LHB
LHB are the duo Giles Barton and Lee Wilson-Wolfe whose debut for a major, Tell 'Em Who We Are, has the potential to be one of the biggest-selling dance records of 2002. There is nothing particularly new or out of the ordinary about their style but the skill and creative ideals used to successfully blend so many different genres of dance in every song are rare talents. The opener "No Transmission" is a poppy brand of hip-hop-infused house with an organ hook reminiscent of Moby in a "simple-yet-fiendishly-catchy" way, and the tone of the album is pitched somewhere between the dance floor and your headphones. Further flirting with timbre can be found on "Coming Up for Air" where acoustic guitars, an ethereal vocal and a dirty electro bassline effortlessly mingle in a downbeat epic worthy of Massive Attack on a good day. You could go on forever drawing comparisons with other artists: the Beck-esque vocals of "Everybody Sees It in My Face"; or the easy-cheesin' lounge samples of the title track.....\r