Moby: All Visible Objects review – misjudged and out of touch

(Mute Records/Little Idiot)
Seeming to prefer penning candid memoirs to exploring new musical material, Moby’s 17th album has vitality but no novelty

Moby’s heydays bookended the 1990s. In 1991, the New York native smooshed together post-punk, 80s disco and the Twin Peaks score into Go, a quintessential rave track that reached No 10 in the UK charts, something he celebrated with spasmodic dancing on Top of the Pops. In 1999, his album Play, which combined American roots and club beats into the kind of dinner party-friendly dance music middle England could really get behind, went six times platinum in the UK. Capturing the zeitgeist at both ends of a decade is no mean feat, and at 54, Moby seems more intent on reflecting on his success than repeating it – nowadays he makes headlines for cringeworthily candid memoirs about his unlikely superstardom rather than any new material.

Moby: All Visible Objects album art work
Moby: All Visible Objects album art work Photograph: PR Handout

Certainly, All Visible Objects, Moby’s 17th album, doesn’t feel like a punt for musical relevance. The first half dances between feverish house, dazed electronica, rave, techno and dub, the second comprises ambient and slightly po-faced pieces built from piano figures and synth washes. The overriding impression of both modes is nostalgia, not least for the uplifting, utopian properties of dance music. Moby finds some traction on the first count – there is vitality here, if not novelty – but the forays into politics aren’t so convincing. Power Is Taken, a hypnotic incitement to overthrow your oppressors recited by Dead Kennedys’ drummer DH Peligro, and Rise Up in Love, which muses on a similar subject, both feel misjudged. Perhaps it would have landed differently 20 years ago, but nowadays the uber-privileged using the voices of black musicians to deliver messages about subjugation seems bumblingly out-of-touch.

Contributor

Rachel Aroesti

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Moby: Destroyed – review
There's little cheer in Moby's reflections on life on tour, finds Caroline Sullivan

Caroline Sullivan

12, May, 2011 @10:59 PM

Article image
Kedr Livanskiy: Your Need review – joyful, punchy beats with a touch of tape hiss
Sung in Russian and English, Livanskiy’s more playful, deeper second album has an optimistic spirit

Aimee Cliff

03, May, 2019 @9:30 AM

Article image
Natalie Portman criticises 'creepy' Moby over 'disturbing' account of friendship
Musician says in memoir the pair dated, but Portman disputes account, saying ‘my recollection is a much older man being creepy with me’

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

22, May, 2019 @9:16 AM

Article image
Disclosure: Energy review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
With nightclubs closed during coronavirus, the third album from the British pop-house duo has an unwittingly mournful quality

Alexis Petridis

27, Aug, 2020 @11:00 AM

Article image
Caribou: Suddenly review – perfectly imperfect pop
Dan Snaith’s project returns after five years away to confront grief and family, beautifully warping songs that are drenched in melody

Alexis Petridis

27, Feb, 2020 @2:31 PM

Article image
Ladytron: Ladytron review – electroclash stomp of intent
The Liverpool band – now based all over the world – return with a synth stomp of protest at our times

Kate Hutchinson

15, Feb, 2019 @10:30 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
The Cinematic Orchestra: To Believe review – soundscape originators' accomplished return
The sound of TCO’s tasteful electronica has become ubiquitous. This new album isn’t experimental or idiosyncratic enough to stand out

Rachel Aroesti

15, Mar, 2019 @9:30 AM

Article image
Panda Bear: Buoys review – indie experimenter finds the slow lane
The Animal Collective man’s sixth solo album is full of trademark quirks and it’s undeniably clever, if slightly monotonous

Kate Hutchinson

08, Feb, 2019 @10:30 AM

Article image
Denai Moore: Modern Dread review – hypnotic, surrealist bid for freedom
Moore’s genre-blending electronic pop is an unsettling exploration of isolation and selfhood in an over-connected age

Timi Sotire

03, Jul, 2020 @8:00 AM