{"id":68860,"date":"2023-10-18T16:23:34","date_gmt":"2023-10-18T16:23:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/likecelebwn.com\/?p=68860"},"modified":"2023-10-18T16:23:34","modified_gmt":"2023-10-18T16:23:34","slug":"james-blake-on-uk-club-culture-devotion-to-design-and-playing-robots-into-heaven","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/likecelebwn.com\/entertainment\/james-blake-on-uk-club-culture-devotion-to-design-and-playing-robots-into-heaven\/","title":{"rendered":"James Blake on UK Club Culture, Devotion to Design, and 'Playing Robots Into Heaven'"},"content":{"rendered":"

Over the past decade, James Blake has become a master of collaboration. But by tapping into his past as a more singular solo artist, he created one of his best albums to date: Playing Robots Into Heaven<\/em>. \u201cThis album wasn’t exactly a return to a sound,\u201d he explains to Hypebeast, \u201cIt was more like, \u201cWhere does this process<\/em> lead me these days?\u201d<\/p>\n

The process mentioned is one which first brought James Blake his original success. While Blake seemed to appear out of nowhere in 2010, you wouldn\u2019t say he \u201cburst\u201d on to the scene. Instead, the Enfield-born musician carefully dropped a considered array of avant-garde, spectral and awe-inspiring tracksthat would go on to shake up the course of electronic music.<\/p>\n

Songs such as \u201cCMYK\u201d, \u201cThe Bells Sketch\u201d and \u201cAir and Lack Thereof\u201d incorporated sonics people simply hadn\u2019t heard before, with auto-tuned vocalsthat had been chopped, diced, sped-up or slowed-down with real, electronic soul. They brought together a combination of Blake\u2019s classical training, expertly flipped R&B samples from the likes of Aaliyah and Kelis, and a real understanding of London after dark, where he was educated by basslines emanating out of East End clubs like Herbal and Plastic People in the early noughties.