So records I love end up having one of two characteristics – either a groove or a sound I really liked repeated with small variations, consistently, or a lot of tonal variety song-to-song which you keeps me off balance and interested in what comes next. “Dummy” doesn’t have either of these – the groove is late night lounge singer, albeit a mournful one with a fair degree of soul, backed by rhythms so slow and subtle they sound like they’re being played by a band five towns away from the recording studio and therefore delayed by a few seconds. That said, I appreciate the innovation – it’s a unique combination, this trip hop of theirs, and new as it was at the time when I first heard it eons ago, it never really moved me – it was just another take on ambient. I’m not a fan of beautiful voices anyhow as a rule – I think of vocalists as accompaniment to music and not vice versa, and no good lounge singer is ever going to be upstaged by the band. That’s the case here, but the novelty of the beats and scratches is at least intellectually interesting, even if the music/record doesn’t speak to me. Among the tunes, they largely pass me by save for the one I know well (Sour Times) and Wandering Star, my favo(u)rite, where the background overcomes the singer for a while. Glory Box is kind of like this too but I've always found it a little underwhelming. One wouldn't even know the band had a full-time guitarist til that track actually if you didn't know (and I didn't - I looked it up). A few of you brought up Sade, and I might also bring up Ivy, but in both cases the music connects much better with me despite a quite talented female singer. So this is another sit-and-listen record, and while I’m pretty sure Beth Gibbons' feelings are real, I’m also pretty sure they’re one-note. I wouldn’t mind digging deeper to figure it out, but we’d still be left with music that is intriguing mentally but flat-footed and, let’s face it, a bit dull . . . or, more likely, so subtle that I can’t tell the difference. 5/10, mostly for uniqueness.