home
biography
label
Perhaps surprising to some of his many fans, Jamie Lidell started out producing rough experimental techno during the late 90s as part of the then booming Brighton scene. Employing his distinct voice more and more, both for singing and as a means of sound creation, Lidell teamed up with Cristian Vogel to form Super_Collider, which combined Vogel's experimental production style and Lidell's crooning vocals to great acclaim. After two successful albums Lidell continued his solo career and returned in 2005 with 'Multiply', an album of contemporary soul music recorded together with skilled live musicians Mocky and Gonzales, which perfectly balanced Lidell's experimental edge with a mainstream pop appeal. The album was so successful that Jamie Lidell was invited to support Elton John on tour, completing his unlikely metamorphosis from techno extremist to pop star.
435 Releases, 306 Artists
Multiply
Related
Multiply
Warp Records Multiply 0801061013134 in_stock Album released on Warp Records
Album released on 13 June 2005
Pop
00:39:19
MP3 (320 kbit/s)
10 Tracks
Rating
Rating
1 user has rated this Album
9,99 €
To Clipboard Download
Tracks on "Multiply"
recommended
Game For Fools (Track 10 on this Album)
Rating
Rating
znrR, 3 years ago via zero-inch.com
This Album is featured in Update #015:
Flying Lotus, Gonjasufi, Africa Hitech
Twenty years and counting - Warp Records' influence on the era of electronic music has been tremendous, and with recent releases by Flying Lotus, Gonjasufi, Autechre and LoneLady it's heartening to see that the legendary label hasn't lost a bit of its more...
The Editor, 3 years ago via zero-inch.com
Arguably one of the best albums of 2005, not only marking Jamie Lidell's departure from the more experimental grounds of his work with Super Collider, but also proving his incredible talent as one of this century's great crooners. Not just Elton John thinks 'Multiply' is magnificent!
The Editor, 3 years ago via zero-inch.com
Rating
Rating
znrR, 3 years ago via zero-inch.com
Close
Progress