Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
09/21/1999 | Elektra / Wea
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CD
$12.99COBRA & PHASES GROUP PLAY VOLTAGE IN MILKY NIGHT
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CD
$28.99COBRA & PHASES GROUP PLAY VOLTAGE IN MILKY NIGHT
Lyrics from Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
All Music Guide Review
Stereolab took an unprecedented two years between 1997's Dots & Loops and 1999's Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night, as they tended to personal matters. For a band that churned out limited-edition singles and EPs, along with an annual album, between 1992 and 1997, complete silence was a complete change of pace, but they happened to pick a good time to go into seclusion. During those two years, Stereolab's brand of sophisticated, experimental post-rock didn't evolve too much, even as their peers, colleagues, and collaborators tried other things: Tortoise got jazzier with TNT, Jim O'Rourke got irresistibly lush and complex with Bad Timing and Eureka, while the High Llamas fleshed out Sean O'Hagan's Beach Boys fetish with 'Lab highlights on Cold and Bouncy. With the exception of O'Rourke, who abandoned Gastr Del Sol's minimalism for grandiosity, they all offered slight expansions of what they did before instead of making great progress. Since each Stereolab album has offered a significant progression from the next, it would have been fair to assume that when they returned with Cobra, it would have been a leap forward, especially since it was co-produced with Tortoise's John McEntire and O'Rourke. Perhaps that's the reason that the album feels slightly disappointing. The group has absorbed McEntire's jazz-fusion leanings -- "Fuses" kicks off the album in compelling, free-jazz style -- and the music continually bears O'Rourke's attention to detail, but it winds up sounding like O'Hagan's increasing tendency of making music that's simply sound for sound's sake. Cobra may seem that way because its pacing is off, with the first half of the album filled with concise numbers that give way to the lengthy "Blue Milk" and "Caleidoscopic Gaze" toward the end; after those two set pieces, it snaps back into succinct mode for the final three songs. Throughout it all, Stereolab's trademarks remain in place, but they're augmented by rhythms, harmonies, horn arrangements, dissonance, muted trumpets, and electric keyboards all out of jazz from the late '60s, whether it's bossa nova or fusion. All fascinating in theory and often in practice, but Cobra still winds up being less than the sum of its parts. Maybe it's because the longer pieces drift, instead of hypnotize or develop; maybe it's because the songs sound like afterthoughts to the arrangements (a criticism leveled at Stereolab before but never really applicable until now); maybe it's just because of the odd pace of the album. In any case, Cobra never hits its stride, even as it offers a few miniature masterpieces along the way. Perhaps the time off led to the slight lack of focus, since many moments of the album illustrate that Stereolab is as fascinating as ever. But as an album, Cobra is their first record since Transient Random Noise Bursts to not be fully realized. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night Track Listing
Credits of Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
- Rob Mazurek
- Cornet
- Sean O'Hagan
- Organ, Guitar (Acoustic), Bass, Brass Arrangement, Clavinet, Harpsichord, Piano
- Jim O'Rourke
- Bass, Keyboards, Producer, String Arrangements, Percussion, Guitar
- Kev Hopper
- Saw
- John McEntire
- Drums, Producer, Keyboards
- Steve Waterman
- Overdubs
- Andy Robinson
- Overdubs
- Steve Rooke
- Mastering
- Fulton Dingley
- Producer, Mixing, Engineer
- William Hawkes
- Strings
- Mark Bassey
- Overdubs
- Sophie Harris
- Strings
- Jacqueline Norrie
- Strings
- Dominic Murcott
- Marimba (Electronics)
- Colin Crawley
- Overdubs
- Simon Johns
- Bass
- Ramsay Morgan
- Organ, Electric Harpsichord, Wurlitzer, Percussion, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Piano, Guitar
- Brian G. Wright
- Strings
- Stereolab
- Main Performer
- Tim Gane
- Organ, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Wurlitzer, Electric Harpsichord, Group Member
- Mary Hansen
- Organ, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Drums, Vocals, Clavinet, Wurlitzer, Electric Harpsichord
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