Barnes & Noble
On their third recording, Mezzanine, Massive Attack manage to jack it up without getting much louder. Retaining the deep, dubby bass lines that underpin most of 1991's Blue Lines and 1995's Protection, the Bristol, England, collective adds snarling guitar drones, Middle Eastern vocal accents, and electric keyboards to their sonic landscape. The result is alluring and deliberately unobtrusive, though slightly oblique, as Elizabeth Fraser (of the Cocteau Twins) and regulars Horace Andy and Sarah Jay croon gentle tales atop this sonic concoction. "Teardrop" and "Risingson" -- which features a sample of the Velvet's "I Found a Reason" -- are among the highlights, and though they don't quite match the cool fire of Blue Lines's best track, "Unfinished Sympathy," this album is more consistent than its predecessors, and innovative throughout. Martin Johnson
All Music Guide
Increasingly ignored amidst the exploding trip-hop scene, Massive Attack finally returned in 1998 with Mezzanine, a record immediately announcing not only that the group was back, but that they'd recorded a set of songs just as singular and revelatory as on their debut, almost a decade back. It all begins with a stunning one-two-three-four punch: "Angel," "Risingson," "Teardrop," and "Inertia Creeps." Augmenting their samples and keyboards with a studio band, Massive Attack open with "Angel," a stark production featuring pointed beats and a distorted bassline that frames the vocal (by group regular Horace Andy) and a two-minute flame-out with raging guitars. "Risingson" is a dense, dark feature for Massive Attack themselves (on production as well as vocals), with a kitchen sink's worth of dubby effects and reverb. "Teardrop" introduces another genius collaboration -- with Elizabeth Fraser from Cocteau Twins -- from a production unit with a knack for recruiting gifted performers. The blend of earthy with ethereal shouldn't work at all, but Massive Attack pull it off in fine fashion. "Inertia Creeps" could well be the highlight, another feature for just the core threesome. With eerie atmospherics, fuzz-tone guitars, and a wealth of effects, the song could well be the best production from the best team of producers the electronic world had ever seen. Obviously, the rest of the album can't compete, but there's certainly no sign of the side-two slump heard on Protection, as both Andy and Fraser return for excellent, mid-tempo tracks ("Man Next Door" and "Black Milk," respectively). John Bush