Alex Macpherson 

Flying Lotus: Until the Quiet Comes – review

The LA producer's fourth album is packed full of ideas but they don't always feel like fully fleshed-out compositions, writes Alex Macpherson
  
  


It's easy to see why Flying Lotus has built up such a high-profile following: Erykah Badu and Thom Yorke, who both guest on the LA producer's fourth album, are long-time devotees; Venus Williams, who does not, celebrated her Wimbledon doubles title this year by going raving in East London with him. Until the Quiet Comes is packed full of ideas. Among the most beguiling are the shimmering funk of The Nightcaller – percussion rustling through an undergrowth of squelching bass and gently murmured vocals – and the wind-up toy melody underpinning Putty Boy Strut. Badu's contribution to See Thru to U is casual and abstracted, but no less gorgeous for that, while FlyLo's jazz background is filtered through curious found sounds on the title track. But FlyLo's albums tend to be slight, and this is no exception: these tracks feel less like fully fleshed-out compositions than lightly drawn sketches started, but not always finished, from a spontaneous jam session.

 

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