Penguin Audio: what your ears want to hear   In association with Amazon.com
 Location:  Home» Electronica » General » Last Night  
Departments
Album Rock
Alternative
Ambient
Arena Rock
Blues
Boom Boxes
British Invasion
Car Stereo
Classical
Classic Rock
Compact Stereos
Country
Dance
Electronica
Folk
Hard Rock
Hip Hop
Home Theatre
Jazz
Latin
MP3 Players
New Age
Pop
Psychedelic Rock
R&B
Rock
Satellite Radio
Speakers
Stereo
Techno
Trance
Trip Hop
Vocalists
Other Penguins

Penguin 64

Penguin CPU

Penguin Cameras

Penguin Kitchens

Penguin Videos

Related Sites

Liberal Media News

OS X Mart

Ultra Mega Mart US

Plenty to Buy

Very Big Bookstore

Geek Book Store

Books, DVDs, and More

Cameras and Photo

Anime Canyon

Just Books for Kids

the Celiac Shop

the sensible celiac

Boolean Sales

Downloads
Apple iTunes

Last Night

Last Night
Artist: Moby
Label: Mute
Category: Music

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $11.99
You Save: $2.99 (20%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 51 reviews
Sales Rank: 1699

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 69383
UPC: 724596938324
EAN: 7245969383242
ASIN: B000Y8KG02

Release Date: April 1, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Ooh Yea
  • I Love To Move In Here
  • 257.zero
  • Everyday It's 1989
  • Live For Tomorrow
  • Alice
  • Hyenas
  • I'm In Love
  • Disco Lies
  • The Stars
  • Degenerates
  • Sweet Apocalypse
  • Mothers Of The Night
  • Last Night

Similar Items:

  • Accelerate
  • Hard Candy
  • The Odd Couple
  • Third
  • Funplex

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk
After three albums that seemed to find Moby in some sort of creative stasis, Last Night sees the once-restless DJ/producer changing the record and returning to one of his first loves: the heaving dancefloors of his native New York. Soulful, uplifting piano rave is the order of the day here, and while some hallmarks of Play remain--Moby still has a fascination for long, tearful synth lines and sampled vocals, which he drops in here and there, seemingly to yield the maximum emotional response--Last Night still feels like a clean slate. "I Like to Move in Here" shimmies along on a languid house beat that doffs a cap to early hip-hop in the shape of a cameo from MC Grandmaster Caz, one of the writers of "Rapper's Delight", while "Everyday It's 1989" is the sort of overdriven, ecstatic piano house that Moby perfected on his 1995 classic Everything Is Wrong. There's more guest spots in the shape of British MC Aynzli, the Nigerian 419 Squad and Sylvia from dark NYC disco band Kudu, but the most impressive thing about Last Night is the peaks that Moby can reach when he's working alone: see the grand, emotive swell of "Sweet Apocalypse", cold synths and driving beats that, were it released by James Murphy, would be hailed as genius--and rightfully, too.--Louis Pattison

Album Description
Last Night - the fifteen track album was recorded in Moby's home studio in Manhattan NY and mixed by Dan Grech - Maguerat who has also worked with Radiohead and the Scissor Sisters. The new album features guest vocalists and includes the original 70's MC Grandmaster Caz one of the writers of Rappers Delight, Sylvia from Kudu, the UK's MC Aynzli and S.O. Simple and Smokey from the Nigerian 419 Squad. EMI. 2008.


Customer Reviews:   Read 46 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Moby In The Mix   September 16, 2008
William m Coles (BALTIMORE, MARYLAND United States)
Nice mix of musical genres, light vocals, very musical and open-minded and uncentered. If you are looking for something just a little off the beaten path but not too obscure then this album will soot you just fine.


1 out of 5 stars Huh?   September 9, 2008
The Doctor (The TARDIS)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The blurb above says that this is Moby's "return" after three albums where he was in a "creative stasis." What? Moby's last three albums WERE HIS BEST THREE ALBUMS!! This, however, is standard, uncreative, passe, forgettable dance-music CRAP. Nothing to write home about.


1 out of 5 stars Truly Forgettable   August 27, 2008
Moe Train (Philadelphia, PA)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Whenever most audiophiles refer to Moby's crowning career achievement, most will mention his 1999 breakout album, Play. The creativity and originality of Play was a shining moment in the electronica genre, but unfortunately, Moby's creative light has fizzled in his latest offering, Last Night.

With his last album (Hotel) being less than stellar, Moby fans were forced to wait three years to see if he could musically reconcile with his loyal following. However, much to the chagrin of this reviewer, Last Night was a deplorable effort from an artist who was once electronica royalty. When a musician feels inclined to explicitly describe the concept of an album instead of letting the music speak for itself, something is amiss. In the album's liner notes, Moby states, "It's me trying to take 25 years of going out in NYC and condensing it into a 65-minute record. It's also trying to condense an eight-hour night into just over an hour of music." Although many of Moby's listeners haven't experienced a true "clubber's night" out in New York City during it's heyday, Last Night takes you on a flashback through the DJ's hazed eyes.

