In their second album Sydney dance trio RÜFÜS continue to make music that is exceptionally good at not interrupting the good vibrations of party people
“My work is to enter people’s lives with my music,” says Canadian singer Céline Dion in her 2005 biography, For Keeps. “Do you think I want to disturb them when they bake? Do you think I want to disturb them when they make love? I want to be part of it. I don’t want to interrupt.”
The quote reappears in Carl Wilson’s 2013 book Let’s Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste, an investigation into why many people enjoy music that so many other people — critics, mainly — think is terrible. Dion’s quote is part of the answer: the more music intrudes on people’s lives, the less welcome it is. To be successful then, is to be an invisible accessory.
Continue reading...by Marcus Teague via Electronic music | The Guardian
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