King Midas Sound released their enthralling debut album ‘Waiting For You’ in the fading light of November 2009. A hyper-modern nocturnal take on lovers rock, featuring delicate but sour electronic instrumentals topped with Roger Robinson's bitter-sweet falsetto and Kiki Hitomi’s fragile voice, it highlighted a hitherto less-exposed side of producer Kevin Martin’s musical evolution. ‘Waiting For You’ returns now as ‘Without You’, transformed by a raft of carefully chosen collaborators.
For ‘Without You’ Kevin Martin has sourced a pool of radical reinterpretations that follow somewhat in the tradition of reggae, in the same way that the original ‘Waiting for You’ album did. Here instrumentals are reworked or totally rebuilt by a diverse set of artists from across the musical spectrum, and on other tracks, fresh vocal interpretations totally transform the flesh that adorns the bones of their parent rhythms.
The album opens with Kuedo’s stumbling, exhausted waltz rework of ‘Goodbye Girl’, before dBridge graces the rhythm for ‘Blue’ with his exquisite gentle falsetto, transforming it into ‘Without You’, adding layers of soaring chords that sound like a war in heaven. Flying Lotus’ mix of ‘Lost’ is loosely in a dancehall style, but fed through dizzying echo and crackle, while in stark comparison, Nite Jewel follows with a reinterpretation of ‘Lost’ as a sorrowful instrumental somewhere between synth funk and the Out Run arcade game soundtrack. Gang Gang Dance turn the doomy ‘Earth A Kill Ya’ into a goofy but earnest plea. King Midas Sound’s own KikiHitomi reinterprets ‘Cool Out’ as ‘Tears’, singing in a breathy soft Japanese accent, and Hyperdub artist Cooly G voices ‘Lost’ as a modern day lovers rock singer on ‘Spin Me Round’. Joel Ford (of …& Lopatin) sings a bright vocal on ‘Say Something’. Hype Williams lose ‘Sometime’ in bouncing footwork-like drums and loops, burrowing the track in lush blissed-out synths, while Kode9 And The Spaceape rework ‘Meltdown’ as a tender fly-on-the-wall interpretation of a break-up. Digital Mystikz' Mala invests his version of ‘Earth A Kill Ya’ with toxic dread and earthy power, whilst Deep Chord’s aerial dub of ‘Goodbye Girl’ spins whispery slithers of vocal around a sub bass and endlessly echoing fxs. Scritti Politti's Green Gartside revoices ‘I Man’ on ‘Come And Behold’ beautifuly. The album ends with a splatter, with Ras G’s vicous interpretation of dub on ‘Cool Out’.
It's rare that a compilation of new versions of old tracks will coalesce as naturally and solidly as this; ‘Without You’ sees all the contributors open themselves up and step inside the zone of King Midas Sound. Instead of squeezing the ideas of the originals dry, as is the shortcoming of most remix projects, the coherence of ‘Without You’ takes the original album clear into a new dimension of sound.