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Underworld: Oblivion With Bells

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by Billy Hamilton
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 15/10/2007

With wine rapidly transcending into the nation’s favourite pub-time tipple, it’s fitting that Underworld have taken on a more ambient guise. Not that the duo of Karl Hyde and Rick Smith (once a trio with Darren Emerson’s grey matter splitting wheel-spinnery at the helm) ever consigned themselves to the "lager, lager, lager" lairyness that evolved after 1996’s stratosphere-smashing anthem ‘Born Slippy’ – the otherworldly techno-zipping of Second Toughest In The Infants quelled any such notions – but there comes a point in every act’s life where dignity and a quiet sense of self-confidence supersedes air fisting, speaker-box shuddering euphoria. And in the release of their fifth LP, it seems Underworld’s time has finally come.

Oblivion With Bells is a comedown record crafted by the pioneers of cranium-scrambling comedowns past. Those thunderous juggernautal floor-fillers like ‘King Of Snake’ or ‘Pearl’s Girl’ are long gone, replaced with ethereal slow-building plateaus of electronic swirls and ear-clothed percussion. And where Hyde’s coarse vocal strains once transported jaw-chewing hoards into the upper-echelons of ecstasy infused utopia, his new-found monotonic mumble now guides them through a claustrophobic underpass of foreboding walls and petrifying, sensor-squirming paranoia.

Yet as ‘Crocodile’’s bass heavy groove reverberates round the eardrums it’s difficult to diagnose this mellowed atmospheric adoption. Growling and gnarling to an incessant limb-scattering rhythm, it’s the traversing, smoke-fuelled sound of post-club, all-back-to-mine-at-the-end-of-the-night elation riddled with tempered crows and surging electro-slithers. But once ‘Beautiful Bernout’’s melodica-infused hypnotism bypasses ‘Holding The Mouth’'s driving beat minimalism, Oblivion With Bells gently blends itself into the head-holding, knee-cradling break of dawn.

Shivering synths scatter across ‘Ring Road’’s ritualistic melody as Hyde unfurls himself as a loquacious, all-seeing beat-poet; weaving together prophetic verses with the unabashed devotion of a babbling shamanic street preacher. But this nocturnal aural bliss quickly dozes off into slumberous realms as tempos drop and asphyxiated trance infiltrates banal, attention-less scores like ‘Boy, Boy, Boy’ and the droning, repetitive wail of ‘Faxed Invitation’. Sluggish and littered with an ambivalent sense of uniformity, it’s as if these one-time purveyors of seismic, pulse-pushing epics have aged from distinguished tune-merchants to comatosed, flat-cap festering pensioners over the course of eleven tracks.

Album closer ‘Best Mamgu Ever’ at least proves there’s still some life left before the obligatory pipe and slippers are acquired – lifting itself into an effervescent dub-tinged spectacle of starlit effects and deep-filling bass – but after an auspicious introduction Oblivion With Bells has disappointingly descended into an irreconcilable docile abyss. Perhaps it’s about time Underworld laid off the vino and sunk a few pints of the heavy stuff?

  • Underworld 6 / 10

Glam Bucket

is great mind. About right. I'd have given it a 7, but the first 4 tracks sadly don't represent that terrible middle part.

The annoying thing is the Riverrun project they've done on the net for the last 2 years has had loads of great stuff in its depths. Its great they weren't lazy and just rereleased it, but maybe they shot themselves in the foot by not doing so.

Still, great set the other night. Not as vital as they once were alas, but still better than most of the pack (barring that terrible "Streets-esque" monologue


Oblivion With Bells

is a tough album. I can put it on and lose myself in whatever I'm doing to it, which is good, but I agree that there's a lack on insistence that's plagued Underworld's last few releases. A Hundred Days Off took me a while to get into - the exit of Emerson wasn't an easy pill to swallow. The guy really did add a lot to their sound - indeed, Cowgirl, Pearl's Girl, King of Snake etc, are magnificent because of his beat prowess - Pearl's Girl with its euphoric use of 2 Bad Mice's Bombscare breakbeat that just puts it completely over the edge.

Underworld mk3 just don't have that willingness to push a beat anymore. A Hundred Days off was Techno via the Ballearics, Oblivion with Bells feels like the start of 28 Days Later... walking home after the party of all parties through eerily empty streets, feeling half calm and half paranoid. Techbiance? Ambno?

Beautiful Burnout is the highlight for me.


I once read

a really good article about how little Emerson contributed to some of the Underworld 'classics', but i know what you mean. A lot of the beats have all got a lot more mellow in recent years. Then again, they are in their 40 / 50's


I think I recall

that article... it came out between Beaucoup Fish and A Hundred Days Off, no? I detected a smattering of bitterness about Emerson leaving - and let's face it, as evidenced, during the time he was in the band, they produced their 3 best albums.


(That's not to say

I dislike Underworld sans Emerson - I've been waiting for Oblivion With Bells on tenterhooks. It's just the same deal with Massive Attack - I still love them, but they put out their greatest stuff when Mushroom (where is he now?) was still around - even if he himself didn't think so.)


Anyone that has those three download EPs they did

Are they worth getting? For someone that's a big fan, that is...


I like all three of them for different reasons

They're each one, long half hour track that kind of ebb and flow, but I'm certainly happier to have them than to not. Plus when you download the 3 of them, you get a megamix mp3 of all of them...

That article was indeed just before AHDO I think. These last 2 records have been frustrating. I like them both immensely, but I guess its saying something when you're still hoping thei live set largely ignores them...