Wednesday, January 26, 2011

'James Blake,' James Blake

James Blake has nothing left to lose.

Jordan Satterfield
MORE INFO
CD.4.5_1.jpg
James Blake
James Blake

Londoner James Blake’s debut LP of soul-infused dubstep is an icy, shattered and detached record.

It’s all about deceit, betrayal, limits and loss — the story of a loving man whose veins have run dry, frozen solid by the chill of sacrifice. The album charts the transformation from man to machine, detailed by scattershot electronics, R&B harmonies and heavily affected hums of auto-tune.

It’s also the most emotional, believable and touching record released in recent memory.

Blake specializes in a fascinating dichotomy of glacial electronic and classic soul music — a truly original representation of the internal struggle.

His brief, brutally repetitive lyrics fail to become bothersome. “My brother and my sister don’t speak to me, but I don’t blame them,” he croons some 20-plus times over the course of “I Never Learnt To Share,” each time sounding more and more defeated.

James Blake is not just a record for dubstep fans, it’s a record for anyone who has ever doubted their own humanity.

DOWNLOAD: “The Wilhelm Scream”

Also in CD Review

Ear Candy

Behold! The records that got us through the year

Inlander Staff |
Wednesday, December 28,2011
CD REVIEWS

'The Valley Path,' US Christmas

One of the best albums of the year comes out of nowhere.

Leah Sottile |
Wednesday, June 15,2011
CD REVIEWS

'David Comes to Life,' F---ED UP

A punk band that has grown up in a good way.

Jordan Satterfield |
Wednesday, June 15,2011
CD REVIEWS

'Codes and Keys,' Death Cab for Cutie

For once, Death Cab ceases to be pitch-perfect.

Seth Sommerfeld |
Wednesday, June 8,2011
CD REVIEWS

'Ukulele Songs,' Eddie Vedder

Yes, you read that right.

Azaria Podplesky |
Wednesday, June 8,2011

Also By Jordan Satterfield

The French Connection

LA band Détective uses 1960s cinema as its guide

Jordan Satterfield |
Tuesday, January 22,2013

Dance Rock Revolution

The brothers of Tweak Bird are trying to make you forget everything else and rock out

Jordan Satterfield |
Wednesday, April 17,2013
CD REVIEWS

'Collapse into Now,' R.E.M.

Their best in ages.

Jordan Satterfield |
Wednesday, March 23,2011

Back (Again) in Black

Hell's Belles: rocker feminists or chicks with schtick?

Jordan Satterfield |
Wednesday, May 18,2011

Future Legend

Joe Pug sings like Dylan, borrows from Hiatt and does business like Radiohead. But he sounds like America.

Jordan Satterfield |
Wednesday, May 4,2011


 
 
Close
Close
Close