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The Overlords - All The Naked People


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The Overlords - All The Naked People

 

Artist: The Overlords

Title: All The Naked People

Label: Habana

Date: 1994

 

Track listing:

 

01. 06'00" God's Eye

02. 03'35" Coming 2 Go

03. 04'53" The 7th Stage

04. 04'59" Naked People

05. 04'55" Spiral

06. 02'18" Starseed

07. 04'08" White Room

08. 04'04" Wow Mr Yogi

09. 04'44" Solaris

10. 04'41" Masses

 

Review:

 

Goa with lyrics? Well, that's essentially

what this is... Wait, don't run away yet!

Overlords was Ian Ion's old band, before he

became the producer of Koxbox. They made

"Electronic Body Music" along the lines of

Front 242, before turning to trance in 1992

with the remake of "Sundown" (a Goa classic).

Tracks like "God's Eye On Goa" followed, and

this sound can clearly be heard here, on their

final album... so is it any good? Let's see...

First we have "God's Eye", a poppier version

of that infamous track. Though watered down

slightly, the same madness is present in this

version... driving, pushing rhythms, lots of

melody, and trippy instrumental samples.

Vocal performances are strong, and the track

has the best "outro" I've heard in a long

time (middle eastern strings, "spiritual"

sounding synth and didges, really nice!).

Good stuff... The next track, "Coming 2 Go", is

also really groovy and rhythmic, with a nice

"rolling" feel. Very melodic, almost

commercial sounding, but the esoteric lyrical

content lifts it above "rave fodder". It's

just a shame about the length! Track 3, "The

7th Stage", is an instrumental, Kox Box-y

track, and is a real masterpiece... this is

true Goa! Beginning slowly with rain forest

samples, it hypnotises with a groovy bass and

drifting psy-sounds (you may recognize one

melody from Juno Reactor's "Labyrinth", another

Ian co-production). The whole track has this

feeling of a beautiful, soul cleansing jungle

trip... "you are all entrapped" says the voice

and I believe it. One to have a good cry to.

But, what goes up must come down, and track 4

"Naked People" is a really crap love song -

with lyrics like "I'll make it rain, I'll make

you shine, come again into my mind".

Bleeech! This could've been a really cool,

subversive trance anthem, and they blew it

with the vocals. The worst one here.

"Spiral" is much much better... another

instrumental, with a ravey sound, but quite

unconventional in it's execution (I can't

believe they made the tuba sound good!).

Really nice if you like (for instance) old

808 State/Prodigy stuff... `ardcore will never

die! ;-) "Starseed" is a short ambient piece

with Timothy Leary quotes. Pleasant, but

nothing ground breaking. I don't really care

for the next track, which is a cover of Cream's

"White Room"... it's a decent cover, but WHY?

How can you improve on a classic? "Wow! Mr.

Yogi", however, is just great. Stereotypical

Indian melodies (in the best way), EBM riffs,

and a mini-metaphysical discourse in the

lyrics ("so you want to make up your own

reality? well my friend, that's no abnormality.

but if you go for the world with cruelty, then

you didn't understand a thing. meditate and

mantain another state of consciousness").

"Solaris" is a chill-out, ambient techno track

with a really beautiful atmosphere (a little

bit like Juno Reactor). And the album finishes

with the rather sad sounding, but very catchy

"Masses"... Overall, I really like this album.

Ian Ion wasn't entirely satisfied with it,

and it's not hard to see why: it's an uneasy

mixture of Goa and commercial influences.

Some of it could've been better (2, 4, 7) but

as a whole, the album works... so, I'll give

it 6.5/10 (add two points if you like The

Shamen, Praga Khan, or lyrics in general).

It's a cool piece of psy-trance history, and

well worth seeking out.

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I had incredibly high expectations when I first heard this album since the

cover is absolutely beautiful, needless to say I was let down since I had

extremely high expectations and thought this was an all-out goa album, and in

the end I din't buy it.

 

Since I got the Gods Eye 12" I started to change my opinion about the poppier

album version of the song. I actually really like it and especially the

lyrics. This might seem really silly to some but for me the song seems to

convey a message of how the band went to goa in order to find enlightment but

instead became desillusioned by the promise goa couldn't keep. Prepared to

leave the surreal spiritual world they experienced in india for the ordinary

world's rainy streets of Copenhagen. "Sayonara cowboy, you can take my place",

leaving the mission to someone else to try to find the enlightment promised

by the now rather shattered naivistic dream of the goa revolution.

 

So now I really regret that I didn't buy this album when I had the chance.

 

Thanks for the exellent review Inukko.

 

For more oldschool action from Ian Ion, try to dig up the "shiva's edit"

version of "Wow mr. Yogi" on the dusty old Coma Records compilation "Mermaid

Trax" along with the track "Crystal" by "Koxbox"

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  • 6 years later...

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