Gorillaz: Song Machine Season One: Strange Timez review – playful and potent collaboration

(Parlophone)
Damon Albarn is the melodic anchor to this pioneering album that balances concept with fun

The Now Now (2018) was one of those Gorillaz albums that dispensed with the hip hop-led collaborations that have often defined this band of ink and flesh. Guests are in full effect, though, on its follow-up: what’s billed as Season One of the band’s Song Machine concept, compiling the tracks Gorillaz have released monthly via their YouTube channel since January, plus extra helpings.

Everything that has ever been engaging about Gorillaz is present in spades here. Playfulness and conceptual ambition are all anchored by Damon Albarn’s melodic melancholy and his side-eye at the suboptimal state of things. His Bowie fixation waxes hard on unreleased tracks – such as The Lost Chord – as well those already in the public domain (Aries).

Lifers might miss the very old school flows of the band’s earlier hook-ups, but the dizzying array of present voices – from 6lack to Octavian via US producer Mike Will Made It – renews Gorillaz’ relevance as beat merchants, while the assured application of other talents (from Robert Smith to Fatoumata Diawara, Peter Hook to St Vincent) ensures textural breadth. A strangely cogent album for wildly unstable times.

Watch a video for Gorillaz: Aries featuring Peter Hook and Georgia.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Gorillaz: Song Machine Season One: Strange Timez review – the poignant sound of social distancing
Damon Albarn’s cartoon band mark their 20th anniversary with a record whose star guests – Elton John, Robert Smith and St Vincent among them – are folded into a fluent, brilliant whole

Alexis Petridis

15, Oct, 2020 @11:00 AM

Article image
Gorillaz: Cracker Island review – bittersweet tunes for anxious times
A thoughtful eighth album blends Damon Albarn’s state-of-the-world concerns with the talents of collaborators from Stevie Nicks to Thundercat

Kitty Empire

26, Feb, 2023 @9:00 AM

Article image
Gorillaz: Humanz review – Albarn pulls his punches
Gorillaz’s on-trend party album brings reassuring strangeness and a clever use of collaborators, but little real-world clout

Kitty Empire

30, Apr, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Gorillaz: Song Machine Live from Kong review – a genre-straddling success story
Damon Albarn plays master of ceremonies in an impressive night of collaborations

Kitty Empire

19, Dec, 2020 @2:00 PM

Article image
Gorillaz review – all stars blurred into one
Bits of Oasis and other super-guests join the party as Gorillaz’s Humanz tour ends in triumph

Kitty Empire

10, Dec, 2017 @9:00 AM

Article image
Gorillaz | Live review
Damon Albarn's cartoon band has turned into a vast live crew, dressed as sailors and pounding an irresistible groove, says Kitty Empire

Kitty Empire

01, May, 2010 @11:06 PM

Article image
Everything Is Recorded: Everything Is Recorded By Richard Russell review – mogul music with a stellar cast
As head of XL, Richard Russell shaped UK music for three decades. His own debut release finds its voice in many singers

Kitty Empire

18, Feb, 2018 @9:00 AM

Article image
Gorillaz: Cracker Island review – smaller, subtler, and better for it
Damon Albarn has reined in the excess – though there are still cameos from the likes of Bad Bunny and Stevie Nicks – for a trim album that is one of the band’s best

Alexis Petridis

23, Feb, 2023 @12:00 PM

Article image
Shygirl: Nymph review – a sensuous, playful debut
British rapper, DJ and singer-songwriter Blane Muise slinks between genres, mischief and melody on her experimental first album

Ammar Kalia

02, Oct, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
Gorillaz review – Damon Albarn refuses to be pigeonholed in hip-hop jamboree
The Blur frontman brings his animated band’s world tour to the UK, and it’s the house vocalists – such as Peven Everett and Jamie Principle – that really shine

Alexis Petridis

28, Nov, 2017 @1:04 PM