33.(3) Robot

Album info

Album-Release:
2017

HRA-Release:
18.07.2017

Label: Waterfall Records

Genre: Pop

Artist: Robot

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 48 $ 8.80
  • 1 Bones 03:38
  • 2 Tru Luv 03:48
  • 3 Head 02:53
  • 4 The Night Is Made for Two 02:26
  • 5 Pig 02:24
  • 6 Animals 03:33
  • 7 Girls 03:35
  • 8 Anger 04:07
  • Total Runtime 26:24

Info for 33.(3)

Der Multiinstrumentalist Robbie Moore zählt in seiner britischen Heimat bereits seit Jahren zu den profiliertesten Songwritern der dortigen Popszene. So rief das seit frühester Jugend musikalisch aktive Multitalent Mitte des letzten Jahrzehnts die siebzehnköpfige Bigband-Formation The Mores ins Leben, baute in London ein mittlerweile höchst renommiertestes Studio auf und arbeitete im Laufe seine Karriere sowohl studio- wie livetechnisch bereits mit Künstlern wie Florence & The Machine, Glen Matlock, The Irrepressibles, Babyshambles, Jackson Scott oder aktuell Jesper Munk.

Mittlerweile in Berlin ansässig und (wieder) als Studiobetreiber, Produzent und Musiker aktiv, legt er jetzt unter seinem geheimnisvoll anmutenden Pseudonym Robot ein wundervolles Soloalbum vor, auf dem er außer Schlagzeug und Bass (der von Taylor Savvy eingespielt wurde) alle Instrumente im Alleingang einspielte.

Dabei überzeugt der charismatisch charmante Brite hierauf mit elaborierten Popkompositionen voller unwiderstehlich raffinierter Harmonien und Arrangements, die (s)eine unüberhörbare Vorliebe für sanft instrumentierte und / oder (psychedelisch) orchestrierte Klänge der sechziger und (frühen) siebziger Jahre offenbaren und die in ihrer Brillanz Vergleiche mit den musikalischen Großtaten von Paul McCartney, Jeff Lynne (Electric Light Orchestra), Gerry Rafferty oder Neil Hannon (Divine Comedy) zulassen.

„Gleich im Opener ›Bones‹ geht es zurück in die goldenen 20er Jahre, gibt ein perlendes Vaudeville- Piano den Takt vor, mit schmeichelnder Stimme wird die Ohrwurmmelodie immer wieder mantrahaft wiederholt, bevor das Ganze als moderner Popsong endet, inklusive E-Gitarrensolo und vielstimmigem Refrain.“ (Good Times)




Robbie Moore
I have been scratching together trying to make what might sound like music since I was 7 years old, when I began to teach myself guitar and piano. I then spent many years unconsciously re-writing Beach Boys songs and making hissy recordings using my mother’s tape-to-tape function.

Not knowing if I wanted to be a musician or a plasticine cartoonist, when I was 15 I saw my opportunity – the lodger had moved out, so I took over the spare room and began turning it into my own 4 track cassette studio. Developing into an obsession, I barricaded myself in that room trying to figure out how to write pop songs until I had recorded 3 albums by the time I was 18, when I was kicked out and went to live with the Krishnas.

Getting married after a 3 day long psychedelic episode, and discovering when we woke up that we sang well together, we ended up at my father’s house, taking over his sitting room and recording 3 more albums in 2 years – which started to get some attention, including festival dates, good support shows and a sofa in a publisher’s office.

Well, fate was not on our side that time – a tragic death, petrol emotion and fragile youth left us in tatters and unable to pull ourselves together again. Out of the wreckage I clambered, creating what would turn into The Mores, rapidly growing into a 17-piece orchestral monster, and which in 2002 saw us as pioneers, being the first band to play many of London’s churches including Shoreditch and St. Giles, both now established venues. With 15 shows in little over a year, running an orchestra, 3 backing singers, a lighting rig, a bar, trying to convince doubtful vicars, I was getting married again every month!

Meanwhile a run in with a Smashing Pumpkins drummer had taken me to a dilapidated artists building where I began construction on my first ‘proper’ studio. Being poor, I acquired a blue Ford Sierra with a red door and a petrol leak and conducted a long season of nightly skip and bin raids across London, gathering together enough materials to build the studio, entirely out of things I had found, for free. Sound on Sound magazine were impressed enough to do a 5 page feature! Look here

Being in the middle of a creative boom in London, pretty soon I started getting people wanting to record with me, helping me pay the rent while we set about putting The Mores on to tape. Two years and one sideways studio expansion later an opportunity to move into the old SARM East studios appeared. Along with 2 partners, in 2005 we refitted the studios and quickly became one of the best places to record in East London, with a huge pooled equipment collection, impressive studio history and a perfect location on Brick Lane. So began an amazing few years both in the studio and on the road, recording, producing and playing on hundreds of sessions with the likes of Florence + the Machine, Glen Matlock and the Irrepressibles, touring with Babyshambles and Lefthand, and Mores releases with Ambiguous Records. In 2009 the business expanded and the studio relocated to Dean St, Soho, and is now one of London’s most popular studios. See here

As Dean St became more and more of a big business, I needed somewhere I could call my own, so in 2010 we converted our flat in Woolwich into a Joe Meek style setup, with tie lines running from the loft into each of the downstairs rooms. It even had a steam room/echo chamber! It was a beautiful place and I recorded albums for Rob Marr, Jackson Scott, Holly and the Wolf, and singles for Mr. David Viner and LA Salami there.



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