Westbam – Don’t Look Back in Anger

August 18, 2010

There’s lots of people in this video, so I’m not completely sure which of them is the German dance musician. But I’d say this guy’s a fair guess…



[Video][Website]
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Mallory O’Donnell: Tasteful crossover from one of Germany’s most venerable DJs, “Dont Look Back in Anger” is thankfully neither an Oasis cover nor hiding any trance leanings. Actually, for a pop mix of a big floor track it’s quite concise, albeit lacking any of the wobbly, yet somehow classy gleefulness of the original mix.
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Katherine St Asaph: From his video: “As further proof of his enduring talent, he returns with a new single, sounding as fresh and cutting-edge as ever.”
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Martin Skidmore: Is he still going, or restarting? The string flourishes early on here remind me rather of “The Final Countdown”. Otherwise it’s mid-paced techno/house, slickly done, but the song is sadly vague and aimless, and the singing unexciting. I wanted to like it more than I do.
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Jonathan Bogart: Normally I would consider it part of my due diligence to check and see if this is a cover of the Oasis song (which I’ve never heard), but whether it is or not, it’s techno that Oasis fans can embrace, which means it’s one-note, thudding, and stupid.
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Maura Johnston: The opening had me hoping this was going to be some sort of icy-synth Oasis remake. Alas, it’s not even that interesting; instead we have a bunch of effects piled on top of one another, then presented as a formless song that seems made for transitioning between two big huge hits by a DJ whose mix is commandeering the speakers of a club that I probably wouldn’t be able to — or want to — get inside.
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David Raposa: Fair warning to any readers that think I know anything about anything, but to my untrained ears, this is just long-lunch punch-the-clock techno that’s pushing all the required buttons (Come Up / Come Down / Beat Drop / Diva / Piano Outro) except the ones that get me moving (or at least force me to consider the possibility of motion).
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Frank Kogan: I’m not the one to judge how successfully functional this is, since the function this music adorns isn’t my function; but out of the rave context this seems as if it could have been a nice gentle ditty, mildly melancholic, that didn’t need to be lifted up by an ocean of sound.
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