Group: Enigma
Title: Enigma 3 Le Roi Est Mort, VIVE Le Roi!
Author: Chaitanya
Source: Microsoft Music Review
Expect the usual enigmatic from Enigma's third tour of inner space: shimmering synthesizers, breathy female vocals, low boil beats, and brooding mysticism. Enigma is the mystery-shrouded brainchild of Bucharest native Michael Cretu, better known as Curly M.C. a cloistered studio rat smitten with the electronic sounds of Pink Floyd, Deep Forest, and that Cool Manual no-no, Yes. The Gregorian chants and pan flutes of Enigma's first album MCMXC a.D., blend with the Indonesian flavors of 1994's The Cross Of Changes on Le Roi Est Mort, VIVE Le Roi! ("the king is dead, long live the king"). It's a pleasant rehash with only one notable distinction, Cretu's own vocals. His capable and emotive singing is a mixed blessing. In it's restrained form, Cretu's voice adds another silky layer to the luxurious textures. When he bullies to the forefront the spell shatters. On Beyond The Invisible he sounds like Phil Collins straining for metaphysical euphoria. "Things are changing but nothing changes" is the mantra permeating Le Roi, an ambling philosophical meditation that pivots on the question "Why?" While not exactly a novel mission, the quest for answers can be a worthy aim, except when the search gets under way. Cretu gets so hung up ruminating on the crisis of the unknown that he forgets to open his eyes and get a clue. By the end of Le Roi, even the most pensive sage would holler "Oh, why NOT already!" Not that it matters. In the language of Enigma, words are merely another instrument to caress the sensibilities. The voices of Zulu's and Latvians mix with gentle flutes and strings and other worldly sound effects to create swirling, exotic collage. Cretu ditched crisp disco beats for muted drums that readily blend with the moody sonic. When Le Roi hits it's stride, the result is ethereal and wondrous, as in the feathery "Morphing Thru Time", "T.N.T. For The Brain" and Odyssey Of The Mind", a hunting piece that recalls the creepiness of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells. But Enigma descends into a new age noodling, it has all the spiritual sustenance of K-Tels ode to the oboe.
Source: Microsoft Music Review
Saturday, April 21, 2007
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