Orbital
Calling it Quits
After 15
years working together as Orbital, Paul
and Phil Hartnoll have announced that their
upcoming recording, The Blue Album,
will be their last.
“I
think we feel that Orbital has run it’s course,” says Paul Hartnoll.
“We’re both pursuing different avenues with our music. And
we’ve been sat, as brothers, in the same room for 15 years now–and
studios are always confined spaces–I think it’s time for a
change.”
Since
their first single, ‘Chime’ entered the top 20 in April 1990 Orbital have released six albums. They
have helped to shape and develop both the character and credibility of
electronic music beyond the acid house scene that they came from.
The
brothers extra–mural interests have all informed the character of The Blue Album, the bands seventh,
which evolved gradually over the course of 2003 with the band free from record
company expectations and schedules for the first time since their career began.
“If anything,” says Paul
“It’s closer in character to our first album than our later ones,
if only because we made it in our own time and for ourselves.”
Fans will
recognize the trademark Orbital sound when they hear it. Familiar themes from
previous albums, such as religion, are also present.
“There’s
a couple of references to that,” says Paul.
One of my favorite tracks, “You Lot” has got this speech from Christopher Eccleston
from this fantastic drama called The Second Coming. I just really loved that
programme and that speech is quite typically orbital, like our other track
Forever, that’s got a speech halfway through and I really love the
sentiment behind that. That whole programme was about the second coming,
obviously, and God.”
“We’ve
got another track [One Perfect Sunrise] we did with Lisa Gerrard
who was in Dead Can Dance, singing on it. That’s a spin off from
something we wrote for a Sunrise
scene, in another film …that’s turned out well.”
Another
audible influence on the album is that of legendary transsexual composer
Walter/Wendy Carlos. “Absolutely,” says Paul,
“I tried to do something with a sort of Clockwork Orange feel, and that
became ‘Bath Time’ . It started off by being hummed in the bath on
tour before I was about to go and meet everyone for a pint in San Francisco. Got out of the bath and
scribbled it down on my laptop and finished it over last summer, adding little
bits in buses and vans while I was traveling. And it went on from there. It
became like Clockwork Orange and Kraftwerk combined. Electronic music for
electronic musics sake, dodging all real instrument sounds. Whereas ‘Easy
Serve’ is weird supermarket muzak, almost like hospital muzak. Maybe
it’s a supermarket where they only sell hospital items. Here’s the
lip section…Either way, it’s not going to be a coffee table album.
But then we’ve never done one of them. Maybe a coffee table album at
three in the morning, when everyone is blind drunk and no one can remember
anything anyway.”
With the
album complete, the band is turning their attention to their final show at Glastonbury. An
appropriate venue for a farewell as it was here, exactly ten years before that
Orbital delivered a live show that Q magazine listed as one of the fifty
greatest live show of all time. “It’s nice to know that we’re
finishing, it’s not many bands that do that. They tend to just fade away.
And it’s nice to have our last gig at Glastonbury. It’s gonna be a party set,
a best of Orbital. We’re not gonna sit there and try and promote the new
album. I think if we’re gonna do a last gig we should do distilled set of
all the best stuff we’ve done. And that’s what we’re gonna
do, play all the stuff that’s stuck around for all this time because they
are the favorite ones. This will definitely be our last ever live shows,”
confirms Paul, “Although
I’m sure Status Quo keep telling themselves the same thing.”
Details
on their upcoming album are available at the Orbital site.
RMStringer
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"We want a few mad people now. See where the sane ones
have landed us!"
George
Bernard Shaw
(1856-1950)