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Wait for Me [Deluxe Edition]

Moby
Release Date: 11/23/2009
Original Release:  2009
# of Discs:   3
J&R Item # 1093712_CD
UPC # 724596942727
Label: Mute Records
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Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Division
2. Pale Horses
3. Shot In the Back of the Head
4. Study War
5. Walk With Me
6. Stock Radio
7. Mistake
8. Scream Pilots
9. Jltf 1
10. Jtlf
11. Seated Night, A
12. Wait For Me
13. Hope is Gone
14. Ghost Return
15. Slow Light
16. Isolate
17. One Time We Lived
18. Stay Down

Disc: 2
1. Seated Night, A
2. Study War
3. Pale Horses
4. Stay Down
5. Hope is Gone
6. Wait For Me
7. Division
8. Mistake
9. Walk With Me
10. Isolate
11. Shot In the Back of the Head
12. Slow Light 1
13. Ghost Return
14. Scream Pilots
15. Jltf3
16. Slow Light 2

Disc: 3
1. Raining Again - (live)
2. Bodyrock - (live)
3. Pale Horses - (live)
4. Shot In the Back of the Head - (live)
5. Mistake - (live)
6. We Are All Made of Stars [Trance Version] - (live)
7. Feeling So Real - (live)
8. Go - (live)
9. Lift Me Up - (live)
10. Walk With Me - (live)
11. Epk
12. Q&a
13. Shot In the Back of the Head Video By David Lynch
14. Pale Horses Video By Elanna Allen
15. Mistake Ufo Video By Yoann Lemoine
16. Mistake Animated Video By Robert Powers
17. Mistake Stop Motion Animation By Katy Baugh

Performer: Moby
Distributor: EMI Music Distribution

Notes: Following the decadent, club-style excursions of 2008's HOTEL, Moby returns for a more contemplative sound on the melancholic WAIT FOR ME. Working through deeply personal material and a more intimate, though at times cinematic, sound palette, the album ranks as among his best in over 10 years. Moby's most unified and understated album, and all the better for it, WAIT FOR ME is a morose set of elegantly bleary material, quite a shift from the hedonistic club tracks of LAST NIGHT. Dominated by instrumentals, "Shot in the Back of the Head" is the most evocative of the bunch, seemingly pulled from an unreleased David Lynch film scored by the Afghan Whigs circa GENTLEMEN--a lament from a dustbowl, full of mournful slide guitar and dewy electric piano. Other than "Mistake"--a glum neo-post-punk rave-up that, despite its cathartic release, remains downcast--Moby leaves the vocals to a series of females (neighborhood chums, apparently) who each contribute to one song. The smoky 3-A.M. gospel whispers from throwback soul singer Leela James on "Walk with Me" steal the show. Moby's most unified and understated album, and all the better for it, Wait for Me is a morose set of elegantly bleary material, quite a shift from the hedonistic club tracks of Last Night. Dominated by instrumentals, "Shot in the Back of the Head" is the most evocative of the bunch, seemingly pulled from an unreleased David Lynch film scored by the Afghan Whigs circa Gentlemen -- a lament from a dustbowl, full of mournful slide guitar and dewy electric piano. Other than "Mistake" -- a glum neo-post-punk rave-up that, despite its cathartic release, remains downcast -- Moby leaves the vocals to a series of females (neighborhood chums, apparently) who each contribute to one song. The smoky 3-a.m. gospel whispers from throwback soul singer Leela James on "Walk with Me" steal the show. [A Deluxe Edition of the album was released with an extra disc of bonus content, as well as a DVD.] ~ Andy Kellman
Rolling Stone (p.80) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Instrumentals like 'Shot in the Back of the Head' billow moodily, lush arrangements glowing with Eno-style analog-synth warmth." Spin (p.92) - "[I]t's easily his loosest, most consistent work in quite a while....Emotionally wrought, even transporting." Billboard (p.28) - "Like the indelicately hard stop of the otherwise elegant album closer 'Isolate,' WAIT FOR ME continually surprises." Paste (magazine) (p.53) - "WAIT FOR ME weaves a small-scale tapestry that succeeds on the strength of many little things done well....It's a remarkable work..." Record Collector (magazine) (p.93) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Moby has returned to gorgeous downtempo strings and melancholic synths, topped with vocals from friends on tracks such as the reflective, female-sung 'Jtlf'..."
Diminutive, bald-headed Richard Melville Hall, better known as Moby, achieved greater mainstream success than any other electronica artist by virtue of his willingness to adapt electronic dance music to a well formed pop sensibility. From the '90s on, he dipped his toe into everything from guitar-based punk to ambient music to gospel and blues, filtering it all through a very modern musical mindset.
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