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Sunil Glen | 
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Here’s a little poem wot I wrote couple of yonks back and has been published around the place. Enjoy! Explosion of Colour. (Sunil Glen, November 2009)
Explosion of Colour, muthas babies poppin’ out like yesterday’s papers
streamed in some aqueous solution while the husband vapours
and the chameleon crawls down the proverbial london bus as an
adverbial accidentally pops their head into the dressing room of man.

Explosion of colour, as the muller yogurt enters my eye as gravity finds
depravity and prevails until a bloodshot cot of gunky junk, it is no joke
the bloke above laughs as a giraffe might on any given night or day, I pray
that he’d close his cake hole as his role as a peasant has been quite unpleasant.

Explosion of cullah, as Abdullah the mullah bows down in his gown with a frown, 
doubting yet shouting, is his hope on an outing? Its such a shame that a lie
has made the triune in the sky something He’s not so many will die having not known Him.

Expulsion of emulsion, the convulsion awakes the tiger inside, jaws open wide
yawning with no warning that the fiery fur will jump and deter the rest of the pack
from a crack at the wildebeest, at least he’s got food for today 
but his prey are running thin and his din may have to be you or me, we’ll see.

Explosion of colour, the medulla of my brain goes insane at the thought I ought not think
as much as I do, its hue turns from crimson to blue, as I grow old and cold
A mould develops in the envelope I meant to send at the weekend but I forgot.

Explosion of colour, as the greying corpse pulled on cart by horse travels without knowing
there’ll be relatives throwing the soil on top, the cop had a cardiac arrest, his chest may have gone
but his soul lives on in the hope of his saviour, his misbehaviour forgiven by the giver of life.  
His wife was content and confident (from her face) that her husband was sent to the heavenly place.

Here’s a little poem wot I wrote couple of yonks back and has been published around the place. Enjoy! Explosion of Colour. (Sunil Glen, November 2009)

Explosion of Colour, muthas babies poppin’ out like yesterday’s papers

streamed in some aqueous solution while the husband vapours

and the chameleon crawls down the proverbial london bus as an

adverbial accidentally pops their head into the dressing room of man.


Explosion of colour, as the muller yogurt enters my eye as gravity finds

depravity and prevails until a bloodshot cot of gunky junk, it is no joke

the bloke above laughs as a giraffe might on any given night or day, I pray

that he’d close his cake hole as his role as a peasant has been quite unpleasant.


Explosion of cullah, as Abdullah the mullah bows down in his gown with a frown, 

doubting yet shouting, is his hope on an outing? Its such a shame that a lie

has made the triune in the sky something He’s not so many will die having not known Him.


Expulsion of emulsion, the convulsion awakes the tiger inside, jaws open wide

yawning with no warning that the fiery fur will jump and deter the rest of the pack

from a crack at the wildebeest, at least he’s got food for today 

but his prey are running thin and his din may have to be you or me, we’ll see.


Explosion of colour, the medulla of my brain goes insane at the thought I ought not think

as much as I do, its hue turns from crimson to blue, as I grow old and cold

A mould develops in the envelope I meant to send at the weekend but I forgot.


Explosion of colour, as the greying corpse pulled on cart by horse travels without knowing

there’ll be relatives throwing the soil on top, the cop had a cardiac arrest, his chest may have gone

but his soul lives on in the hope of his saviour, his misbehaviour forgiven by the giver of life.  

His wife was content and confident (from her face) that her husband was sent to the heavenly place.


The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind pitiless indifference.

Richard Dawkins, River Out Of Eden.

Atheism - no hope, no purpose, no meaning, no moral foundation, no certainty.

From Saturday’s Gaurdian, Cameron’s Clearing System - Genius. Note the ‘Eton Rifles’, ‘warning: aim may veer to the right’ and the ‘clegg shell’!

From Saturday’s Gaurdian, Cameron’s Clearing System - Genius. Note the ‘Eton Rifles’, ‘warning: aim may veer to the right’ and the ‘clegg shell’!

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Song: Elbow - Neat Little Rows

ELBOW - BUILD A ROCKET BOYS!

