Editorial Reviews Heath K. Hignight
Music Review:
Music Review
Haydn: The Seven Last Words of Jesus Christ, Op. 51; String Quartet, Op. 103
Heaven: Deep Trance Essentials V.1 [Import]
Flashbacks! Live 1995-1998 [Import]
In The Pursuit Of Leisure [Enhanced]
Hitmania Dance Estate [Import]
From URB Magazine
For the better part of 10 years, Laikas been one of the best kept secrets in modern electronic pop. This retrospective is irrefutable proof. Comprised of Margaret Fiedler on vocals and former My Bloody Valentine engineer Guy Fixsen on everything else, Laika skipped through the UK charts during the 90s on a fertile mixture of post-New Order synth heaviness, lush ambient harmonies and dastardly complex jazz rhythms, creating many memorable singles and three top-notch albums. The selections on Lost In Space, however, illustrate exactly why the group glanced off the American pop bubble: Theyre too clever. From their biggest hit, the sprightly dour "Uneasy," to the rampant melancholic poetry of "Breather," Laika flaunts syncopated, unorthodox rhythms like 5/2 and 7/4 with as much melodic aplomb as Dave Brubeck. The release boasts a second disc with remixes and Peel Session cuts, but the first disc of Lost In Space is proof enough that Laika deserves serious reconsideration on their 10th anniversary.
Album Description
Culled from their first three albums, this is a double CD collection of Laika favorites, Peel sessions, re-mixes, rarities, and a new unreleased track. 'That perfect point between melancholy and renewed optimism' - Time Out. 'Bewitching, confounding, and very often unique' -NME. Too Pure. 2003.