Orbital's Final Blue Album

Reported by simple

After 15 years working together as Orbital, Paul and Phil Hartnoll have announced that their forthcoming LP The Blue Album will be their last. For much more on the album, read below.

Noted for their collaborations, Orbital’s last album is no exception featuring work from fellow sibling legends, Sparks. “We wanted some vocals on the track “Pants,” something fairly odd, and thought Sparks would be perfect,” says Paul. “It turned out they’re quite up for a bit of collaboration and said yes when we approached them. After we’d asked them I set about listening to some of their recent work and was pleasantly surprised to find it was even more bonkers than their original stuff. It was all done across the Atlantic, via file sharing and CD’s, and when we heard it we realised it was really a track in it’s own right so we remixed it and it’s ended up here as “Acid Pants,” it’s own thing.”

“We’ve got another track [“One Perfect Sunrise”] we did with Lisa Gerrard who was in Dead Can Dance, singing on it. That’s a spin off from something we wrote for a Sunrise scene, in another film …that’s turned out well.”

Another audible influence on the album is that of legendary transsexual composer Walter/Wendy Carlos. “Absolutely,” says Paul, “I tried to do something with a sort of Clockwork Orange feel, and that became “Bath Time.” “It started off by being hummed in the bath on tour before I was about to go and meet everyone for a pint in San Francisco. Got out of the bath and scribbled it down on my laptop and finished it over last summer, adding little bits in buses and vans while I was travelling. And it went on from there. It became like Clockwork Orange and Kraftwerk combined. Electronic music for electronic music’s sake, dodging all real instrument sounds.”

“I think we feel that Orbital has run its course. We’re both pursuing different avenues with our music. And we’ve been sat, as brothers, in the same room for 15 years now–and studios are always confined spaces–I think it’s time for a change.”
— Paul Hartnoll

Aug 26 2004