Cydonia (album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cydonia
Cydonia cover
Studio album by The Orb
Released 27 February 2001
Recorded 1998
Genre Ambient house, Dub
Length 68:38
Label Island Records
Producer Alex Paterson, Thomas Fehlmann, Andy Hughes
Professional reviews
The Orb chronology
Orblivion
(1997)
Cydonia
(2001)
Bicycles & Tricycles
(2004)

Cydonia is a 2001 album by The Orb released on Island Records. Alex Paterson and Thomas Fehlmann, along with usual collaborators Andy Hughes, Nick Burton, and Simon Phillips, wrote and produced Cydonia for a planned 1999 release.[1] Featured on the album are Robert Fripp, John Roome, and Fil Le Gonidec, who had previously only worked with The Orb in live performances.

Contents

[edit] Production

Unlike previous Orb albums, Cydonia featured several "proper songs" with vocals, which critics felt did not sound similar to "Orb songs".[2] Singers Nina Walsh and Aki Omori appeared on two tracks each on Cydonia providing vocals and co-writing lyrics with Paterson. Paterson felt that this new direction for The Orb was more similar to the experimental work of Orbus Terrarum, rather than the poppish techno of Orblivion.[3] The Orb produced two CDs worth of material for the album and eventually cut it down for the final release. However, to the displeasure of Paterson, large portions of both CDs were leaked through Napster.[4] As Island Records was trapped in "major-label-restructuring limbo" due to its recent purchase by Universal Music Group, Cydonia was not released until 2001.[5][4]

[edit] Critical reception

 

Upon release, critics noted that Cydonia merged together pop, trance, and ambient-dub, which they felt to be a conglomeration of bland vocals and uninventive ambience.[6][5] NME harshly described it as "a stillborn relic, flawed throughout by chronically stunted ambitions" and describing its only appropriate audience to be "old ravers" seeking nostalgia.[7] With the album came the single "Once More" featuring remixes from Bedrock and Mark Pritchard. Paterson believed that "Centuries", another vocal piece from Cydonia, was also worth releasing as a single, but Island chose to wait and see how successful the album was before making a final decision.[4] Not only did the album receive poor reviews, but The Orb was frequently regarded by the UK press as past the peak years of the creative years, being an "ambient dinosaur" out of place in the current dance music environment.[8][6] After the release of Cydonia, Hughes left the group, becoming "another acrimonious departure from The Orb".[9]

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Once More" – 4:17
  2. "Promis" – 5:27
  3. "Ghostdancing" – 7:29
  4. "Turn It Down" – 8:38
  5. "Egnable" – 1:59
  6. "Firestar" – 0:46
  7. "A Mile Long Lump of Lard" – 6:21
  8. "Centuries" – 4:22
  9. "Plum Island" – 5:22
  10. "Hamlet of Kings" – 7:56
  11. "1.1.1" – 0:36
  12. "Thursday's Keeper" – 4:09
  13. "Terminus" – 11:16 (w/ Robert Fripp)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bush, John. The Orb Biography. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 2006-10-09.
  2. ^ Cowen, Andrew. "What goes around comes around", Birmingham Post, 2001-03-19, p. 13. 
  3. ^ Demby, Eric (2001-02-27). Orb Back From Orblivion With New LP, Cydonia. VH1.
  4. ^ a b c O'Neal, Sean (2001-04-19). Q and A: Alex Paterson. Philadelphia City Paper.
  5. ^ a b Bush, John. Cydonia Review. All Music Guide. Retrieved on 2006-10-10.
  6. ^ a b Walker, Richard. "A dance pioneer who's just going round in circles", Sunday Herald, 2001-03-04, p. 10. 
  7. ^ Pattison, Louis (2001). Orb : Cydonia. New Musical Express. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
  8. ^ Smith, Aidan. "A master of the ballistic", The Scotsman, 2001-02-16, p. 10. 
  9. ^ Simpson, Dave. "The Friday Interview", The Guardian, 2001-01-19, p. 6. 

[edit] External links