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Fear of Fours

 
Album Review: Fear of Fours

  • Artist: Lamb
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: July 27, 1999
  • Total Time: 52:58
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

While their debut was practically a revolution in the development of a satisfactory fusion of singer/songwriter vocals and drum'n'bass, Lamb's second album sets the bar much higher. As on the band's debut, Andy Barlow proves he's one of the most capable and inventive producers in the electronic community. He also still sounds inspired by the fiery side of bop as well as more muted chamber music, from the dexterous synthetic bass and intricate drum programs on "Little Things" to the restrained beats and orchestral tug of "All in Your Hands" and "Bonfire." Similar to the rather deflated return of Portishead in 1997, though, Fear of Fours suffers from Louise Rhodes' tendencies to play up her voice as a torch diva, overemoting and often coming off as girlish or whiny on many tracks. Thank goodness, then, for lengthy instrumentals like "Ear Parcel," which begins with the pastoral sounds of twinkling bells and croaking frogs but later whips up a few frenzied breakbeats as a bed for a sampled trumpet solo. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Soft Mistake Lamb (3:16)
Little Things (Lyrics) Andy Barlow, Louise Rhodes Lamb (3:18)
B Line (Lyrics) Lamb (2:46)
[Untitled Track] Lamb (:07)
All in Your Hands (Lyrics) Lamb (4:39)
Less Than Two (Lyrics) Louise Rhodes Lamb (1:19)
Bonfire (Lyrics) Larry Rhodes Lamb (4:23)
Ear Parcel Lamb (7:54)
Softly (Lyrics) Louise Rhodes, Andy Barlow Lamb (3:56)
Here (Lyrics) Lamb (3:22)
Fly (Lyrics) Louise Rhodes, Andy Barlow Lamb (5:13)
Alien (Lyrics) Lamb (4:06)
Five Louise Rhodes, Andy Barlow Lamb (5:49)
Lullaby (Lyrics) Andy Barlow, Louise Rhodes, John Thorne Lamb (2:57)

Credits

Ann Wood (Violin), Cathy Rimer (Cello), Rich Mulhearn (Photography), Louise Rhodes (?), Jared Hawkins (Assistant Engineer), Jimi Goodwin (Guitar), Jim Abbiss (Mixing), Lamb (Producer), Rick Myers (Design), Tanera Dawkins (String Arrangements), Ian Carmichael (Mixing), Tanera Dawkins (Cello), John Rayson (Viola), Alan Douglas (Recording), Lamba (Performer), Alice Kinloch (Sousaphone), Kevin Davy (Trumpet), Helen Kamminga (Viola), Mikey Wilson (Drums), Niroshini Thambar (Violin), Rick Myers (Art Direction), Al Stone (Mixing), Nathan Ward (Violin), Graham Clarke (Violin), Ian Carmichael (Engineer), Alice Kinloch (Trombone)
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Wikipedia: Fear of Fours
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Fear of Fours
Studio album by Lamb
Released 17 May 1999
Genre Trip hop, drum and bass, jungle
Label Mercury
Professional reviews
Lamb chronology
Lamb
(1997)
Fear of Fours
(1999)
What Sound
(2001)

Fear of Fours is the title of Lamb's 1999 album.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Soft Mistake" – 3:15
  2. "Little Things" – 3:18
  3. "B Line" – 2:51
  4. [untitled] – 0:07
  5. "All in Your Hands" – 4:38
  6. "Less Than Two" – 1:18
  7. "Bonfire" – 4:23
  8. "Ear Parcel" – 7:54
  9. "Softly" – 3:55
  10. "Here" – 3:22
  11. "Fly" – 5:14
  12. "Alien" – 4:08
  13. "Five" – 5:46
  14. "Lullaby" – 2:56
  • On the CD release of the album, an alternate version of "Lullaby" is hidden in the pregap, which can be found by rewinding the CD back before the first track. The Australian version has extra remixes of the album's tracks.

Notable Themes

The fourth track is not included on the album's track listing. It is a single struck chord which effectively ends the song "B Line" preceding it. This deliberate omission is a nod to the album's title, whose sentiment is revealed in a deeper level throughout the album: unusual time signatures. "Soft Mistake" is in 10/8. "B Line" is driven by a prominent bass line in 3/8, followed by the single note track 4. "Less Than Two" is in 12/8, backed by a repeating twelve beat phrase "needing you wanting you loving you holding you", and "Softly" is in 6/8. "Alien" continues in 12/8, although the rhythms are at times ambiguous. "Five", the most intricate yet, is in 5/8,5/8,5/8,5/8,5/8,6/8,5/8,6/8, which could also be written as 10/4,10/4,11/4,11/4. "Lullaby" rounds off the album in a slow, lazy 3/4 time. "Little Things" has a rather complex rhythmic pattern, which nevertheless converges to 4/4, or a multiple, depending on notation.

However some of the tracks are more conventional: "All In Your Hands", "Bonfire", "Ear Parcel", "Fly" all have time signatures which are at least divisible by 2 or 4, even though they may not be written as 4/4 per se. "Here" again has a 4/4 structure to it, though the bass plays rhythms which stress this as 3+3+2/8.

B Line video

The video was directed by Garth Jennings from director group, Hammer & Tongs.

It starts off with a black screen as the sounds of power is loading. When the lights come on we see Louise standing in what looks like an abandoned warehouse with a crumbled remains of a graffitied wall behind her. She then starts singing the song. As she dances, Andy comes and connects jumper cables to her hips, which are connected to a small control device which Andy operates. When the song reaches the first chorus, Andy pulls a lever which causes Louise's head to become huge and monster-like as she rises and flies in the air.

When the chorus ends, Andy pulls the lever again to turn off the power, causing Louise to go back to normal. She continues singing and dancing while Andy increases the power and pulls the lever again. Her head grows and she starts flying again but this time, her monster head is different than before: her eyes are red, her hair is flesh-coloured and there is a red marking on her forehead.

Then there is a problem, Andy can't turn it off. As the machine malfunctions, Louise starts having what could be a seizure as the wall breaks apart some more. Eventually, the control device explodes causing Andy's body to turn into a machine with huge biceped arms (the head however stays the same, making it looking small by comparison). Louise's head is still monster-like but she is now on the ground, though her walk looks like it defies grafity.

References

  1. ^ Aston, Martin. "Review: Lamb - Fear Of Fours". Q (EMAP Metro Ltd) (July 1999): 118. 

External links


 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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