Moon Safari – Vish Iyer

Moon Safari
Air
Caroline Records, 1998
Reviewed by Vish Iyer
Published on Mar 23, 2005

The 1990s were a decade that saw a good deal of creative
variations of conventional dance music. With weirder manifestations
of disco music, like electronica and trip-hop, this popular genre
of music — especially its newer forms — found a place in the
predominantly rock music-dominated alternative music scene.
Breaking boundaries of conventional dance music, non-conformist
underground pop/dance bands — the likes of Massive Attack, The
Chemical Brothers, and Prodigy — have revealed or have given birth
to an evil doppelganger of popular dance music, which has made this
kind of music bury its head in the ground with shame.

With dance music gaining unconventional facets, the French band
Air, too, like its confreres, has touched up dance with its own
unique style, adding a rather laid-back and drunken countenance to
it that is very uncharacteristic of this form of music.
Moon Safari doesn’t quite fit under the rubric of any of the
popular forms of contemporary dance music. It is laid-back, and it
has a lot of retro psychedelic elements fused in the tipsy and
drowsy atmosphere of its songs. It is interestingly groggy,
painfully slow… and maddeningly addictive.

This album is like one of those taverns where you love to visit
every night, get shamelessly drunk, and have the worst hangover the
next day. It is as if you want to visit the place again and again,
just to enjoy the messed-up state of your head the next
morning.

The album begins with the very sensual “La Femme D’Argent”; the
first seven-odd minutes of the album tickles you at just the right
spots and puts you at your sensuous best, and this is just the
beginning! Sober, yet embarrassingly drunk, chaste yet fraught with
a feeling of concupiscence, the rest of
Moon Safari will get even the most ardent teetotaler drunk.
“Sexy Boy,” “All I Need,” and “Kelly, Watch The Stars!” come across
as the standouts of the album.

Moon Safari, in all its mysteriousness, is an album of sin
in its subtlest forms. It is quiet, deceptively easygoing,
sensitive and sensuous — it is beautiful!

Rating: B

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