Tuesday, March 13, 2012

My Amazon Reviews: Thomas Dolby "A Map Of the Floating City"

Mapping Dolby's World
3 Out Of 5 Stars

The Blinded by Science guy returns after a near 20 year absence with a studio album that, frankly, I doubt many were hotly anticipating. That said, I'm pleasantly surprised by Dolby's three part trip around the globe (as he describes in the liner notes: Urbanioa, Amerikana, and Oceana) that brings Dolby back with some old cohorts. Kevin Armstrong, Edie Reader, Bruce Wooley and Mark Knopfler appear, along with a guest vocal from Regina Spektor. Regina drops in on the album's most humorous cut, "My Evil Twin Brother."

The humor is something fans of Dolby would expect, but so are the strong melodies, odd keyboard textures ("Spice Train"), stories of the down, out and eccentric ("Road to Reno") or the romantic looking for a safe place to call home ("Oceana"). There's an oddity here that borders on roots music, the dippy "Toad Lickers," which I dig, along with songs that are little more than Dolby and a piano, like the gorgeous "Love is a Loaded Pistol." That song (along with Knopfler's turn on "17 Hills") will take some fans back to the brilliant "The Flat Earth," even if the sum total of "Map of The Floating City" doesn't stay at that high level of quality.

Still, you can't help but to be reminded of the quirky synth-master that gave us such disparate albums as "The Flat Earth" or the unevenness of "Astronauts and Heretics," an album I still enjoy. Dolby, in a recent interview, did not realize that "She Blinded Me With Science" was thirty years old this year as he was being interviewed in support of "Floating." He even expressed surprise, as he put it, because he tends not to look back at a career he sees as a continuation, even as he commented on just how that song opened all his doors to the present. "A Map Of The Floating City" is a pretty good addition to that journey.



   





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