The clip for “Feelings Come Undown” is available now
Acclaimed New York City-based electronic musician, producer and activist Moby shares a playful, hand-drawn music video for his latest Latin house-infused single “Feelings Come Undone” featuring Raquel Rodriguez. The video arrives following the release of his long-awaited 22nd studio album Always Centered at Night everywhere now.
The new video for “Feelings Come Undone” sees Moby illustrate the track with a marker on a whiteboard, starring an anonymous small space alien. The drawing is played back in reverse to mirror the track’s title as if to “undo” the story.
“Years ago when I was a little college dropout sleeping on my mom’s pull-out couch, I started drawing my space alien alter ego. I don’t know his name, but he keeps showing up and that makes me happy,” Moby shares.
Even by Moby’s standards, always centered at night is a bit special. The album features 13 collaborations in all, from names you might recognize to others you undoubtedly will come to recognize. The lead single “Dark Days” was recorded with acclaimed soul-jazz singer-songwriter Lady Blackbird, a defiant, rhythmic work propelled by her alluring, deep vocals and earnest soul. Other collaborators include Serpentwithfeet on the achingly beautiful “On Air,” and Benjamin Zephaniah on the propulsive, break-beat driven “Where is Your Pride?,” a spoken word with a powerful message delivered in the late dub poet’s characteristically warm Handsworth burr.
Other wonderful voices on Always Centered at Night, include Sudanese, Netherlands-based chanteuse Gaidaa on “transit,” London-based, Burundian royal refugee J.P. Bimeni, and Kingston-raised, London-based Aynzli Jones.
The album is the continuation of the project of the same name that Moby announced in 2022. He saw this project as a similar service to the idiosyncratic New York record shops that he frequented in the late 1980s, where he’d hear something recondite and exciting and it would open up whole new worlds. always centered at night was his way of working with special writers and vocalists to make songs inspired by the spirit of musical discovery.
These are often personal songs, and the personal is the political, as is the border-defying nature of the work. Moreover, they’re crepuscular, conceived at twilight, with many of the styles of the last 30 years in electronic music coming to the fore, such as the trip-hoppy “We’re Going Wrong” featuring Brie O’Banion, the broken beat, almost drum ‘n’ bass influenced “Medusa” with Aynzli Jones, or the Latin house of “Feelings Come Undone” with Raquel Rodriguez.
Moby will embark on his first tour in over a decade later this year across Europe/UK in celebration of Play, which featured classics “Porcelain,” “Natural Blues” and “Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?” and sold over 12 million copies worldwide, winning numerous awards and becoming the biggest-selling electronic album of all time. Tickets for the select dates, including a newly added show in Lausanne, Switzerland, are on sale now. Several dates have already sold out with 100% of his tour profits going to European animal rights organizations.