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Late Night Tales: The Cinematic Orchestra

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Download links and information about Late Night Tales: The Cinematic Orchestra by Cinematic Orchestra. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop, Bop genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 02:35:51 minutes.

Artist: Cinematic Orchestra
Release date: 2010
Genre: Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop, Bop
Tracks: 19
Duration: 02:35:51
Buy on iTunes $6.99
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Auntie's Harp (featuring Flying Lotus) 7:21
2. Three Hours (featuring Nick Drake) 7:03
3. The Rain (featuring Eddie Gale) 6:32
4. You're Goin' Miss Your Candyman (featuring Terry Callier) 7:22
5. Behold the Day (feat. Wayne Henderson) (featuring The Freedom Sounds) 4:41
6. Living Beats (featuring Dj Food) 3:46
7. Aht Uh Mi Hed (featuring Shuggie Otis) 4:15
8. Black Swan (featuring Thom Yorke) 7:12
9. Restaurant 0:38
10. Electric Counterpoint - Fast (Movement 1) (featuring Steve Reich) 4:30
11. Joga (featuring Björk / Bjork) 7:02
12. Cumulus (featuring Imogen Heap) 7:01
13. See Line Woman (See Line Woman Vocal) (featuring Songstress) 7:21
14. La Ritournelle (featuring Sébastien Tellier / Sebastien Tellier) 7:40
15. Dog Shelter (featuring Burial) 3:00
16. South American Getaway (Butch Cassidy Soundtrack Version) (featuring Burt Bacharach) 7:01
17. Talking About Freedom 4:42
18. The Happy Detective, Pt. 3 (featuring Will Self) 1:44
19. Late Night Tales Cinematic Mix 57:00

Details

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Following contributions from guitar bands Arctic Monkeys and Snow Patrol, the critically acclaimed Late Night Tales series invites an outfit more associated with their early laid-back electronica-based installments to compile their own playlist in the shape of British experimental jazz collective the Cinematic Orchestra. While their selected 19 tracks lack the surprise element of their two indie predecessors, both of whom divulged an unexpected love of hip-hop, it's still a highly eclectic affair, taking in '60s lounge-pop (Burt Bacharach's "South American Getaway"), fingerpicking acoustic folk (Nick Drake's "Three Hours"), and retro Italo house (the Songstress' "See Line Woman"). Showcasing their influences, there are traces of their lush widescreen orchestration on Björk's "Jóga" and Imogen Heap's instrumental "Cumulus," their ambient electronica on U.S. producer Flying Lotus' "Auntie's Harp" and dubstep pioneer Burial's "Dog Shelter," and improvised jazz leanings on trumpeter Eddie Gale's "The Rain" and the Freedom Sounds ft. Wayne Henderson's "Behold the Day." Elsewhere, the album unexpectedly has two artists in common with Gary Lightbody and company's selections in blues-soul vocalist Terry Callier ("You're Goin' Miss Your Candyman") and DJ Food's "Living Beats" (whose turntablist, Patrick Carpenter, now plays with the Orchestra); Sebastian Tellier's "La Ritournelle" and St. Germain's "Rose Royce" reveal their love affair with Gallic jazz-pop; and Radiohead's Thom Yorke ("Black Swan"), minimalist composer Steve Reich ("Electric Counterpoint"), and '60s R&B star Shuggie Otis ("Aht Uh Mi Hed") complete their predominantly chilled-out soundtrack. Fans intrigued by their two own new compositions may feel slightly let down by the brief 39-second forgettable instrumental "Restaurant," but their atmospheric and soulful cover of Syl Johnson's "Talking About Freedom," featuring the impassioned tones of previous collaborator Fontella Bass, should more than make up for the disappointment. A brief insight into the musical mindset of one of the British nu-jazz scene's most exciting acts, the Cinematic Orchestra's addition to the series is a veritable treasure trove of lost classics, obscurities, and high-quality dream pop that takes the concept back to basics. ~ Jon O'Brien, Rovi