Since 2005, Benjamin Schoos and his label of esoteric pop-loving misfits, Freaksville, have been doing their best to keep the Belgian / French language pop scene awash with an alternative to the usual radio fodder. As a solo artiste, Benjamin has released six or seven albums which veer all over the slightly kitsch shop. On Quand La Nuit Tombe Sur l’Orchestre, he has attempted to compile a collection of instrumental pieces from the last three albums that sit together and evoke a certain mood.
It is not all trips down televisual memory lane, though. The dreamy acoustic guitar progressions of “Cine Nostalgia” have a touch of melancholy, but when plied with bursts of space Theremin (or something like it), the track is taken right out there. We are also given a better opportunity to sample the drummer’s capabilities and he has a deft touch that really propels some of the songs. There are also a couple of irresistible dancefloor smashes, all Studio 54 and Moroder-like flourishes. The string-inflected “Les Amants De l’Atlantide” is irresistibly funky and you could imagine Baccara laying a sexy vocal over the top, whereas “Disco Europe Express” is deeper and even more delicious, with a syrupy female vocal that grows sexier and breathier as the track progresses. “I’d like a rum and coke”, intones one of the protagonists at some point, and I think that says it all.
Things take an Americana turn on “La Fidelite”, the deep acoustic guitar duelling with a more vibrant electric as the drummer throws fills into the mix, sending us out to the desert with a sweet Chris Cacavas-style organ run keeping us company, but then take a turn for the lachrymose on “Dans Les Bras De La Nuit”. Here there is something for the ladies, as Alain Chamfort does a spoken word accompaniment in a perfect style. I know it is a compilation, but the variation is endless and all the better for that. Early morning piano ballads, teary-eyed with Theremin; headlong driving drama underpinned with a bobbing bass line, even a bar-room piano feel on “La Villa Borghini” that brings to mind a carousing café dance, replete with clarinet.Quand La Nuit Tombe Sur l’Orchestre is a delight for the senses and for the mind and I for one will be exploring his back catalogue; but for now, I think Jacques Brel has a contender for most vital Belgian. Long may this continue.
-Mr Olivetti-