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Steve Spacek - Space Shift (CD)

Space Shift
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Album Details: Space Shift

Release Date:10/04/2005
Label:Sound In Color
UPC:180026000120

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Pro Reviews: Space Shift

  • All Music Guide

    Possibly hoping to soak up some of the freakedout energy emanating from fellow space cadets SaRa, or perhaps lured by Leon Ware's "Why I Came to California," Steve Spacek decamps from his South London base, sets up in the golden state and goes it alone, save for a couple collaborations. His previous album with Spacek, 2003's Vintage HiTech, carried a spare sound throughout, a wobbly kind of inflexible funkiness. Here, the arrangements are loose, fullbodied, juiced. While the lyrics are often delivered with the bedside sense of intimacy that Spacek fans are familiar with, they often indicate that Spacek is becoming more of a songwriter, as opposed to a mood carrier who uses his words and deliveries for strictly atmospheric effect. In opener "Dollar," producer Jay Dee lets a Billy Paul sample provide the atmosphere, allowing the punches of "Let the dollar circulate" to trail off into a string of spacedout "ayyayyayyay"s that radiates psychedelically through the verses. Spacek retains the... sentiment of Paul's song, clearly inspired by Curtis Mayfield's sweetened reality stinger. "Smoke," structured like an extended interlude that's all shadows and whispers, seduces with a supporting cast that involves Gary "Warrick from CSI" Dourdan, Bugz in the Attic's Orin "Afronaught" Walters and the abovementioned Ware (the songwriter behind Marvin Gaye's I Want You and a phenomenal solo artist in his own right). Though highlights are sprinkled everywhere, the fivesong sequence that begins with "Dollar" and ends with "The Hills" is as strong as any other stretch on an RB album from the past several years, winding through modern psychedelic soul ("Dollar," "Rapid Rate"), dreamy smitten bliss ("Thursdays," "Slave") and bumping stalker baroque ("The Hills"). The latter half of the 68minute disc shows signs of Spacek being a little too anxious to clear out all of his ideas and might require some sequencing shakeups from the listener, but it's more than evident that Spacek did need this break from his partners. Space Shift is as pleasurable as, if not better than, the first Spacek album. - Andy Kellman, All Music Guide Read more Less

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