Lamb | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Lamb |
Cover: | Cover-lamb.jpg |
Studio: |
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Genre: | |
Length: | 65:14 |
Label: | Fontana |
Producer: | Lamb |
Next Title: | Fear of Fours |
Next Year: | 1999 |
Lamb is the debut studio album by English electronic music duo Lamb. It was released on 30 September 1996 by Fontana Records.[1]
In the United States, Lamb was released in 1997 and distributed by Fontana's parent label Mercury Records.[2] [3] The album was reissued on LP by Music on Vinyl on 10 March 2014.[4]
In Melody Maker, Sharon O'Connell lauded Lamb's fusion of the "kinetics" of drum and bass with "the sensuality of soul" on Lamb, describing the album's musical style as a "sumptuously organic" take on drum and bass incorporating varied instrumentation and the "gorgeous, haunted voice" of lead singer Lou Rhodes.[5] Martin James of Muzik, noting Rhodes's folk music lineage and her bandmate Andy Barlow's roots in "the breakbeat tradition", highlighted the duo's juxtaposition of "genres, sonics and emotions" throughout Lamb. The Guardians Dan Glaister credited Rhodes's "fragile vocals" for giving the music "an original context", while Matt Diehl commented in Entertainment Weekly that she "shows how emotionally satisfying techno can be." Dele Fadele was more lukewarm towards the record in NME, finding it derivative of "Portishead's version of trip-hop" while conceding that Lamb have a "distinct identity that sneaks out through the pores of the whole".
AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine praised Lamb in retrospect as "one of the more hypnotic byproducts of trip-hop", observing a "classy, detached, and cool" approach to the genre distinguishing the album "from the avant-garde sensibilities of Tricky and the haunted romanticism of Portishead, or even the pop leanings of Sneaker Pimps and the soul-inflected grooves of Morcheeba." In 2021, Slant Magazine listed Lamb as the tenth-best trip hop album of all time, with staff writer Sal Cinquemani calling it "nervy, innovative, and complex—boasting shifting time signatures, stuttering machine-gun beats, and eccentric vocal turns by singer Lou Rhodes, who stretches her uniquely colorful voice over producer Andy Barlow's tight, jazzy arrangements."[6]
Notes
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[7]
Lamb
Additional musicians
Production
Design