Aural & Hearty
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Rating
Album: Aural & Hearty
# Song Title   Time
1)    Lighten up Francis
2)    Hey Baby
3)    Air Suspension
4)    Tres Tres Chic
5)    Intothinair
6)    Thick Interlude
7)    Cha Cha Cha
8)    Velvet Black Sky
9)    Astroglide
10)    Waiting for Verdeaux
11)    Step
12)    Lighten up Again
 

Album: Aural & Hearty
# Song Title   Time
1)    Lighten up Francis
2)    Hey Baby
3)    Air Suspension
4)    Tres Tres Chic
5)    Intothinair
6)    Thick Interlude
7)    Cha Cha Cha
8)    Velvet Black Sky
9)    Astroglide
10)    Waiting for Verdeaux
11)    Step
12)    Lighten up Again
 
Product Description
Product Details
Performer Notes
  • Mocean Worker: Adam Dorn.
  • Personnel: Mocean Worker (synthesizer); Bono (vocals); Adam Dorn (programming); Roc Raida (scratches).
  • Audio Mixers: Adam Dorn; Martin Brumbach; Mocean Worker.
  • Editor: Mark Fellows.
  • After proving himself one of the more adept drum'n'bass producers on his first two sets, Adam Dorn branched out his Mocean Worker project considerably for his third LP, Aural & Hearty. The results aren't completely disastrous -- Dorn's production talents are as tight as usual -- but the parade of genre workouts on this album makes it all a bit tiring (though it must've been a fun one to record). After a short intro, Aural & Hearty begins with a beyond played-out big beat redux named "Hey Baby" (guess what the predominant vocal sample turns out to be), and the track's only partially redeemed by Dorn's production finesse and the guest scratching of Roc Raida (from the X-Ecutioners). The song with the highest expectations coming in, a Bono collaboration titled "Air Suspension," also turns out a distinct disappointment; Dorn frames Bono's tossed-off vocal with little more than a few bland acid-techno riffs and a vocal tag lifted straight from a Timbaland record. The rest of the genres Aural & Hearty soundchecks -- easy-tempo groove on "Tres Tres Chic," Brazilian samba on the scratchy cut "Velvet Black Sky," filtered disco on "Astroglide," beatbox techno on "Step" -- are pleasant enough, but quite clich?d coming on the heels of Dorn's inventive mastery of dark drum'n'bass and trip-hop on his previous material. "Intothinair" is one of the bare few highlights, a stab at paranoid tech-house with a devastating analog bassline and shimmering synth (Dorn apparently loved the bassline effect, considering he used it in two other tracks on the album). ~ John Bush
Professional Reviews
Entertainment Weekly (10/6/00, p.87) - "...Cosmopolitan kitsch and big, dopey grooves....Half the songs pump to a clubby beat; the other half revisit the cocktail revival..." - Rating: B-

Alternative Press (12/00, p.105) - 3 out of 5 - "...A kitsch-laden batch of clean family fun..."

CMJ (9/25/00, p.24) - "...Diverse and dazzling....gritty, feel-good funk, jazzy licks..."
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