“Hot Property” also features stylistic nods to house music within a slick pastiche of disparate elements, including Super Mario-era synths pitched into a maudlin grain and the creep of a Rick James bassline, accented with riffs guitarist Rob Harris managed to borrow from the Minneapolis Sound.įor a band that once leaned so heavily on gimmicks involving the marvels of space travel, it’s refreshing to see Jay Kay rebuke technology as panacea so explicitly. The sentiments of “Shake”-“If we’re going to do this thing, let’s do it and do it right / I know we can reach the stars, I know we can reach the heights, yeah”-quickly shifts to “Cloud 9”s silky smooth hook: “Only a fool could walk away from me this time / I look up to heaven and every star I see is mine / Only a fool could walk away from me this time / I’m walking on air and every cloud is Cloud 9.” The song also marks the first of the album’s many lyrical vacillations between considered optimism and euphoria. house influence permeates this new record from the jump, with the opening track, “Shake It On,” which unabashedly consummates the band’s previous flirtations with four-on-the-floor dance music. Automaton is a pop/funk/acid jazz/disco/proto-house opus that succeeds in discounting the band’s growing pains within the confines of both fame and pop music.Īn undeniable U.K. Their latest effort Automaton arrives in the wake of their biggest hiatus yet: it’s been a full seven years since the release of their last album Rock Dust Light Star.īut one of the most curious aspects of Jamiroquai’s later oeuvre is that the same unfortunate set of stakes that produced the floundering style experiments of the 2000s has yielded the band’s finest effort in 20 years. It doesn’t help that the time between albums for the group has been getting longer and longer. While they remained stars in their native England, landing at or near the top of the charts with each album, here in the States, the group faced declining record sales and an inability to keep their cultural relevance. Just as “Virtual Insanity” was receiving hosannas at the VMAs in 1997, the first iterations of Napster were heralding a distribution revolution that would cripple the relevance of institutions like MTV. One of the more indelible images of the ‘90s is Jay Kay, leader of Jamiroquai, dancing around moving floors and furniture with Fred Astaire-like flourishes in the music video for “Virtual Insanity.” It made a star of out him (and his hat) while pushing London’s homegrown funk and acid jazz scenes to the forefront.Īt the same time, Jamiroquai would get caught up in the massive shakeups that befell the music industry.
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