music. Wisely, he avoids the cloying pity and repetitiveness of Gavin Briars' "Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet": it's apparent from the slamming first track "Honey" that Moby's not trying cutely to juxtapose a "naïve" form with a sophisticated one, he's entering into a conversation with fellow soul-searchers and love slaves. He just happens to come from a totally different world.

Happily, he's also a whiz as a sampler (news to no one), so the sounds in songs like "Honey," "Find My Baby," "Natural Blues," and "Run On" work both as ingredients in a sonic collage and stay totally recognizable at the same time (Ahem, no mean feat: Puff Daddy). They make you want to dance, and for once with Moby's electronic stuff, the songs are downtempo enough that you can rock the thing all the way through without fearing a heart attack.

Despite all the blues and gospel additions, Play has a lot of other influences and techniques going on that round it out and keep it from feeling too much like a bookendy concept album one-off. "Porcelain" is a lush little snippet which sounds like a basement tape from a Magnetic Fields EP. "South Side" combines Moby's atonal vocals with percussion that has a whiff of Chicago go-go (appropriate given the song's title). Count the minutes before "Rushing" gets snapped up for some high-budget luxury car commercial (I swear, this is not an insult: it's a beautiful song). And "Bodyrock" handles the current jones for old-school hip-hop without ever once being kitschy. The only tracks that aren't pure gold are the New Wave-meets-trance "Machete," "Guitar Flute & String," (which might sound more at home on a Dan Fogelberg LP), and the somewhat thin (basically a guitar solo) ,"7." But hey - nobody's perfect.

Frankly, given that this is the same kid who remixed the James Bond theme and worked with artists as diverse as Jon Spencer, Metallica, and Brian Eno, it's enough to make you wonder if the wheel of karma is handing out an early payoff to the world's most famous vegan. Get this record.

Tracks:

Honey
Find my baby
Porcelain
Why does my heart feel so bad?
South side
Rushing
Bodyrock
Natural blues
Machete
7
Run on
Down slow
If things were perfect
Everloving
Inside
Guitar flute & string
The sky is broken
My weakness