![]() ![]() As a whole, it’s a total trip into Moyet-land, containing moments of curiosity and wonder, Guy Sigsworth as the Hatter pulling the singer to new places with inventive and unusual programming. The minutes is addictively good, fierce music, sometimes vivid enough to alarm (and maybe that’s what schizophrenia is, a total overload of images and voices and too much world all at once). “All Signs of Life” takes it a step further into a hard piece of electro, coming-up, coming-down, into to the ominous, meta-physicals bells of “Rung by the Tide”. Uprooted, we’re taken into a cinema and the inner city life of “Filagree”. “A Place to Stay” begins with what sound like windscreen wipers over a windshield, perfectly emphasizing the context of the song. It sounds like Daft Punk on holiday in Essex. “Remind Yourself” is a big ballad, demonstrating an ongoing but opposing internal dialogue, and then in sweeps “Love Reigns Supreme”, oscillating with the new, optimistic and hoping for kindness. Potentially this may be because on the album Moyet switches effortlessly between the modern and the traditional. ![]() Moyet has suggested that the main theme of the minutes is schizophrenia. “Apple Kisses” starts with a drop, and takes us further into techno through some instrumental breaks, and “Right as Rain” is certainly a challenge to Kylie as ûber-cool club queen, complete with backbeat, and Moyet’s adoption of a zen, take it or leave it pose: “If you can’t be happy with me, be unhappy with me, stay unhappy with me.” The song shows off the delight of Moyet’s hard vowels to great effect, and even has a Springsteen-esque instrumental break. The wizardry never detracts but only adds, and it must be an unexpected technical development in itself for me to catch myself singing the chorus to “When I Was Your Girl” around the house, because I am in fact a boy, and have not knowingly ever been anyone’s girl. “Changeling” rams the message home, with a synth line that points as precisely as the laser moving up between James Bond’s legs. “Horizon Flame” sets the listener up for something different, “suddenly the landscape has changed,” and melody is interspersed with unexpected technical developments. Behind the techno, dubstep and basslines is Moyet’s distinctive voice, bringing it home to papa. Her music can appeal to hipsters and housewives, or even housewives in hipsters, and the minutes is a great type of hybrid. All you can do is shrug your shoulders, and admit some things stick to public consciousness and some things don’t, accept sometimes we’re stuck with the idea other people have of us, whether it’s right or wrong. It was only later on that her music turned a little more traditional with Alf and Raindancing, as Moyet became known as the greatest chanteuse to come out of Romford since Edith Piaf (this may be a purposeful misstatement of fact, as Moyet actually originated from Billericay). ![]() ![]() It should probably be listened to loud on your cans to get total sonic immersion, walking down the street in new 110s.īut really it shouldn’t be that surprising because Moyet started off in the Vandals, hitting mainstream success in the ‘80s with Yazoo, and the latter was very much programmed music. I don’t wanna amp it up, but it’s bangin’, and I doubt the rents will get it. The minutes contains phat London beats, innit, which could surprise the average Alison Moyet fan. ![]()
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