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  1. Jun 16, 2018 · With backing from Marshall and producer Neil Davidge, Del Naja eventually got the upper hand in the unfolding civil war within the group, but not without Vowles landing a sneaky suckerpunch or two along the way.

  2. Dec 28, 2013 · That’s something confirmed by Mezzanine producer Neil Davidge – essentially a fourth member of the band throughout the sessions, and a central part of the group ever since.

  3. Initially, Davidge was brought in as engineer, but soon became producer. [29] The group increasingly fractured in the lead-up to the third album, Davidge having to co-produce the three producers' ideas separately.

  4. Jun 13, 2024 · Davidge and Vowles fleshed out the composition and used a sped-up sample from Les McCann’s “Sometimes I Cry” for the beat. Vowles decided he wanted Madonnawith whom Massive Attack had...

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  5. Apr 20, 2018 · The producer Neil Davidge later described the process as “messy,” but from that angst, tension, and messiness, Massive Attack delivered a masterpiece. Robert Del Naja, Grant Marshall, and Andrew Vowles in 1998.

  6. Jul 5, 2023 · The album had a particularly tortured genesis, which saw the band record separately in an attempt to keep their fractured relationships at bay, the success of which can be judged by the fact that Andrew “Mushroom” Vowles left Massive Attack soon after the album’s release, leaving Robert “3D” Del Naja and Grant “Daddy G” Marshall ...

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  8. Andrew "Mushroom" Vowles left the group soon after the album's release, due to creative conflicts, while reggae artist and Massive Attack collaborator Horace Andy contributed to the album on multiple songs. [7] . The album's working title was Damaged Goods, which was the name of Gang of Four's 1978 debut single. [3]