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The
Alpha Story
In 1997, their debut album, the well-entitled Come from Heaven,
manages to operate a delicate synthesis between pop classicism of
the 60’s and the modernity of contemporary productions. In
this album, Alpha acutely alludes to the greatest songwriters and
arrangers of the past (Lee Hazlewood, Scott Walker, Jimmy Webb or
Burt Bacharach), without ever yielding to the facilities of sympathetic
nostalgia or retro-futurism. Quickly, the list of their admirers
looks like a Who’s Who of the international pop scene : David
Bowie, Radiohead, Pulp, or Madonna all rave about Come from Heaven,
and eventually start on collaborations with the duet.
After the release in 1998 of the remix album Pepper and a European
tour with Massive attack, it takes Alpha three years to return at
their best. On their second album, The Impossible Thrill, Andy and
Corin continue with the work started on Come from Heaven by enriching
their musical palette with organic sounds and mixing strings to
the most relevant samples.
Andy and Corin had now also gain a reputaion for their remixes,
check out the list
Two years went by, full of events. With the end of Melankolic, the
outfit is left isolated, and from now on exclusively depends on
itself. Alpha takes advantage of what could have been a restraint
to assert their spirit of independance and tie new bonds, notably
with France where they undertake fruitful collaborations with some
artists (Avia) and Catalogue, now in charge of the band’s
releases across the continent. As usual, Andy and Corin crafted
Star Gazing in their own home studio, in an intimate atmosphere
disturbed only by a few births and other moves... Carrying on their
work of sonic exploration and experimentation, they recorded about
fifty tracks before proceeding to a strict selection. The Impossible
Thrill outcome is strikingly coherent.
This album features the regular vocalists of Alpha (Martin Barnard,
Wendy Stubbs and Helen White), but also a newcomer, Kelvin Swaybe.
The aforementioned, a long-time friend of the duet and collaborator
of Adrian Utley (Portishead), effortlessly managed to merge in the
universe of Alpha, as it shows on Elvis and I Just Wanna Make You,
two of the most stunning tracks of the record. So no Revolution
there, contrary to what the cover of The Beatles’ classic
released last year in France could have suggested. Only the deepening,
the perfecting of a skillfuness for songwriting, arranging and producing.
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