One record at a time: 300. Gary Numan - Outland

"Outland" was originally released in 1991 and finds Gary on his knees. The music on this record was supposedly influenced by the production style of Jam and Lewis but Numan's attempts to write songs in a complimentary R&B/funk style fall completely flat.

It's not that this record is badly made, but the sound of a round peg being hammered into a square hole for forty minutes is challenging to listen to.

"Soul Protection" is just pseudo-R&B garbage that sounds like a poor man's "Rhythm Nation 1814". Don't get me wrong, I like Janet Jackson, I just don't like listening to a bad impersonation of it.

Songs like "My World Storm", "Devotion" and "From Russia Infected" are just too derivative and have a sound that doesn't suit Numan's voice. Adding well-known samples from science fiction films like Blade Runner or The Terminator doesn't add value or make the songs sound atmospheric; it just screams of desperation.

If the previous album "Metal Rhythm" was all about the sound of the Ronald D-50, then "Outland" is built on the Korg M1. Songs like "Heart" are swathed in the preset combination patch "Beauty" and sounds like "Lore" and "Finger Snap" pop up quite frequently. In fact Numan continued to use the "Beauty" patch on quite a few albums until Ade Fenton came along and rightly stamped it out a few years later. I can't warm to this album and whilst there are cheesier albums in Numan's back catalogue, this is the one I enjoy the least. 1/5

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