Three years on since The Seldom Seen Kid, The Mancunian alternative rockers are back with this their fifth album, Build A Rocket Boys!, released on Monday 7th March 2011 with Fiction Records. 

I was really looking forward to this album after the last one, and when an early video was released for ‘Lippy Kids’ I was mightily pleased! Lead singer Guy Garvey’s heartfelt and northern voice compliments the gentle piano, smooth guitar and whistles. ‘Neat Little Rows’ was the next to be released and is one heck of an anthem with its rocky distorted guitar and piano riff, another classic like ‘Grounds For Divorce’. Definitely my favourite two on the album. Properly looking forward to seeing this band in 2 weeks in my hometown of Nottingham. 10/10 Elbow!

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Song: Radiohead - Lotus Flower

RADIOHEAD - THE KING OF LIMBS

The Oxford five are at it again, mucking around with the music industry like only they know how. The best band currently on the planet (in my opinion) released number eight at some surprise time on Friday 18th February 2011, despite the initial earlier announcement of Saturday 19th. On hearing about the abrupt (yet long anticipated) release, I got kind of nervous, not knowing what it would be like at all, they seem to change so much, having definitely left their teenage, poppy, pessimistic days behind but recent offerings being saturated with electronics.. I was nervous, but a good nervous. This is Radiohead after all. Also, in the way of releasing, no-one (not even the band themselves, perhaps) envisaged what was next, how and when it would be released. It’s a digital only until March 28th when it’ll appear in conventional CD + vinyl format, then a limited edition ‘newspaper’ 10” vinyl format in May with added artwork and other treats. So here’s my lowdown on the tracks, their shortest album yet at a lesser-than-average 37:24.

Bloom

The start comes across as slightly Indian, also a bit like Muse’s ‘In Your World’. Then come in the skipping glitch sounds we know so well from Yorke’s ‘The Eraser’, marching drum repetition and dreamy high vocals and a vinyl surface noise-like sound. The whole shebang is very reminiscent of their penultimate offering ‘In Rainbows’ (especially the second disk the vinyl came with) but the ‘caught in loop’ technique creates a new sound we haven’t yet heard from the band. The lyrics are typically Radiohead, heaving with emotion, nature and a sense of longing (even frustration). This flows throughout the album. Another observation I picked up on quite quickly was how much more bassy this album is than previous ones. Perhaps that’s just my headphones.

Morning Mr Magpie

Oh this is a definite second track to an album, like Bodysnatchers to In Rainbows. When I saw this title upon downloading, I was sure I had seen it next to the band name Radiohead before. A title floating around for the past decade and occasionally played at gigs, the originally acoustic Good Morning Mr Magpie gets an electronic facelift here, a complete reworking of the melody but retains pretty much all the lyrics, with a few added.  The drums are fantastic here, sounding very looped but I know it’s not beyond Phil Selway, that man got de skillz to pay the billz. The guitar pluckings and Thom’s prolonged vocals fit well.

Little By Little

No, it’s not an Oasis cover (however crazy Radiohead are, it’s probably the last thing they’d do…however, saying that, I think they did a jokey parody of Wonderwall once!). I got all kinds of stuff in my head on listening to this one. The mysterious rising guitar part brought early Pink Floyd to mind, the drums are quite latin-y/samba-y and add the singing to the mix and…Amnesiac? My goodness there’s a lot of repetition in this album, from the drums to lyrics, glitchy electronicness and hooks. I really appreciate the guitar and straight bassing on this song. There’s something spring-like and, oh it’s very Radiohead.

Feral

So far we’ve had one minor piece and the last two have been major. This one’s a minor too. There’s a real sense of ‘short’ with this piece, not only is it the shortest on the album, but the sound effects, temporary burst of sounds and vocals (no lyrics here..) come together to make this almost an instrumental interlude or bookmark in the album. It reminded me a little of ‘Idioteque’ from Kid A, also massively of ‘Beatrix’ by Cocteau Twins on their fantastic album ‘Treasure’ (same key too, interesting huh?). This one builds up beautifully, as the bass and other effects enter.

