
Band: Massive Attack
Album: Heligoland
Release Date: February 8th 2010
Band Members: Robert Del Naja, Grant Marshall
Special guest substitution this week. Taking the place for the presumably injured Rob is David Rangel joining us from The Oxiigen Club
This week Electric Trip Hop from Massive Attack as chosen by Steve. The last of our individual 'best of 2010' picks. From next week its new releases all the way baby!
Enjoy x
Steve
I'm never usually impressed by compilation albums, they always seem like an attempt to resuscitate a fading franchise, however, this sweeping statement is definitely not applicable here. Heligoland is a thoroughly good album which keeps Massive Attack as a continued subtle success story on the British music scene.
For an album that I consider to be one of the better attempts by old musicians in 2010 to prove their worthiness, it starts unremarkably. Pray for Rain is an odd introduction, a very sombre, almost painfully slow track that would have resonated better if placed somewhere in the middle or even the end. Luckily the integrity of the album is saved by Babel, Splitting the Atom and Girl I Love You. These songs are good, bass heavy and easily make up for a slow start.
The best tracks come towards the end in the form of Paradise Circus and Atlas Air. Paradise Circus in particular is the strongest song on the album. Hope Sandoval is just as good here as Sarah McLachlan was in Delirium’s Silence and the lyrical content is impeccable and haunting. Atlas Air has an excellent air of menace but the breakdown is it's best asset, finishing the album on a high.
Massive Attack has produced another solid album, enhanced most of the reputation's involved in its songs and has offered some good remixes in Heligoland's deluxe version. This album is unashamedly bass heavy, melodic in places and has a sleek feel. I can imagine this album atop a golden throne, lording it up over the other more mediocre offerings 2010 had to give and drinking ambrosia with its sunglasses on.
Favourite Song: Paradise Circus
If you could take this album out on a date, where would you take it? As a compilation album, I'm sure it would take me somewhere interesting with its multiple personality disorder, but, I would probably force it to put its finest smock on and take it to a fancy restaurant.
David
After being asked to do a guest review here on 5-a-Side, I was pleased to hear that it would be for the latest Massive Attack effort. Like a lot of people I’m sure, Mezzanine is still being played regularly on my stereo and with their album 100th Window five years apart from that, Heligoland really did give us a wait – seven years in fact!
The one thing that the producers do well, always, is create music that can relate to a wide audience. The album opener, Pray For Rain, presents bass guitar and drum ostinatos reminiscent of The Beatles’ Come Together. The track Babel has wonderful glitch, breaks and drum and bass influences with its upbeat tempo and careful synthesiser automation. Girl I Love You features the darker timbres we are used to with Massive Attack; soft synths, low rumbling bass and gently weeping vocals, sung fittingly by reggae singer-songwriter Horace Andy.
Half way through the album, you’ll be hypnotised, and the rest of the album becomes a psychedelic collage of sounds. Flat Of The Blade features more glitch effects and disjointed rhythms and snappy snare drum effects. The last three songs have a groovier feel to them, which seems to be quite the trend for electronic acts a lot as of late, for example, Broken Bells. Another perk is that Damon Albarn appears on the track Saturday Come Slow. The man never disappoints.
The album appears effortless, by which I mean the duo make this all seem so easy. Creating such atmospheric, cool and groovy music seems to come so naturally to the Massive Attack and this album is certainly worth a listen, providing it’s during your wind-down period in the evening.
Favourite Songs: Girl I Love You, Atlas Air
If you could take this album out on a date, where would you take it? A dimly lit, tapas restaurant...a table in the corner where we wouldn’t be disturbed ;)
Jamie
Well I don’t know a lot about Massive Attack but I have listened to their greatest hits and really like “Unfinished Sympathy” with its combination of hip hop style beats, violins and cellos and the incredible soulful vocal.
