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Definitely in the hat for album of the year.
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Alternative PressA righteous wallop of club-crawling, rave-slumming fun. [Oct 2002, p.83]
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UrbThe music pulses with a shimmering, spine-tingling blend of moodiness and vitality. [Sep 2002, p.102]
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Night Works proclaims the victory of brains over booty-call, mind over matter, craft over cash.
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MixerWhile Layo & Bushwacka! could have pieced together a compilation of their bountiful peak-time material (and easily sold it), they chose to expand their artistic scope by revisiting the art of the proper artist album. And in those terms, Night Works works wonders. [Sep 2002, p.76]
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With Night Works, the gung-ho Layo and Bushwacka! have made an intelligent album that doesn't stray too much from it's shadowy overall mood, aided by determined breakbeats and drawn-out orchestral sounds.
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It's this fusing of electronics, instrumentals and genres that will separate it from big beat acts -- a.k.a The Chemical Brothers a.k.a. Fatboy Slim.
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It's hard to put into words exactly what makes this album so appealing. The mindlessness of it all is a major selling point.
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Night Works is dramatic and flirtatious, as well as warm and inviting.
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The album is as streamlined as a mix set.
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Nightworks shifts moods up and down with a crafty balance of beats that would work loud in a club and low in your headphones.
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The overall mood (so spot-on is the title that the whole thing feels like a big chilled-out dance doughnut with stardust for sugar, heh heh) saves it, along with the occasional staggering moment of beauty.
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