Lotus Flower

This was the first to be released as the day before the album came out, the music video was uploaded to YouTube and instantly a viral, thanks to the band’s twitter page. You can watch a really interesting interview with the choreographer here - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ABInlA5MMY. This song had also been knocking around for a while, being played in a different form at gigs, festivals and Thom’s solo performances. It is definitely my favourite on the album, at an exact 5 minutes long and with an incredible syncopated / interesting rhythmic drumbeat which has been the mainstay on more recent albums, I reckon (in the same league as Idioteque, 15 Step). There’s something optimistic and more relaxing about this one. I love the different sounds that come in and disappear throughout, from hand claps to electronic blips and the driving bass underneath all, like that of ‘I Might Be Wrong’ from Amnesiac. The lyrics are full of longing, looking for meaning and purpose. Elements of freedom and ‘doing what we want’ also pop up. Nature again, the lotus flower, weeds, roots, moon, the heart, human emotions… oh but the drumbeat beats all in this song. No wonder Thom’s dancing as he is!

Codex

What an odd start. Sounds like a deleted take or part of another song as it builds up for a couple of seconds and then cuts off into the mellow and gentle piano-driven Codex. It is redeemed by the wonderfully-placed chords and the lovely harp-like glissandi in the background, sparkly like ‘Subterranean Homesick Alien’ and very similar to the ghostly ‘Motion Picture Soundtrack’. So atmospheric. The lyrics here are very ‘OK Computer’, dismal and strange, but full of wonder, hope and fearlessness. The song ends with radio-like interference turning into birdsong and transitions into the next song.    

Give Up The Ghost

This is an unexpected ballad. Slow and eerie like the last, lyrically longing and hopeful again. The ‘don’t hurt me / in your arms’ which echoes throughout is excellent. Repetition again, a structure which the rest of the song flows around. There’s a bassy heart-like beat that lasts throughout too, and some gentle acoustic guitar that compliments it so well. It all ends with some glitchy wing flapping-like sounds at the end. And then…

Separator

As if there weren’t enough pleasant yet unexpected surprises on this album, Phil’s tight and constant drums on Separator start the last song, and yet again; what a rhythm! I like Thom’s layered vocals on this one. It seems he’s really dominated this album, the others seem less involved with the amount of electronic/effects and apparent solitary (although sometimes multilayered) voice being Thom’s. I miss Jonny Greenwood’s crazy guitar riffs but his guitarring here is still top notch. A happy ending to a brilliant album that i’m sure will grow on me more and more in the coming months. Ok so there’s no outstanding masterpiece which will become my favourite song ever and it’s not the best of their albums (what can beat Kid A though?) but it’s an extremely well made piece of work. Well done yet again Radiohead, full of talent and innovation. 9.5/10 for now but might as well be a 10.

THE GO! TEAM - ROLLING BLACKOUTS

Any band with two drummers is worthy of kudos. Brighton 6-piece The GO! Team are at it again, with album number three, Rolling Blackouts. Jam-packed yet again with lucrative samples, catchy riffs and vocal chants like you’ve never heard before, Ian Parton and co. have produced an exceptional offering in the first quarter of 2011, reprising their harmonicas, banjos and careening guitars. It all starts off with explosive ‘T.O.R.N.A.D.O.’, making a whirlwind in your head and blasting out of your headphones/speakers like a big brassy thing. My top listen on this album is the single ‘Buy Nothing Day’ with its simple piano driven accompaniment and mean drumming. The GO! Team have wonderfully placed each track to compliment the previous and next, from the mellow to busy and the odd oriental-sounding track (oh when you’ve got a minute, check out their track ‘Phantom Broadcast’. Infact, just get their previous two albums; if Thunder Lightning Strike is not in your collection, you’re really missing out). Hip hop indie rock anyone? Set your ears on Rolling Blackouts. 9/10.

