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Moby - Play (CD)

Play
$4.99 - $8.13
4.5 out of 5.0 stars 71 Ratings (76 Reviews)

Album Details: Play

Release Date:06/01/1999
Label:V2
UPC:638812704924

Other Available Formats: Play

User Reviews: Play

  • Overall:

    toubles with Music

    By DrewFountain  Nov 14, 2001 | 2 out of 2 found this Play review helpful

    Moby is able to capture doubt and mystery on this record, along with his dubious insertion into pop royalty. He doesn't seem any different -he's still as strange as before. The record stays with Moby's fasination with Christian morality, and the mu...sic is more aural and more ambient in quality. A triumph for a great musician, and this is a great record. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    MOBY goes X-Files

    By MeTrO  Feb 16, 2000 | 1 out of 1 found this Play review helpful

    My last dose of Moby was back in the Twin Peaks days. Moby's addition, "My Weakness", to the X-Files episode shown on 2/13/00, "Closure II", totally captured the scene of Mulder hugging his dead "ghost" sister. Admittedly, the scene coupled with Mob...y's music sent chills down my spine as I envisioned I too was there with agent Mulder. Moby's entire album is "My Weakness" Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Play

  • 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, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Moby

Moby was one of the most controversial figures in techno music, alternately praised for bringing a face to the notoriously anonymous electronic genre, as well as being scorned by hordes of techno artists and fans for diluting and trivializing the form. In either case, Moby was one of the most important dance music figures of the early '90s, helping bring the music to a ... Read more