After holding his own in the darkest days of
the Stone Roses' career and then co-writing the best tracks on
Ian Brown's debut solo album, 2000 was as good a time as any for
Aziz Ibrahim to come out of the session musician closet. "Middle Road" has guests like
Paul Weller and
Mani, but due to its aroma of a sitar-flecked effort wafting out like
the Jam soundtracking a Bollywood epic, it's all thumbs and not exactly super-group detonation. Even fellow track "Kills Me" manages to just amble around the perimeter of a song -- regardless of
Primal Scream's backing vocalist
Denise Johnson and ex-
Smiths members
Andy Rourke and
Mike Joyce trying to fill out the sound with impromptu musicianship. Fret not, though. The reason for the real praise is "Murassi." Featuring
Talvin Singh and sounding not surprisingly like
the Stone Roses feasting of Indian rock cuisine, it cascades with one of the most sincere and picturesque East/West crossovers in recent memory. Session musician tags and wasted guests notwithstanding, this is music that belies the mediocrity of the title.
–
Dean Carlson, Rovi