DANNY BOYLE - 127 HOURS (Released November 2010)
After initially disliking the idea of this story being made into a film and thinking it wouldn’t work as a whole film, I have just been put wrong. Who was I kidding, directed by one of my favourite film-makers Danny Boyle (of Trainspotting, 28 Days/Weeks Later and Slumdog Millionaire fame). Having just watched it, I would recommend anyone to go and do the same.
127 Hours tells the real-life story of American mountain climber Aron Ralston’s excursion to Blue John Canyon, Utah in 2003 where he didn’t tell anyone where he was going and happened to get his arm lodged in between a large rock and a canyon! As the film title suggests, he was apparently stuck there 127 hours before he decided to go ahead with the cutting-the-arm-off plan and gets rescued by a helicopter search team. James Franco’s acting is excellent here as it shows everything Ralston comes across before the incident and all the struggles he goes through (from loneliness and braving the elements to having to drink his own urine).
The composer A.R. Rahman collaborates with Boyle again here providing an excellent soundtrack and even features Dido and a track by Sigur Ros which works really well (brought a tear to my eye in that scene!). Overall a fine job, although some of the sub-plot was a bit strange. 9/10.

DANNY BOYLE - 127 HOURS (Released November 2010)

After initially disliking the idea of this story being made into a film and thinking it wouldn’t work as a whole film, I have just been put wrong. Who was I kidding, directed by one of my favourite film-makers Danny Boyle (of Trainspotting, 28 Days/Weeks Later and Slumdog Millionaire fame). Having just watched it, I would recommend anyone to go and do the same.

127 Hours tells the real-life story of American mountain climber Aron Ralston’s excursion to Blue John Canyon, Utah in 2003 where he didn’t tell anyone where he was going and happened to get his arm lodged in between a large rock and a canyon! As the film title suggests, he was apparently stuck there 127 hours before he decided to go ahead with the cutting-the-arm-off plan and gets rescued by a helicopter search team. James Franco’s acting is excellent here as it shows everything Ralston comes across before the incident and all the struggles he goes through (from loneliness and braving the elements to having to drink his own urine).

The composer A.R. Rahman collaborates with Boyle again here providing an excellent soundtrack and even features Dido and a track by Sigur Ros which works really well (brought a tear to my eye in that scene!). Overall a fine job, although some of the sub-plot was a bit strange. 9/10.

TOP 10 ALBUMS, SONGS + FILMS OF 2010

ALBUMS:

1. ARCADE FIRE - THE SUBURBS

2. GORILLAZ - PLASTIC BEACH

3. VAMPIRE WEEKEND – CONTRA

4. FOUR TET – THERE IS LOVE IN YOU

5. MASSIVE ATTACK – HELIGOLAND

6. TWO DOOR CINEMA CLUB – TOURIST HISTORY

7. RATATAT - LP4

8. DAVID BYRNE + FATBOY SLIM – HERE LIES LOVE

9. STORNOWAY – BEACHCOMBER’S WINDOWSILL

10. DARWIN DEEZ – DARWIN DEEZ

SONGS:

1. ARCADE FIRE – SPRAWL II (MOUNTAINS BEYOND MOUNTAINS)

2. GORILLAZ - EMPIRE ANTS 

3. MUSE - NEUTRON STAR COLLISION (LOVE IS FOREVER)

4. OWL CITY – FIREFLIES

5. YOLANDA BE COOL + DCUP – WE NO SPEAK AMERICANO

6. VAMPIRE WEEKEND – WHITE SKY

7. BROKEN BELLS – THE HIGH ROAD

8. FOALS – SPANISH SAHARA

9. DARWIN DEEZ – RADAR DETECTOR

10. STORNOWAY – ZORBING

FILMS:

1. INCEPTION

2. TOY STORY 3

3. DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS

4. THE SOCIAL NETWORK

5. TRON : LEGACY

6. SHREK FOREVER AFTER

7. DATE NIGHT

8. SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD

9. DESPICABLE ME

10. MICMACS

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Song: Sufjan Stevens - Too Much


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Song: Röyksopp - The Drug

RӦYKSOPP - SENIOR

If only every decent electronic musician/group would release an album every year and a half, I would be a very happy man. We haven’t seen much of Ed Banger Records, Warp or XL for a while unfortunately, but it’s all been going on at Astralwerks and Ninja Tune. The former release this offering with Wall of Sound records, from Norwegian mellow masters Röyksopp today (Monday 13th September 2010), a sequel to last year’s ‘Junior’ album, suitably called ‘Senior’.

This is an instrumental masterpiece which is mostly formulated from bits and bobs from their Junior sessions. It is a real example of how their sound has matured since debut Melody A.M., and the innovative techniques the second half of the noughties brought about into the world of electronica.

