- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
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He really is pouring everything he has into the whole thing, but there's so much overly earnest, reverential, "let's get back to making real music" energy floating around that you can sense it nibbling away at the desire to make something that sounds like today.
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Listen to Multiply once and you'll be struck by how reverent it is; listen to it three times and you'll start to notice the microscopic digital artifacts and subtle tweaks that give it personality and pop.
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UncutMultiply marks the full flowering of a singular talent. [Jul 2005, p.99]
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More than a patchy but occasionally brilliant album, Multiply is the whisper that the greatest soul music, rather than being trapped in our memories of times gone by, may yet play free in days to come.
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MojoThe heritage soul signposts multiply with almost hallucinatory rapidity. [Aug 2005, p.104]
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Q MagazineA blistering song set with the playful spirit of '80s Prince. [Jul 2005, p.115]
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New Musical Express (NME)His skill rests in the realisation that you can't airbrush soul: so, instead of smoothing rough edges, these cuts of cyborg funk fidget with digital tics and gasps. [11 Jun 2005, p.67]
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His is a rare talent, demanding to be heard.
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How he makes good on such a seemingly noxious premise remains a mystery... but Lidell's star shines from whatever angle it might be spied.
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SpinSound[s] like Prince cutting the ass out of Squarepusher's pants. [Aug 2005, p.103]
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Entertainment WeeklyIf even a hint of Jamiroquai makes you gag, stay away; otherwise, proceed to the dance floor, please. [22 Jul 2005, p.74]
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An album that, in its best moments, draws comparisons to at-peak Prince and, at its worst, lands in the respectable company of Nikka Costa’s Everybody Got Their Something.
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A silky, bright, singing-in-the-shower masterstroke of joy and elation.
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This is a major step forward in pushing the IDM aesthetic into the bigger territory of soul and R&B music.
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BlenderThe idea is to build a monorail between Aphex Twin and Stax Records; the songwriting eventually slacks off, but Lidell's performances don't. [Aug 2005, p.111]
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Outside the charismatic skill of Lidell's shapeshifting vocals and his forward-looking arrangements, the actual songs of Multiply aren't of as indelible an essence as the classics that they imitate.
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Lidell has a fine voice, arguably one of the most potent white soul singers England has given us since Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie.
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Multiply sounds like he picked up some ancient reel-to-reel tape from lost Holland-Dozier-Holland sessions and gave them a 2005 production spit-and-polish.
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Multiply is not just the year’s most adventurous album, it’s one of its most melodic, soulful, and engaging as well.
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UrbTruly strange and beautiful. [Jul/Aug 2005, p.102]
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'Multiply' sees the flavours of Al Green, Curtis Mayfield, Prince and Sly Stone twisted into 2005 with subtly inventive touches and modern production suss.
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Multiply sacrifices cohesion in its quest for stylistic diversity, but it’s a bravura tour through the smooth sounds and hot jams of yesteryear.
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Lidell has created an album of flawless, imaginative, and radical funk grooves.
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Although Lidell's voice lacks muscle and butter, he knows how to launch a falsetto, and the beats on "A Little Bit More" and "The City" should not be played within earshot of anyone wearing a pacemaker.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 44 out of 58
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Mixed: 2 out of 58
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Negative: 12 out of 58
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MattyMMar 14, 2007
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BlairSMay 29, 2006Very solid album. The single, Multiply, is definitely a highlight. One of the best tracks in a long time!
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SimGNov 1, 2005Very creative, great combination on an album, but give it some time. It takes a little bit of time to grow on you.