Radar

Radar

发行日期:
byAlexOggYouwould'eadilyideifysuchbouday-skippigmadesswihIlfod,Essex.Radakicksoffwihhesix-miueepic1sTasmissio,asiglefis......

by Alex OggYou wouldn't readily identify such boundary-skipping madness with Ilford, Essex. Radar kicks off with the six-minute epic 1st Transmission, a single first previewed on U.K. TV's Later with Jools Holland. Rapper Mau's free-association lyrics -- I'm rock, I'm roll, I'm Nat King Cole -- adopt a quickfire estuary-English patois that harks back to the scat-jazz era. The whole album is saturated with unlikely reference points, Mau namechecking celebrities from Harvey Keitel to Juliette Binoche. The musical platform is ably assembled by co-writer Tim Saul (who was involved in Portishead's Dummy) and could be likened to a jazz enthusiast's take on trip-hop, though the sound is more eclectic than that description suggests. I Love Albert Einstein, for example, contains a sample drawn from Athletico Spizz 80's No Room. But it is Mau's old-skool, free-flowing hip-hop style that carries the day. One of those hugely rewarding albums that emphatically fails to sell beyond the confines of a vociferous but marginal audience.