Track 1 is an excellent intro into an excellent album, including surface noise like that of a record player when the needle hits the vinyl. The backward sounds and the deep bass is wonderful. Track 2 variates ‘Tricky Tricky’ off of Junior, called Tricky 2 here. The guitarry sounds and syncopated synths compliment the exciting speed of the song, I am reminded throughout this album of magnificent multi-instrumentalist Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells II, but mostly in this track. Track 3 ‘The Alcoholic’ starts suitably with the metal clink of a can opening. The melody is catchy and the harmonies pleasing. Track 4 ‘Senior Living’ sounds dubby and dreamy, starting in a minor waltz and ejecting into a mellow yet emotional euphoria.

Track 5 ‘The Drug’ starts slower than the others (with a ascending and descending space-like sound) but when the lead comes in it sounds like a clubber’s favourite. The syncopated thirds and ascending oscillator sounds, oh it’s so wonderful. The Norwegian boys have put a lot into this. Track 6 ‘Forsaken Cowboy’ sounds suitably western with its shuffling drumbeat and twangy guitar. There’s a fantastic minor - major - minor key transition in the chorus. Track 7 ‘The Fear’ starts like Nino Rota’s ‘Godfather’ theme! It then goes onto sound like some computer game background music. Not one of my favourites from the album but it’s still pretty good. I didn’t think the album could get any mellow and melancholy, but the penultimate track ‘Coming Home’ stoops to a new depth, in a good way. To finish off, track 9 ‘A Long, Long Way’ is really creepy with no sure key and some revolving chimey sounds that don’t really go. It makes me feel everything is in slow motion, but doesn’t really fit with the rest of the album. Ending with low-pitch sounds like that of a vehicle trying to start, I can see how it could sound good on its own, and am reminded of Brian Eno and perhaps Radiohead’s Kid A.

I can just see all the remixes appearing now, and perhaps reworkings by rappers. Well produced and a more than adequate following to their last. An enjoyable 47:50 of my time, it can be of yours too. Recommended for listening during an essay-write or a reading sesh…9/10 Röyksopp, gjennomstekt! (well done!)

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Song: Arcade Fire - The Suburbs

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Song: Kele - Tenderoni


MUSE @ GLASTONBURY, 26th June 2010
The Devonian rock-trio strike again, at the world’s most famous contemporary music festival. It’s Saturday night, and here they headlined the pyramid stage with the biggest crowd I have seen since Chelsea fans filled the road to Wembley for their FA Cup win in May. Like any Muse gig, all were excited and looking forward to an epic set of some of the most amazing rock songs written over the last decade. Crazy riff jams and feedback effects were made use of inbetween songs, complimented by an amazing light show and background visualisations. Muse were on top form, playing all the classics and even a few of the newer ones. At one point the bassist Chris Wolstenholme whipped out a pipe and started a’puffing! After the fourth song, frontman Matt Bellamy called out “Big shout for Mr Eavis! And His Daughter!”
As a consolation for the previous headliners having had to cancel, U2’s guitarrist ‘The Edge’ made an unexpected appearance to play one of U2’s songs with Muse, ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’. At some points I felt the pyramid stage had turned into a space ship and was going to blast off. Anyway, enough waffling. Here’s some pictures I managed to screen-capture from the live BBC footage (thanks BBC!) and the set-list.

Setlist
Uprising
Supermassive Black Hole
New Born
Map of the Problematique

Guiding Light
Citizen Erased
United States of Eurasia
Feeling Good

Undisclosed Desires
Albinoni’s Adagio into The Resistance
Hysteria (with Absolution Interlude)
House of the Rising Sun (sung by crowd)
Time Is Running Out
Starlight
Stockholm Syndrome
Where The Streets Have No Name (with U2’s The Edge)
Plug-In Baby

Morricone’s ‘The Man With The Harmonica’
Knights of Cydonia

MUSE @ GLASTONBURY, 26th June 2010

The Devonian rock-trio strike again, at the world’s most famous contemporary music festival. It’s Saturday night, and here they headlined the pyramid stage with the biggest crowd I have seen since Chelsea fans filled the road to Wembley for their FA Cup win in May. Like any Muse gig, all were excited and looking forward to an epic set of some of the most amazing rock songs written over the last decade. Crazy riff jams and feedback effects were made use of inbetween songs, complimented by an amazing light show and background visualisations. Muse were on top form, playing all the classics and even a few of the newer ones. At one point the bassist Chris Wolstenholme whipped out a pipe and started a’puffing! After the fourth song, frontman Matt Bellamy called out “Big shout for Mr Eavis! And His Daughter!”

