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Last Night
 
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Last Night [Import]
~ Moby (Artist)
3.6 out of 5 stars 12 customer reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product details

Listen to Samples
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1. Ooh Yeah Listen
2. I Love to Move in Here Listen
3. 257. Zero Listen
4. Everyday It's 1989 Listen
5. Live for Tomorrow Listen
6. Alice Listen
7. Hyenas Listen
8. I'm in Love Listen
9. Disco Lies Listen
10. Stars Listen
11. Degenerates Listen
12. Sweet Apocalypse Listen
13. Mothers of the Night Listen
14. Last Night Listen

Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
After three albums that seemed to find Moby in some sort of creative stasis, Last Night sees the once-restless DJ/producer changing the record and returning to one of his first loves: the heaving dancefloors of his native New York. Soulful, uplifting piano rave is the order of the day here, and while some hallmarks of Play remain--Moby still has a fascination for long, tearful synth lines and sampled vocals, which he drops in here and there, seemingly to yield the maximum emotional response--Last Night still feels like a clean slate. "I Like to Move in Here" shimmies along on a languid house beat that doffs a cap to early hip-hop in the shape of a cameo from MC Grandmaster Caz, one of the writers of "Rapper's Delight", while "Everyday It's 1989" is the sort of overdriven, ecstatic piano house that Moby perfected on his 1995 classic Everything Is Wrong. There's more guest spots in the shape of British MC Aynzli, the Nigerian 419 Squad and Sylvia from dark NYC disco band Kudu, but the most impressive thing about Last Night is the peaks that Moby can reach when he's working alone: see the grand, emotive swell of "Sweet Apocalypse", cold synths and driving beats that, were it released by James Murphy, would be hailed as genius--and rightfully, too.--Louis Pattison

 
Customer Reviews
12 Reviews
5 star: 33%  (4)
4 star: 16%  (2)
3 star: 33%  (4)
2 star: 8%  (1)
1 star: 8%  (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Romantic elegy for a vanished world, 11 April 2008
By C. O'Brien (Scotland, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Last Night (Audio CD)
This is a deeply romantic album -- in the sense that it's a journey through memory, a conceptual stroll through the sensations of a typical night out in NYC in the 80s or 90s.

So the night starts wild and jubilant with the old school "I Love To Move In Here", featuring Grandmaster Caz of the Cold Crush Brothers and moves onto a homage to every crazy rave anthem (Black Box's "Ride on Time", anyone?) with "Everyday It's Like 1989". And the mechanistic "257.zero" evokes a haunted landscape of digital bewilderment before lapsing into the rich, weary sophistication of "Live For Tomorrow" and "Hyenas", the latter featuring a swooning Algerian French vocal; Piaf meets Grace Jones at 4am under a stuttering streetlight.

Elsewhere Moby revisits early 90s house with "Disco Lies" and employs a rap from Ainzli Jones and Nigerian hip-hop act 419 Group for futuristic hip-hop outing "Alice". The guttural desperation of the Moroder-ish "I'm In Love" recalls Crystal Waters "She's Homeless" more than it does the smooth sensuality of a Donna Summer.

But as the album swoops to a blissfully exhausted close with its lovely title track, the elegiac quality of the album is clear as first daylight. "If this be my last night on earth," sings Kudu's Sylvia Gordon, "let me remember this for all that it's worth."

Self-referential maybe - but not dated so much as a romantic elegy for a vanished elysium.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dance music made by and for people who don't dance anymore, 29 Mar 2008
By Mr. M. A. Reed (Somewhere, GB) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
This review is from: Last Night (Audio CD)
Moby's 8th official LP, "Last Night", is apparently a love letter to the long lost disco days of ancient New York - echoing and aping the halcyon years. In some respects, it's a nostalgic recreation of an age that never honestly existed, except in the rose tinted glasses of hazy recollection and half-formed memory, a retrofitted perfect past. Oh, we can dance about it now - but at the time it was terrible.

Ultimately, "Last Night" is an artistic failure : an attempt to create dance music made by and for people who don't dance anymore. I can't realistically imagine any of these songs played in a nightclub. Like bands of a certain pedigree, this material has fundamentally lost its connection to the source material and the source activity and become, to a certain extent, an imitation of what it could be. The disco music contained in the first two thirds of the record is fundamentally unconvincing, asinine, dilute. Like the weaker parts of his previous LP's - most obviously "Very" from 2005's "Hotel" album - the whole of "Last Night" is characterless, lacking in personality, generic, and anonymous. Whilst, to a certain extent it's recognisably Moby : his trademark chords and choral synth sounds dominate the record, and the vocal melodies sound very much as if he wrote them, the record falls desperately short. Being the first LP Moby has made comprising entirely of guest vocalists, the central character that made previous albums compelling - Moby's vocal presence, limited in scope and convincing in versimilitude, is absent - replaced instead by a generic string of divas who communicate like stage actors, emoting and squealing and wailing, but with the emotional honesty of a bad TV actor. They could be singing the ingredients for baking powder for all the emotion this shallow record evokes within me. And, after several identikit (and nearly identically arranged and paced) disco frenzy numbers, the album starts to become an artistic desert : lacking in variation and distinguishing features. Endless miles of the same view start to bore.

It's only by the final third of the album, where Moby breaks from the tedious mould and begins to populate the record with the slower paced, majestically arranged soundscapes that bear and reward repeated listening, that "Last Night" starts to exhibit anything other than a repetitive, almost hypnotic-through-boredom tedium. The final four or five songs are too little, and too late, to rescue "Last Night" from being an emotionally flat nothingness. Thankfully though, they do provide some worth to the record.

Overall, "Last Night" is sadly a crushing disappointment by any standards : an unsuccessful attempt to create a dance album, a set of boring and featureless songs swamped in generic and boring production, and lacking in any of the compelling factors that make albums worth repeated listening. It's a great shame that "Last Night" is Moby's worst official album yet : he can, and has, done so much better in the past.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moby =, 9 April 2008
This review is from: Last Night (Audio CD)
Ignore the couple of bad reviews below. If you appreciate dance music, if you followed play, 18 and hotel, then you will like this album.

There are some high-tempo tracks, some slow tracks with lots of typically warm Moby layers - dance/techno/rap/ambient; all produced to the highest quality to pleasure our ears.

I loved this album at the second or third listen, so does my wife and what is most bizarre, so does my mum !!!
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