Heligoland begins with a fairly relaxed track “Pray for Rain”, the music is soft but fairly experimental and relies on soft electronic sounds as well as the poetic verses of Tunde Adebimpe. Track 2 “Babel” is probably my favourite track on the album, it begins with fast paced electronic drumming and a driving bass line, reminiscent of Nine Inch Nails, then is mixed with mellow keys and vocals, providing the listener with something relaxing and exciting at the same time.
Unfortunately the rest of the album doesn’t follow this trend, but it is still a good album and each track is different. We have different tempos and drum beats that are completely electronic as well as regular drumming. The wide range of different sounds used also make the album interesting, especially the disjointed organ on splitting the atom. The album cover of the sad clown with the colourful back drop fits the album perfectly as it feels like this album is about disillusioned clowns, sticking with the circus but at the same time planning their escape.
If you like electronica/trip hop, whatever the genre that Massive Attack fit into then check this album out, but I definitely recommend “Babel”, “Paradise Circus” and “Rush Minute”.
Favourite Song: Babel
If you could take this album out on a date, where would you take it? To see a romantic comedy at the cinema, in an attempt to cheer it up.
Liam
This really isn’t the type of album I usually listen to. Heligoland just affirmed the reasons why. My first listen resulted in the albums tracks getting lost in the background which is quite an accomplishment seeing as I was on the train to Gillingham and I’ve pretty much memorised the route.
As this boils down to a compilation album rather than an attempt I can definitively attribute to a single band I found it hard to tune into the ebbs and flows that come with traditional record. The music seems to blend seamlessly from track to track. Occasionally a song tickles my interest by starting with an interesting drum beat but the resultant melodies never back it up with some faced passed dance off action. It annoys at times especially when the majority of the tracks clock in at around five minutes. Too long for something that won’t hold my interest.
From song to song the guest vocalists are the only major difference. However, they all have the same monotone style of singing which, again, gets real old real quick. The inclusion of Damon Albarn as one of the guest vocalists if baffling as it comes across as a really half arsed Gorillaz track rather than a carefully selected song by Massive Attack after a seven year interval between this and their previous album.
It’s all peripheral to the music though which fails to impress or inspire and is far too tedious to be an album to relax to. Unfortunately this album misses the mark for me on so many levels. It never hits the crescendo of noise that Nine Inch Nails can reach and is never cool or edgy enough to emulate the Gorillaz. Parallels I’m sure others will recognise.
Favourite Song: Girl I Love You
If you could take this album out on a date, where would you take it? This album isn’t getting my digits in the first place. This album is staying alone at the corner of the bar looking too cool for school.
Nick
I like this, honestly, no I do, honest to god, it’s absolutely fine…buuuuut there’s not really much more I can say about it. It’s stylish, well produced, and a whole lot of other adjectives that one would expect to associate with Massive Attack. It’s groovy in some parts, hypnotic in others. When I concentrate on it, the variations in sound and texture are obviously painstakingly crafted. However, despite this, I found myself at the end of my first listen thinking a small unworthy thought, ‘hmm a bit bland’.
There’s just nothing that really jumps out here, and as I am many other things besides an occasional music reviewer, I’ve not had the time to sit and really absorb this album properly. So yeah I’m sure this lukewarm reaction is entirely my fault, that if I stick with it I will suddenly find new wondrous aural vistas open up before my ears etc. Music reviewing is naturally an extremely artificial process as those who do it usually only record their impressions after the first couple of listens and many great albums take a lot longer than that to sink in.
However, these are the guys who created the immediately unforgettable Unfinished Sympathy. The fact that most of this album does not differ wildly from the formula set by that song but without its earworm qualities suggests that Massive Attack are on autopilot here. Girl I Love You has a cool bass (bass synth?) line, Rush Minute is coolly hypnotic and Atlas Air has a cool hook: the rest is jolly good stuff but leaves me a bit cold. Besides that, I don’t really have anything else to say.
Favourite Song: Rush Minute
If you could take this album on a date, where would you take it? Cinema or theatre, I feel I might get a bit bored if I had to pay attention to it all night





