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In Sides

In Sides
Orbitalinsides.jpg
Studio album by Orbital
Released 29 April 1996
Recorded 1995–1996 at The Strongroom, London
Genre
Length 72:02
Label Internal/FFRR
Producer Paul and Phil Hartnoll
Orbital chronology
Snivilisation
(1994)
In Sides
(1996)
The Middle of Nowhere
(1999)
Singles from In Sides
  1. "The Box"
    Released: 15 April 1996
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B+
Melody Maker very favourable
Muzik 4.5/5 stars
NME 9/10
Q 4/5 stars
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars
Select 5/5 medals
Stylus very favourable
Vox 8/10

In Sides is the fourth album by British electronic group Orbital, released in the UK on Internal on 29 April 1996. The album's title is a reference to the fact that the original vinyl LP release of the album was as a 3-LP vinyl box set, with one track per side of each disc.In Sides saw the band continue the process, begun on their previous album Snivilisation, of moving away from making music for the rave scene towards more intricately crafted melodies and reflective, downtempo tracks. Gathering widespread acclaim not just from dance music magazines but also the UK's more traditional rock music papers such as NME and Melody Maker, the album is considered by many reviewers and fans to be among Orbital's best work.

The album spent 12 weeks in the UK charts in 1996, and reached a high of No. 5 in the week of its release.

The album was recorded at Orbital's rented studio space at The Strongroom in central London. It was mostly programmed and recorded on Apple Mac computers using Logic Audio software and an E-mu Emax 2 E64 sampler. Various analogue synthesizers were also used to create the album, such as the ARP 2600, Roland SH-101, Oberheim Xpander and Roland Jupiter-6. A Roland TR-808 drum machine was used, but many tracks sampled the Hartnolls' friend Clune drumming live instead: Phil Hartnoll told Music Week, "We recorded him with about 15 mics [microphones] playing along to click tracks and doing things on his own".

The vocals on three of the album's tracks are credited to "Auntie", a pseudonym used by long-time collaborator Alison Goldfrapp on this release. Her singing on "Dŵr Budr" is nonsensical chanting, and has been rumoured to have been played backwards, though neither the brothers nor Goldfrapp herself will divulge any information.


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