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Infantjoy - Where the Night Goes

Where the Night Goes
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Album Details: Where the Night Goes

Release Date:11/21/2005
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Track List: Where the Night Goes

  1. Just Before Midnight
  2. Night Shade
  3. Someone Was Saying
  4. Composure
  1. Ghosts
  2. Application #2 (Slower)
  3. Nearing the Sun
  4. Vexuality

Pro Reviews: Where the Night Goes

  • All Music Guide

    Infantjoy is an unexpected but apt collaboration between James Banbury and Paul Morley. Banbury, a multiinstrumentalist, has long been a Luke Haines associate, going back to the first Auteurs album, and has logged studio time with several other musicians. Morley, a journalist and author, was behind a lot of the concepts and some of the sounds that came from the ZTT label during the mid '80s; the last time he was seen doing something musical was in the late '90s, when he was holding a microphone and a sledgehammer onstage with the rest of a reconvened Art of Noise, who were supporting The Seduction of Claude Debussy. The steady Where the Night Goes could be seen as a followup to that uneven album, even though Morley is the lone common factor and Banbury supplies the music. This disc takes inspiration from another composer, Erik Satie, who is credited with "Haunting, etc," and he is felt throughout here as much as Debussy was on the Art of Noise album, albeit in a slightly more concealed... way, from the echoing piano notes and the spaces between them to the deeply conceptualized nature of the whole thing. Predominantly instrumental, Where the Night Goes is an ambient album that functions equally well in the foreground and the background. It remains intensely rhythmic when the tempos are slow and the beats are nonexistent, creating its own world while occasionally hinting at other things from the past. "Composure"'s insistent stateliness could spiral off into Manuel Göttsching's "E2E4" or Kraftwerk's "TransEurope Express." Before "Nearing the Sun" works itself into a series of noisy collisions between all of its elements, its cold crunching beat resembles early Boards of Canada. An appropriate cover of Japan's "Ghosts," featuring the frosty comfort of Black Box Recorder's Sarah Nixey, is right in the middle of the album; it's neither as startling nor as stark as the original, but its twinkling jackinthebox melody, flickering noise fragments, and droning/drifting strings give the song a new angle that also happens to discreetly slip into the album's scheme. (Japan themselves were haunted by Satie.) Morley's text in the booklet is a helpful guide and can fill your head with thoughts and ideas as you listen, but you needn't read it or know anything about Satie, Banbury, or Morley to enjoy the trip. - Andy Kellman, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Infantjoy

James Banbury and Paul Morley formed Infantjoy in the early 2000s. Banbury was involved with the Auteurs since the group's debut album and has taken part in numerous recording sessions as a cellist, keyboardist, string arranger, programmer, engineer and producer. He's on recordings by Natalie Imbruglia, Tricky, Snow Patrol, and U2, and his cello can also be heard on the... Read more