Kosheen - Solitude Record Review

2 min read

Deviation Actions

celebrityphotoshop's avatar
Published:
1.2K Views
Critique of Solitude Record by Kosheen



In case the name has become unknown, these with recollections that stretch again to the beginning of the century might remember when, uniting the esthetics of drum 'n' bass guitar with Evans' soulful pipes, the trio created a title for themselves with the kind of 'Disguise U'. The related record 'Resist' and its successor 'Kokopelli' equally made the top, but became their high-water mark commercially.

Having flirted with both rock and nightclub sounds on the succeeding years, it appeared that at occasions there was some thing of an incertitude about their preferred musical direction. In its, defending team 'Solitude' is much from a sufferer of the sort of confusion, but the hearer may find it difficult to escape the sensation of remoteness, with the true clever scheduling neglecting to pay for Evans' out of practice howl being strangely kept on a good leash.
Occasionally, actually, it isn't even present in any way; bass led tracks including 'And Still another' and 'I' functioning as reminders of Bristol's location in the vanguard of dubstep, but neglecting to maximise on Kosheen's one exceptional facet in Evans.

It looks almost trite to say this, but 'Solitude''s two best attempts are both lessons in the old twentieth-century school of digital music. In such minutes, you ponder what may have occured if Kosheen had continued to get enlightenment in more familiar land. There are occasional discharges here, but scarcely any potential for 'Solitude' catching fireplace.
Andy Peterson
© 2014 - 2024 celebrityphotoshop
Comments0
Join the community to add your comment. Already a deviant? Log In