- Vinyl (9 Sep 2003)
- Format: Import
- Label: Guidance Recordings
- ASIN: B0000AQS5V
- Other Editions: Audio CD | MP3 Download
- Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
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Product details
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| 1. King Wisp |
| 2. Ordinary Day |
| 3. Strictly Bongo |
| 4. Beautiful Otherness |
| 5. Moonbeams |
| 6. So Long Without You |
| 7. Exercise 3 |
| 8. Stay the Same |
| 9. Magic Love |
| 10. Everlastering Blink |
| 11. Thick Ear |
In Bent's world, smooth grooves and multicoloured soundscapes are replaced by dodgy samples from cheesy charity-shop records, crisp beats and cheap ambient synth sounds. Their debut album, 2001's Programmed to Love, took this spiky cut-and-paste approach to extremes, with intensely laidback cuts next to odd electronic work-outs. On the other hand, The Everlasting Blink is a much smoother proposition--just as silly and cheesy, but with altogether better production and less freaky weird-outs. It's full of glimmering trinkets of sonic loveliness; gems such as the poppy "Beautiful Otherness" (featuring the Beloved's Jon Marsh on vocals); lead single "Magic Love"; semi-acoustic country sing-a-longs and quirky electronic interludes. For those who've already fallen in love with Bent, this is nothing new; for those yet to convert, it should be a revelation. --Matt Anniss
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This second outing offers more of the same with some fantastic use of old artists on 'guest' sampled vocals. Nana Mouskouri makes a welcome return, joined by Billie Jo Spears, Captain and Tennille and even David Essex! Inspired.
The leaning towards country music is done is such a way as to leave you wanting to open up to a long neglected genre. BJ Cole's pedal Steel playing is wonderful. Whereas Goldfrapp use a Theremin to inject a haunting side to their ballads, Bent have found just the musician to polish their sound.
Bent's new album is a must. If you like Lemon Jelly you'll love this.
Overall though, Everlasting Blink has a sound which can perhaps best be desribed as Orbital jamming with Lemon Jelly while the KLF man the sampler. Highlights for me are the hazy infectious disco of Magic Love, the catchy electro pop of Ordinary Day and the Jon Marsh-vocalled Beautiful Otherness which brings back fond memories of early Nineties raving.
As so often happens with music of this type, tunes from The Everlasting Blink are already finding their way into advertising (such the recent ad for tax credits).
Fans of Lemon Jelly, Royksopp et al are well advised to snap this album up fast before its poppy beauty is tarnished
by too much televised repetition.
It starts with a sample from Tomita and I thought for a moment that they had put the wrong CD in the case, but it just got better.
The tunes are dancy, but not in a Cream/Fabric vein. It reminded me of Royskopp, and Banco De Gaia, but a bit more mainstream. Possibly closer to I Monster, or Mint Royale.
The best track has to be Ordinary Day, Im not sure of the sample, but I have been singing it to myself all morning.
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