Booka shade movements album
And if the hooks don’t catch you, the basslines will.
#BOOKA SHADE MOVEMENTS ALBUM HOW TO#
If Booka Shade know anything, it’s how to craft melodies filled with more hooks than a fishing kit. We’re far beyond labels here (thank God).Įven within the tracks themselves there are twists and turns that tease and excite, drawing you further in, eagerly anticipating their next movement: the melancholic organ intro to ‘Paper Moon’ suddenly turns into something fun and funky, the groove of ‘The Birds and the Beats (at the Window)’ gives way to a gorgeous piano melody that winds the track down over almost two minutes.īut what is most compelling is the one-two punch that almost all Booka Shade tracks deliver: melody and basslines. The album delights in these shifts: twisting, changing, and sliding from one moment to the next.
Over twelve tracks (nine on the vinyl), the album moves through a number of “movements”, from the dub-tinged ‘Body Language’ to the robotic vocals on ‘Wasting Time’, from the bleeped up funkiness of ‘The Birds and the Beats (at the Window)’ to the enormous synths of ‘Darko’. Recent album taster ‘Night Falls’ only increased the anticipation, and the latest single ‘In White Rooms’ is tearing up your local club even as you read this. Booka Shade singles ‘Body Language’ and ‘Mandarine Girl’ dominated dancefloors in 2005, the year the UK press went gaga over Booka Shade’s label Get Physical. To say that expectations were running high for ‘Movements’ is an understatement. ‘Movements’, however, stands far ahead of the pack, and is quite simply one of the best albums of the year (said confidently in June!).