No Protection: Massive Attack Vs. Mad ProfessorArtist: Massive Attack
Community Score: 7.35
Protection was widely considered a disappointing follow-up to Massive Attack's groundbreaking debut, Blue Lines. Where their debut bent all of the conventional hip-hop, dub reggae, and soul rules, Protection essentially delivered more of the same. Perhaps that's the reason why Mad Professor's remix of the album, No Protection, was welcomed with...
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MezzanineArtist: Massive Attack
Community Score: 7.93
Increasingly ignored amidst the exploding trip-hop scene, Massive Attack finally returned in 1998 with Mezzanine, a record immediately announcing not only that the group was back, but that they'd recorded a set of songs just as singular and revelatory as on their debut, almost a decade back. It all begins with a stunning one-two-three-four...
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Miss SarajevoArtist: Passengers
This CD single was the only one released from U2's 1995 side-project album Passengers. Miss Sarajevo was released as a benefit for Warchild. It contains three non-LP tracks, including one previously unreleased studio song, one remix, and one live song. The studio track is "Viva Davidoff" and the remix is "Bottoms (Watashitachi No Ookina Yume)...
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Stroking the Full LengthArtist: Ruby
Who Can You Trust?Artist: Morcheeba
Slower, smoother, and more soulful than Portishead and less pop-oriented than the Sneaker Pimps, Morcheeba have an alluringly dark sound that nevertheless remains accessible. As their debut, Who Can You Trust?, illustrates, the trio has a keen sense of how to make a pop melody seem dangerous and foreign by having it crawl out of the murk of...
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Salt PeterArtist: Ruby
Formerly of the aggressive feminist punk outfit Silverfish, Leslie Rankine renamed herself Ruby in 1995 and changed her musical tactics. Instead of hard-edged post-punk, Ruby's music is a dark, eerie fusion of trip-hop and industrial, with quietly menacing beats and droning synths. Although it could be said that she was simply trend-hopping with...
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Artist: Massive Attack
Between the 1994 release of Protection and its follow-up, 1998's Mezzanine, trip-hop had worked its way into the mainstream. Massive Attack, however, remained something of a cult institution -- they had some chart success, yet they stayed the province of hip clubgoers and musicians, many of whom appropriated the band's innovations on hit records...
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