Abolition of the Royal Familia (Deluxe)

Abolition of the Royal Familia (Deluxe)

Between the album title and the cover art, you might expect that The Orb’s Abolition of the Royal Familia advocates for insurrection. But the reality of the record, a companion to 2018’s No Sounds Are Out of Bounds, is more complicated. For all their implicit critique of the British monarchy, Alex Paterson and his fellow pranksters (including longtime comrades Youth, Steve Hillage, and Roger Eno) mainly occupy themselves as they always have, molding ambient, dub, and house into voluminous shapes the color and texture of cotton candy. It all kicks off with a surprisingly groove-heavy opening, as the gauzy disco of “Daze (Missing & Messed Up Mix)” gives way to the heavier “House of Narcotics (Opium Wars Mix)” and then the peak-time house of “Hawk Kings (Oseberg Buddhas Buttonhole).” But the bulk of the album is as beatifically supine as The Orb has ever sounded. “Afros, Afghans and Angels (Helgö Treasure Chest)” is a pastel snapshot of easy-listening orchestra; “Shape Shifters (In Two Parts) [Coffee & Ghost Train Mix]” morphs from jazzy new age into moonwalking reggae. Even the closing “Slave Till U Die No Matter What U Buy,” an ambient remake of Jello Biafra’s “Message From Our Sponsor,” is dreamy rather than dread-filled. The Orb has always known how to channel even the zaniest impulses into compellingly psychedelic music; on Abolition of the Royal Familia, their gallows humor sounds deceptively sweet.

Other Versions

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada