
Bring My Family Back is a masterclass in the duality of the late-nineties electronic experience.
At its core, the original track is a heavy, trip-hop-infused meditation on the collapse of a household. Maxi Jazz delivers his lyrics with the gravity of a secular priest, his baritone voice cutting through a dense fog of minor-key piano and cinematic strings.
It sounds like the moment the party ends and the reality of one's personal life rushes back in. It is music for the 'Sunday 8PM' headspace: reflective, slightly bruised, and deeply human.
How does Bring My Family Back sound next to the rest of Faithless's catalogue?
This album stays in step with the catalogue across the board — no axis departs enough to be worth its own note. Hover the dots to see where each one sits.
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