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    Back to Album Preview

    Album Preview

    Tricky: False Idols

    You'll be surprised how contemporary Tricky's signature mix of menace and seduction sounds after his more than 20 years in (and out of) the spotlight.

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    May 20, 2013 • 1 min read

    Listening to a new Tricky album for the first time can be a, well, tricky experience. Anyone who lived through the '90s trip-hop bubble is going to spend that initial spin comparing it to Maxinquaye, the Bristol producer's canonized collaboration with Martina Topley-Bird. Obviously, that's setting the table for disappointment — nothing released today is going to hit as hard as that album's nascent perfection.

    So, once you've made your first pass through False Idols (out May 28), go back to the beginning and listen to the album again on its own terms. You'll be surprised how contemporary Tricky's signature mix of menace and seduction sounds after his more than 20 years in (and out of) the spotlight.

    With help from young British vocalists Francesca Belmonte and Fifi Rong, Tricky deftly balances sexy sighs and dub-influenced basslines. Each time through the album, different highlights surface. First, it might be "Nothing's Changed," the quasi-cover of his own "Makes Me Wanna Die" from Pre-Millennium Tension. Then the timpani and pungi vibe of "Tribal Drums" stands out. The third time through, the refrain from "Does It" is a grabber: "I wouldn't be caught dead in love."

    Tricky's best album since the halcyon days of the mid-'90s, when he could do no wrong, False Idols is one of 2013's most pleasant musical surprises so far.

    - Otis Hart

    Track List:

    01. Somebody's Sins

    02. Nothing Matters

    03. Valentine

    04. Bonnie & Clyde

    05. Parenthesis

    06. Nothing's Changed

    07. If Only I Knew

    08. Is That Your Life

    09. Tribal Drums

    10. We Don't Die

    11. Chinese Interlude

    12. Does It

    13. I'm Ready

    14. Hey Love

    15. Passion of the Christ

    Banner Photo © Aldo Belmonte

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