shop | mailing lists
musicOMH
Facebook Twitter
music: album reviews
Way Out West - Don't Look Now (Distinctive)
UK release date: 30 August 2004
Way Out West - Don't Look Now

buy this title


track listing

Disc 1:
1. Anything But You
2. Don't Forget Me
3. Everyday
4. Apollo
5. Changes
6. Fear
7. Coming Home
8. Just Like A Man
9. Killa
10. Northern Lights
11. Melt
12. Absinthe Dreams

Disc 2:
1. Malk
2. Untitled
3. Stinger
4. 420
5. Rainbows In The Sky
6. Lost
7. Project Out Of Area
8. Buzz
9. Surrender
10. Implantat
11. Seaside Floater
12. Tha
13. Gold Is Your Metal
14. Furball
15. Loveworld
16. Ganz Gag
[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Presenting Nick Warren and Jody Wisternoff - partners in breakbeat crime for some 12 years now, and joined by a third member for Don't Look Now. Vocalist Omi brings her ice cool tones to the boys' meticulously produced textures and beats.

In the '90s Way Out West were a byword for exceptionally fine and emotive house and breaks music. Characterised by meaty bass lines, rich chord breakdowns and rolling beats they rose to the top through tunes such as Ajare, Domination and most notably The Gift, a dreamy summer hit in 1996.

The Intensify album saw the continuation of this rich vein of progressive form as they switched labels to Distinctive. Don't Look Now, their third album release in seven years, once again embodies their perfectionist work ethic, leaving no stone unturned in its search for the right sound.

Sonically it's pretty much business as usual. The booming basslines, imaginative breaks and cool, spacious keyboards remain - the addition of Omi's vocals, meanwhile, enhance some tracks but hinder others. Opener Anything But You is a case in point, the momentum lost somewhat by an over-calculated vocal despite a promising start.

The vulnerability of her voice continues in the downgeared Don't Forget Me. A couple of atmospheric instrumentals follow, Everyday starting out as a superbly brooding slice of synthesised music but not making the most of the potential offered by its piano breakdown.

If all this sounds a bit negative it should be pointed out that all Way Out West's good features remain, especially on the excellent Fear, combining these with acoustically-based percussion that gives momentum and drive, culminating in a majestic breakdown sequence. The warm chords of Coming Home lead to similar patterns as found in The Gift, and Killa has a symphonic breadth rarely found in dance music these days. In a surprisingly downbeat ending, Absinthe Dreams brings a dark, foreboding presence to linger in the memory.

It all adds up to a good album, progressive but staying true to the band's roots, which will no doubt please fans of the previous two records. For the promise shown in tracks like Domination to be realised, though, it needs a bit more aggression, particularly in the vocal tracks.

The enclosed bonus mix CD is a real treat though, with some excellent break-housers from Blue Room, Palava and Way Out West themselves with Buzzin', a track that probably should have made the album. It makes this package a must-have.

share
end of year feature
musicOMH's Top 50 Albums Of 2009
From the nearly 700 albums we reviewed this year, which did our writers love the most?
Introduction
50-41 | 40-31 | 30-21
20-11 | 10-4 | 1-3



released this week
Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can Son Of Dave - Shake A Bone Autechre - Oversteps Mary J Blige - Stronger With Each Tear
Robyn Hitchcock & The Venus 3 - Propellor Time Seabear - We Built A Fire Daedelus - Righteous Fists Of Harmony Mixtapes & Cellmates - ROX
albums coming soon
Jónsi - Go Tracey Thorn - Love And Its Opposite She & Him - Volume Two The Radio Dept - Clinging To A Scheme
recent releases
David G Cox - David G Cox Lou Rhodes - One Good Thing Dan Le Sac vs Scroobius Pip - The Logic Of Chance Christopher Lee - Charlemagne: By The Sword And The Cross
Gorillaz - Plastic Beach Liars - Sisterworld New Young Pony Club - The Optimist Broken Bells - Broken Bells
Sa Dingding - Harmony Amy Macdonald - A Curious Thing Titus Andronicus - The Monitor The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are The Roaring Night
Gonjasufi - A Sufi And A Killer Two Door Cinema Club - Tourist History Pavement - Quarantine The Past: The Best Of Pavement Kris Drever - Mark The Hard Earth
Joanna Newsom - Have One On Me The Knife - Tomorrow, In A Year Archie Bronson Outfit - Coconut Frightened Rabbit - The Winter Of Mixed Drinks
Ellie Goulding - Lights Tunng - ...And Then We Saw Land Thus:Owls - Cardiac Malformations Turin Brakes - Outbursts
  1. more album reviews

TOP ARTICLES NOW
ALBUMS OUT THIS WEEK: Laura Marling, Son Of Dave, Autechre, Mary J Blige, Robyn Hitchcock, Seabear, Daedelus, Mixtapes & Cellmates...

FEATURE: Galaxie 500

INTERVIEW: Jaga Jazzist talk prog

FEATURE: Glee: The Music

INTERVIEW: Editors' Tom Smith opens up

RELATED ARTICLES
NONE AVAILABLE



  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
Soundcloud
MySpace
© 1999-2010 OMH