This album showcases Moby's keen production prowess, though at most times it seems to be brutally uninspired. A "clubber's night" parallels the plot structure followed in a screenplay or a novel. As the exposition of the album unfolds, Moby paints a musical picture of the anticipated good night out in "Ooh Yeah." Starting with a chilled out track to signal the quiet before the storm is an accurate depiction of the beginning of a stereotypical clubgoer's night out. Nevertheless, if Last Night is a purported concept album of a condensed "eight-hour night," Moby must not have had a very thrilling 25 years out in the NYC scene.

Intermittently, there are flashes of classic Moby energy. Grandmaster Caz, responsible for co-writing one of rap's all-time anthems, Rapper's Delight, was recruited to deliver a few bars over a Latin vibe during "I Love to Move In Here," where he repeats that "old school's takin' you back." This is another instance where Moby feels inclined to unambiguously tell the listeners the direction which the album is headed, certainly not a positive quality in writing or music. During the rising action of Last Night, "Alice" is a rare flash of brilliance on an otherwise lackluster album. Grabbing a strong energy from 419 Squad's hip hop vocal delivery, the album catches a bit of groove until the pills kick in during the next track. "Hyenas" is sexy, dreamy track which creates an ecstasy-fueled alternate state of consciousness with French vocals.

As the album reaches the climax of it's "roll," Moby pumps out some tracks which are obvious nods to 90's rave culture. "I'm in Love" sounds as if it was pulled off of a Paul Oakenfold album. Ironically, both artists have strayed to a more apathetic mode of production as they have gotten older. "Disco Lies" comes off as a flamboyantly gay club anthem... Not that there's anything wrong with that. With the falling action taking place during "Degenerates," Last Night has a very abrupt change in pace. If by this time, the album hasn't degenerated enough to lull you to sleep, this song will do the trick.

During the album's denouement, Moby kicks into serious late night NYC chillout afterparty mode as the pills start to wear off and the night's energy comes to an end. It seems unusual that Moby dedicates such a large portion of the album to the final moments of the night, as nearly a quarter of the album slips into a musical coma. Closing out the album with the title track, the diva swoons, "If this be my last night on Earth, let me remember this for all that it's worth." If this is Moby's last album on Earth, hopefully he will not be remembered by it's disheartening worth, for Last Night is truly forgettable.



3 out of 5 stars Soulful dervish   August 12, 2008
Ashraf_A_Kh (California)
I got Moby for the radio-like electronic sounding grooves - and yeah I got 'em on this album. The media of CD is just fine.I don't think I will get it on vinyl to be a superfreak for the real thang 'cause this unreal sounding funkedelic CD does it for me.

There are some Donna Summer-ish artists hollering[just like Donna would]on this CD -- so just when you think, as the song begins if all Moby offers is these divas holler something soulful over and over in your hear about you leaving her and not loving and she being in love so crazy it doesn't make any sense ... the violin comes in.

And that is what is so satisfactory about this album is that the old school joints gonna come back to haunt ya but then he throws in some refined,operatic means of letting your emotions loose - not necessarily in the soulful way that the album predominently is -- the vegan dj defies and imrpovises.

Listen to it in the car as you drive in your cruel concrete jungle who you live and love. She breaks your bones but you keep driving and giving her the bad air she needs back to keep her swaying palm trees surreal.

Or take a shower and gyrate-dry to the hip dancy beat.



4 out of 5 stars Moby - Last Night 7/10   August 10, 2008
Rudy Klapper (Los Angeles / Orlando)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Strict vegetarian and eternally bald hipster Moby returns to his platinum-selling roots on Last Night, turning toward a more electronica/dance style that characterized his hit club record Play way back in 1999. Moby has stated in interviews that this decision came about as a result of his return to DJing in the New York club scene, and Last Night definitely is a DJ's dream.

Beginning with the catchy "Oh Yeah" and continuing nearly unabated to the album's closer, the epic "Last Night," the record chronicles an all-night romp through New York's clubs, anchored by Moby's diverse, eclectic range of beats and his obscure list of guest artists, from Nigerian MCs to "Rapper's Delight" lyricist Grandmaster Caz.

Strong points include the 80s-tastic "Disco Lies" and the Nintendo-mimicking sounds of "257.zero," but the record bogs down a little with the slow jam "Degenerates," and the second half of the record overall takes the energy level down a notch. Last Night's potential for dusk to dawn bootyshaking, however, remains much higher than most of Moby's contemporaries.


Apple iTunes

Downloads
Apple iTunes