teisipäev, 11. september 2018

Ricky Inch - Galaxy 77 (Ossom Records, 2018) Album Review



Riho Ints, alias Ricky Inch, is one of the best examples from the Estonian contemporary soulful dance music scene, and his long awaited solo debut album 'Galaxy 77' is the proof of it. This record brings together all the different shades of house music – deep, funky, disco, tech, underground. - you name it. 

The albums tone is settled with the introduction track 'Connections' with its lively sounding bass guitar and creative electric piano keyboards by Osamu Fukuzawa. A vocal which comes from the soul is delivered by the Bulgarian r&b singer Todor Gadjalov. What follows is an 180-degree turn with the tech house sounding 'Side Effect' with its clunky drums. The albums run-through theme of space and cosmic exploration is represented in instrumental, synthesizer filled nu-disco flavored tracks like 'Galactic Ride 77', 'Space Funk', 'Potatoes On Mars' and 'Lone Jet'. We even get some UK garage influenced skippy beats with 'String & Basso'. There's plenty of dancefloor filling material with tracks like 'Dolce Vita Duty' which has that strobe lights flashing dark room sound. Vocal rich 'The Way I Do' and 'Really Want To Know' are radio friendly songs with a pop-house touch, but not in a tired and predictable way like so much of new dance music. You can hum the melodic 'Sentimental Man' even days after listening. The album finishes with the downtempo lounge feeling track 'The Message'. 

All of this is the artists introduction to his own musical galaxy, where there are no exact boundaries between genres. If its got a good vibe, then everything goes. The album features a roster of talented guest musicians and singers, all masterfully orchestrated together and produced in the studio by Ricky Inch. The result is personal, real and sincere.

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