As a consolation for the previous headliners having had to cancel, U2’s guitarrist ‘The Edge’ made an unexpected appearance to play one of U2’s songs with Muse, ‘Where The Streets Have No Name’. At some points I felt the pyramid stage had turned into a space ship and was going to blast off. Anyway, enough waffling. Here’s some pictures I managed to screen-capture from the live BBC footage (thanks BBC!) and the set-list.

Muse1

Setlist

Uprising

Supermassive Black Hole

New Born

Map of the Problematique

Guiding Light

Citizen Erased

United States of Eurasia

Feeling Good

Undisclosed Desires

Albinoni’s Adagio into The Resistance

Hysteria (with Absolution Interlude)

House of the Rising Sun (sung by crowd)

Time Is Running Out

Starlight

Stockholm Syndrome

Where The Streets Have No Name (with U2’s The Edge)

Plug-In Baby

Morricone’s ‘The Man With The Harmonica’

Knights of Cydonia

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Song: Stornoway - Zorbing


STORNOWAY - BEACHCOMBER’S WINDOWSILL

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Song: The Chemical Brothers - Snow

THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS - FURTHER

Electronic music fans have already been treated with a mahoosive amount of great new music this year (from Four Tet to Gorillaz, Caribou to Crystal Castles..not forgetting Ratatat!) but this one might just be the cherry on the top. After a three year break since ‘We Are The Night’, The Chemical Brothers are back in style with ‘Further’, released on Monday 14th June 2010 under Freestyle Dust / Parlophone Records. It’s a continuous/gapless album that is sure to make clubs go crazy, let alone my ears!

Track 1 ‘Snow’ is one of my favourite ‘first-track-on-the-album’s this year with its persistent modem-esque beeps/sounds/effects, uplifting layered vocals, bass coming in at 1:38, airy/spacey feel and its transition into the next song. Track 2 ‘Escape Velocity’ is the longest on the album at 11:57, building up for 2 minutes into an awesome drop. Tom Rowlands and Ed Simons really know their stuff here and the intricate production and electronic sounds are finely tweaked to hit all the right buttons for the listener and dancer.

Track 3 ‘Another World’ is a little more mellow (reminding me quite a bit of Caribou’s song ‘Subotnic’ from The Milk Of Human Kindness). The underlying bass, screaming effects and rythmic synths make this song, complimented by the higher-pitched male vocals. There’s a smooth transition into the next song ‘Dissolve’, which is the spaciest and synthiest yet, reminding me of The Flaming Lips in parts, also Gary Numan’s ‘Are Friends Electric?’. The drums are really great in this one, and the way it quietens and loudens atmospherically.

The drums convert into ‘Horse Power’ which is really similar to ‘Do It Again’ from their last album. I particularly enjoyed the horse sounds and fantastic beat throughout. You can tell this really is a Chemical Brothers classic to go with ‘Under The Influence’ and ‘Hey Boy Hey Girl’. Track 6 ‘Swoon’ is the first single released from this album back in April, but it’s probably my least favourite from the album sounding more like a house/pop track from the 90’s and bit out of place from the other songs. However, it’ll become popular no doubt.

Track 7 ‘K+D+B’ comes in with simple drums, then some more, and then even more, which continue throughout. It reprises the lyrics/melody from the first track (higher, higher etc.) and even incorporates what sounds like bagpipes. The looped voice then enters into the next and final song, ‘Wonders of the Deep’ (a bit ‘Temper Trap - Sweet Disposition‘y’ at the start, but given some phat bassage and smoother acoustic guitar). It then unexpectedly goes into a large vocal part, then loudens and quietens like songs before it. The electronic blips at the end are a good ending to an overall great album. 9/10 to The Chemical Brothers!