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Album
Section - LOOPZ Online Orbital Discography |
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Blue |
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Info
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After
15 years working together as Orbital, Paul and Phil Hartnoll have
announced that their forthcoming LP the “Blue Album”
will be their last. Following the album’s release on 21st
of June, Orbital will play a couple of gigs in the UK including
a few festivals.
“I think we feel that Orbital has run it’s course,”
says Paul Hartnoll. “We’re both pursuing different avenues
with our music. And we’ve been sat, as brothers, in the same
room for 15 years now–and studios are always confined spaces–I
think it’s time for a change.”
Since their first single, ‘Chime’ entered the top 20
in April 1990 Orbital have released six albums and developed a live
show that evolved, by common consent into one of the landmark performance
shows of the last decade. They have helped to shape and develop
both the character and credibility of electronic music far beyond
the disposable anonymity of the first white labels and the acid
house scene that they came from. In 1989–when Chime was recorded
onto their dad’s cassette player–no–one expected
things to come this far, least of all the band themselves.
The brothers extra–mural interests have all informed the character
of The Blue Album, the bands seventh, which evolved gradually over
the course of 2003 with the band free from record company expectations
and schedules for the first time since their career began. “If
anything,” says Paul “It’s closer in character
to our first album than our later ones, if only because we made
it in our own time and for ourselves.”
Fans will recognise the trademark Orbital sound when they hear it.
Familiar themes from previous albums, such as religion, are also
present.
“There’s a couple of references to that,” says
Paul. One of my favourite tracks, “You Lot” has got
this speech from Christopher Eccleston from this fantastic drama
called The Second Coming. I just really loved that programme and
that speech is quite typically orbital, like our other track Forever,
that’s got a speech halfway through and I really love the
sentiment behind that. That whole programme was about the second
coming, obviously, and God.”
“We’ve got another track [One Perfect Sunrise] we did
with Lisa Gerrard who was in Dead Can Dance, singing on it. That’s
a spin off from something we wrote for a Sunrise scene, in another
film …that’s turned out well.”
Noted for their collaborations, Orbital’s last album is no
exception
featuring work from fellow sibling legends, Sparks.
“We were wanting some vocals on the track Pants, something
fairly odd, and thought Sparks would be perfect,” says Paul.
“It turned out they’re quite up for a bit of collaboration
and said yes when we approached them. After we’d asked them
I set about listening to some of their recent work and was pleasantly
surprised to find it was even more bonkers than their original stuff.
It was all done across the Atlantic, via file sharing and CD’s,
and when we heard it we realised it was really a track in it’s
own right so we remixed it and it’s ended up here as Acid
Pants, it’s own thing.”
Another audible influence on the album is that of legendary transsexual
composer Walter/Wendy Carlos. “Absolutely,” says Paul,
“I tried to do something with a sort of Clockwork Orange feel,
and that became ‘Bath Time’ . It started off by being
hummed in the bath on tour before I was about to go and meet everyone
for a pint in San Francisco. Got out of the bath and scribbled it
down on my laptop and finished it over last summer, adding little
bits in buses and vans while I was travelling. And it went on from
there. It became like Clockwork Orange and Kraftwerk combined. Electronic
music for electronic musics sake, dodging all real instrument sounds.
Wheras ‘Easy Serve’ is weird supermarket muzak, almost
like hospital muzak. Maybe it’s a supermarket where they only
sell hospital items. Here’s the lip section…Either way,
it’s not going to be a coffee table album. But then we’ve
never done one of them. Maybe a coffee table album at three in the
morning, when everyone is blind drunk and no one can remember anything
anyway.”
With the album complete the band are turning their attention to
their final show at Glastonbury. An appropriate venue for a farewell
as it was here, exactly ten years before that Orbital delivered
a live show that Q magazine listed as one of the fifty greatest
live show of all time. “It’s nice to know that we’re
finishing, it’s not many bands that do that. They tend to
just fade away. And it’s nice to have our last gig at Glastonbury.
It’s gonna be a party set, a best of Orbital. We’re
not gonna sit there and try and promote the new album. I think if
we’re gonna do a last gig we should do distilled set of all
the best stuff we’ve done. And that’s what we’re
gonna do, play all the stuff that’s stuck around for all this
time because they are the favourite ones. This will definitely be
our last ever live shows,” confirms Paul, “Although
I’m sure Status Quo keep telling themselves the same thing.”
Blue Album release dates
UK CD / Limited Edition Vinyl - 21st June 2004
Japan with bonux track "Initiation" - 3rd July 2004
Spain - 14th June 2004
Ireland - 18th June 2004
America - 10th August 2004
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1.
Transient
2 . Pants
3 . Tunnel Vision
4 . Lost
5 . You Lot
6 . Bath Time
7 . Acid Pants
8 . Easy Serv
9 . One Perfect Sunrise
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Sparks
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Sparks
were made famous by their 1974 single "This town aint big enough
for both of us". They have since released 19 albums. Sparks
said "Paul (Hartnoll) contacted us
and asked if we'd be interested in collaborating in some way for
their new album. It was a process of them sending us a track which
they wanted us to come up with some vocal elements. We took their
track in our studio in LA, and then came up with the line, 'when
the laugh track starts, then the fun starts.' It was in various
permutations to fit with their track. We sent our work back to the
guys in Brighton and they spliced and diced"
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Promos
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Written / Produced by Orbital
t.b.c
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UK
Promo CD
Orbital Music Records
Cat Number = Orbitalcd0002
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UK
General Release |
Cd
Version - Orbitalcd001
Lp
version - Orbitalv001 |
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Written / Produced by Orbital except:-
Transient written by Orbital / Instrumental
Vocals on Acid Pants - Sparks
Vocals on One Perfect Sunrise - Lisa Gerrard
1. Transient
2 . Pants
3 . Tunnel Vision
4 . Lost
5 . You Lot
6 . Bath Time
7 . Acid Pants
8 . Easy Serv
9 . One Perfect Sunrise
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UK
General Release - June 21st 2004
Orbital Music Records
One Perfect Sunrise is the full version.
Lost is a reworked version of the Octane demo.
CD - Orbitalcd001
Limited Edition LP - Orbitalv001
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