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While it might be stretching things to call Hotel a "back to basics" album, it's certainly the most organic sonic mass in Moby's universe. For starters, the techno titan largely dispenses with the carefully structured vocal samples that usually top off his compositions, taking the mic himself on some songs and calling upon chanteuse Laura Dawn for a handful of others. Her alternately breathy and beckoning delivery adds a particularly sensual tone to the postcoital bask "I Like It" as well as a slowed-down, radically revamped cover of New Order's "Temptation." Moby proves to be no slouch in the vocal department, either, channeling ghosts of glam-rock past on "Spiders," the disc's most guitar-intensive track. Thanks to both the songwriting and the sequencing, Hotel has a nice, natural ebb and flow, with high-energy rave-ups like "Lift Me Up" -- probably the disc's most obvious homage to Moby's early days on the club scene -- building up loads of tension, while more introspective cuts like "Homeward Angel" allow for a laconic release. Those who are hooked on the sort of ambient soundscapes that usually punctuate Moby's releases will find plenty to luxuriate in on Hotel's bonus disc, an 11-song collection of instrumental pieces that occasionally jostle the synapses (the opening "Swear"), but mostly bring the non-noise in a most bucolic way. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble