
Massive Attack: 100th Window (180g) Vinyl 3LP
Do not file under âtrip-hopâ. 100th Window is effectively a Robert â3Dâ Del Naja solo record, and consequently stands as Massive Attackâs darkest, most expansive effort to date. Founding member Andrew âMushroomâ Vowles left the band following the brooding, guitar-oriented direction the band had taken during the recording of Mezzanine, and remaining bandmate Grant âDaddy Gâ Marshall didnât participate in the recording of 100th Window due to personal commitments (but returned for the following album). With the help of producer Neil Davidge, Del Naja hones in on the cinematic sound of sprawling Mezzanine standouts âAngelâ and âTeardrop,â and turns in 9 of the densest, most claustrophobic tracks in the bandâs rich catalog, clocking in at nearly an hour and fifteen minutes. While Mezzanine still retained faint traces of the bandâs tender Nellee Hooper-produced urban grooves, 100th Window sees any shred of the bandâs jazz or rare groove roots smashed to pieces. The tradeoff comes in the form of chilling electronic-noir excellence like the densely-layered âFuture Proofâ and âSmall Time Shot Away,â both featuring Del Najaâs lead vocals. Horace Andyâs ghostly voice sounds oddly at home on âName Takenâ and âEverywhen,â transcending the severed lineage between Massive Attackâs soundsystem roots (with The Wild Bunch) and the icy sound of 100th Window into a sublime new phase of Andy and Massiveâs ongoing collaboration (heâs the only guest vocalist to have contributed to each one of the bandâs albums to date). Sinead OâConnor never sounded as good as she does here, taking three of the albumâs most sinister cuts (âSpecial Cases,â âWhat Your Soul Sings,â âA Prayer For Englandâ) to the next level with her bleak lyrics and urgent delivery. A headphones record for sure. 2017 saw much-needed official represses of Blue Lines, Protection, No Protection and Mezzanine, and Virgin are toasting 2018 in fine style with the first-ever vinyl represses of 100th Window and its elusive follow-up, Heligoland. Recommended.
- first-ever repress of Massive Attack's fourth studio album
- 180g triple vinyl pressing
- tracklisting: A1. Future Proof, A2. What Your Soul Sings, B1. Everywhen, B2. Special Cases, C1. Butterfly Caught, C2. A Prayer For England, D1. Small Time Show Away, D2. Name Taken, E1. Antistar, F1. Hidden Track
- release date: TBD
- music label:Â Virgin 2018
reviewed by hannibal chew 12/2017
Massive Attack: 100th Window (180g) Vinyl 3LP
Do not file under âtrip-hopâ. 100th Window is effectively a Robert â3Dâ Del Naja solo record, and consequently stands as Massive Attackâs darkest, most expansive effort to date. Founding member Andrew âMushroomâ Vowles left the band following the brooding, guitar-oriented direction the band had taken during the recording of Mezzanine, and remaining bandmate Grant âDaddy Gâ Marshall didnât participate in the recording of 100th Window due to personal commitments (but returned for the following album). With the help of producer Neil Davidge, Del Naja hones in on the cinematic sound of sprawling Mezzanine standouts âAngelâ and âTeardrop,â and turns in 9 of the densest, most claustrophobic tracks in the bandâs rich catalog, clocking in at nearly an hour and fifteen minutes. While Mezzanine still retained faint traces of the bandâs tender Nellee Hooper-produced urban grooves, 100th Window sees any shred of the bandâs jazz or rare groove roots smashed to pieces. The tradeoff comes in the form of chilling electronic-noir excellence like the densely-layered âFuture Proofâ and âSmall Time Shot Away,â both featuring Del Najaâs lead vocals. Horace Andyâs ghostly voice sounds oddly at home on âName Takenâ and âEverywhen,â transcending the severed lineage between Massive Attackâs soundsystem roots (with The Wild Bunch) and the icy sound of 100th Window into a sublime new phase of Andy and Massiveâs ongoing collaboration (heâs the only guest vocalist to have contributed to each one of the bandâs albums to date). Sinead OâConnor never sounded as good as she does here, taking three of the albumâs most sinister cuts (âSpecial Cases,â âWhat Your Soul Sings,â âA Prayer For Englandâ) to the next level with her bleak lyrics and urgent delivery. A headphones record for sure. 2017 saw much-needed official represses of Blue Lines, Protection, No Protection and Mezzanine, and Virgin are toasting 2018 in fine style with the first-ever vinyl represses of 100th Window and its elusive follow-up, Heligoland. Recommended.
- first-ever repress of Massive Attack's fourth studio album
- 180g triple vinyl pressing
- tracklisting: A1. Future Proof, A2. What Your Soul Sings, B1. Everywhen, B2. Special Cases, C1. Butterfly Caught, C2. A Prayer For England, D1. Small Time Show Away, D2. Name Taken, E1. Antistar, F1. Hidden Track
- release date: TBD
- music label:Â Virgin 2018
reviewed by hannibal chew 12/2017
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Do not file under âtrip-hopâ. 100th Window is effectively a Robert â3Dâ Del Naja solo record, and consequently stands as Massive Attackâs darkest, most expansive effort to date. Founding member Andrew âMushroomâ Vowles left the band following the brooding, guitar-oriented direction the band had taken during the recording of Mezzanine, and remaining bandmate Grant âDaddy Gâ Marshall didnât participate in the recording of 100th Window due to personal commitments (but returned for the following album). With the help of producer Neil Davidge, Del Naja hones in on the cinematic sound of sprawling Mezzanine standouts âAngelâ and âTeardrop,â and turns in 9 of the densest, most claustrophobic tracks in the bandâs rich catalog, clocking in at nearly an hour and fifteen minutes. While Mezzanine still retained faint traces of the bandâs tender Nellee Hooper-produced urban grooves, 100th Window sees any shred of the bandâs jazz or rare groove roots smashed to pieces. The tradeoff comes in the form of chilling electronic-noir excellence like the densely-layered âFuture Proofâ and âSmall Time Shot Away,â both featuring Del Najaâs lead vocals. Horace Andyâs ghostly voice sounds oddly at home on âName Takenâ and âEverywhen,â transcending the severed lineage between Massive Attackâs soundsystem roots (with The Wild Bunch) and the icy sound of 100th Window into a sublime new phase of Andy and Massiveâs ongoing collaboration (heâs the only guest vocalist to have contributed to each one of the bandâs albums to date). Sinead OâConnor never sounded as good as she does here, taking three of the albumâs most sinister cuts (âSpecial Cases,â âWhat Your Soul Sings,â âA Prayer For Englandâ) to the next level with her bleak lyrics and urgent delivery. A headphones record for sure. 2017 saw much-needed official represses of Blue Lines, Protection, No Protection and Mezzanine, and Virgin are toasting 2018 in fine style with the first-ever vinyl represses of 100th Window and its elusive follow-up, Heligoland. Recommended.
- first-ever repress of Massive Attack's fourth studio album
- 180g triple vinyl pressing
- tracklisting: A1. Future Proof, A2. What Your Soul Sings, B1. Everywhen, B2. Special Cases, C1. Butterfly Caught, C2. A Prayer For England, D1. Small Time Show Away, D2. Name Taken, E1. Antistar, F1. Hidden Track
- release date: TBD
- music label:Â Virgin 2018











