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Blue Stone

Worlds Apart

(Neurodisc; US: 30 Jan 2007; UK: Available as import)

There are two types of electronica in the world: the kind that takes electronic instruments and makes an ethereal, human element out of such digital means, and the kind that gets sold to coffee customers while flying under the banner of “arty”, when in fact they’re just pop-songs wrapped up in enough reverb to drown in.  Blue Stone falls in the latter category.  Copping a feel from orchestral electronic masters E.S. Posthumus, the producers behind Blue Stone (Robert Smith and Bill Walters) manage to build mid-tempo dance beats and liquid piano notes around an anonymous array of feather-voiced vixens who deliver lyrics that typify the term “cliché”.  However, Blue Stone knows that sometimes atmosphere is all you need, and on Worlds Apart, they have it in spades.  Sure, they might be eight years late in copping the beat from Madonna’s “Frozen”, but it still works majestically for the song “Tears” (and the man who produced said Madge song—William Orbit—holds a heavy presence over this entire project).  Each song has its own unique characteristics, but Smith & Walters know little of restraint: the album’s 16 tracks clock in at 74 minutes, and halfway through the beats and orchestral-ambitions blur together.  The parts may be better than the whole, but when the group is constantly trying to outgrow itself, there just might be the day when Blue Stone moves out of the New Age section and into something much more lasting and significant.

Rating:

Evan Sawdey began contributing to PopMatters in late 2005 after contributing for years to his college newspaper The Knox Student. Evan became the Associate Interviews Editor for PopMatters in the summer of 2008, and then the full Interviews Editor a year after that. Since joining, Evan's work has been quoted/featured in a wide array of publications including SLUG Magazine, The Metro (U.K.), the Gulf Times, Soundvenue Magazine (Denmark), and multiple national newspapers. Evan has been a guest on WNYC's Soundcheck (an NPR affiliate), was the Executive Producer for the Good With Words: A Tribute to Benjamin Durdle album (available for free at GoodWithWordsAlbum.com), and wrote the liner notes for the 2011 re-release of Andre Cymone's hit 1985 album A.C. (Big Break Records) as well as the re-release of the JoBoxers' 1983 debut album Like Gangbusters (Hot Shot Records). He is a current member of The Recording Academy. He resides in Chicago, Illinois. You can follow him @SawdEye should you be so inclined.


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