Early in their career,
the Orb were accused (but never proven) of creating a series of trance mixes of
Pink Floyd albums, and the group had plenty of other Floydian references too -- most obviously, the
Battersea Power Station appeared or was parodied on several of their releases. The connection only became direct, though, in 2009, when
David Gilmour recorded a version of the
Graham Nash single
"Chicago" with help from producer
Youth, an occasional member of
the Orb going back to the early '90s. It was a charity single to aid accused hacker Gary McKinnon, but it became the springboard for further collaboration one year later, after
Orb main man
Dr. Alex Paterson became involved.
Metallic Spheres is the result, a 49-minute odyssey that is very intentionally split up into only two tracks.
The Orb fans and
Pink Floyd fans should have no trouble with this album. In fact,
Orb fans will find more resemblance to their classic early-'90s sound than ever; that is, less dense soundworlds and more skeletal groove-riding over a lazy 4/4 beat. Meanwhile,
Pink Floyd fans looking for the imprint of the master will find them everywhere --
Gilmour's guitar or lap steel, and rarely, his vocals (sampled from
"Chicago") feature all over this record, mostly reminiscent of either the countrified haze originally heard on
Meddle or the, well, spacy haze from
The Dark Side of the Moon. The highlight comes 40-odd minutes into the record, when
Youth takes up his mighty bass for
"Chicago Dub." Otherwise, the record simply rolls along with all the sublime calm of
The Orb's Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld or the "Echoes" portion of
Meddle. ~ John Bush