---
product_id: 18652610
title: "Play"
price: "₹ 1625"
currency: INR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.in/products/18652610-play
store_origin: IN
region: India
---

# Play

**Price:** ₹ 1625
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Play
- **How much does it cost?** ₹ 1625 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.in](https://www.desertcart.in/products/18652610-play)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

Product description Moby ~ Play desertcart.com The great iconoclast of techno returns with a smooth, sacred, and exhilarating record. Play's concoction of breakbeat rhythms, ambient mixology, and inspired blues and gospel samples cry out across musical genres and histories, imparting a time-tested wisdom to beat-driven ears. Moby's devout faith--in both God and his own musical whims--give this approach a sort of legitimacy that another, less sincere artist would never have. That sincerity reverberates through the beats and instrumental eclecticism like a pulse. The soulful refrains and proclamations in "Find My Baby" and "Natural Blues" somehow nestle between straight-up dance-floor rave-ups ("Bodyrock") and melt-in-your-mouth ambience ("Inside") with an effortless grace. Moby reaches across his turntables and finds something pure--almost organic. In fact, the album feels more natural than techno is ever supposed to feel, more spiritual than what DJs are supposed to be able to muster, and more alive than it has any right to be. --Matthew Cooke

Review: Still holds up after all this time - If I had the time, and space, I could write a term paper about this seminal, remarkable album from one of the world's great musical artists, Moby. But that would probably bore readers (and me) to death. What I will say is that Play almost single-handedly changed my musical life. In a sense. It was the late 90s / early aughts and I was just waking up to a new generation of musical artists like Radiohead, Moby, The Chemical Brothers and learning about how electronic music and digital technology was transforming music in ways we are still trying to understand. I had heard Moby on the also seminal soundtrack to the film, The Saint and was kind of blown away. I decided to buy a CD and, after acquiring the cheekily-titled I like to Score I bought Play. Wow. Just Wow. Moby was using samples, combined with his own original compositions to create completely new songs, but he also was a pretty good bespoke song writer. Play weaves a marvelous musical tapestry, with a variety of existing, usually obscure source material -- such as a virtually unknown song by Southern Gospel group BIll Landford and the Landfordaires (Run On) – to which he adds own musical enhancement, sometimes beats, sometimes background chords, sometimes melody to create something completely new. The opening track, Honey, sets the tone with its combination of a “call and response” type of African American tune with a fierce drum track, and Moby’s trademark muscular piano. Then he effortlessly weaves in, a few tracks later, the achingly beautiful Porcelein, which has become a Moby standard and one of his most beloved songs. Here, he inverts the formula, and most of the song is his music and lyrics, with a sampled backround vocal of a man singing “woman”. Again, wow. I could go on, but if you like Electronica, you like great music, drum, piano, guitar, great song-writing, and can stomach sampling done in a way that you probably have never heard before, Play is for you. In some ways this is the album that really put Moby on the map. And oh, what a country the elfin, balding musical geek is. Thank God Moby exists in our world.
Review: Amazing Album - This is a classic album, and having the superior quality of CD only elevates it. Plus, you get the version of South Side with Gwen Stefani. (Since it isn't on Spotify 🙄)

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | B00000J6AG |
| Best Sellers Rank | #20,794 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) #8 in Trance (CDs & Vinyl) #18 in Techno (CDs & Vinyl) #42 in Ambient (CDs & Vinyl) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (2,603) |
| Date First Available  | December 12, 2006 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer  | No |
| Item model number  | MFR638812704924#VG |
| Label  | V2 Records |
| Language  | English |
| Manufacturer  | V2 Records |
| Number of discs  | 1 |
| Product Dimensions  | 5.5 x 4.94 x 0.45 inches; 3.57 ounces |

## Images

![Play - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61qp2YJGW9L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Still holds up after all this time
*by E***N on September 20, 2019*

If I had the time, and space, I could write a term paper about this seminal, remarkable album from one of the world's great musical artists, Moby. But that would probably bore readers (and me) to death. What I will say is that Play almost single-handedly changed my musical life. In a sense. It was the late 90s / early aughts and I was just waking up to a new generation of musical artists like Radiohead, Moby, The Chemical Brothers and learning about how electronic music and digital technology was transforming music in ways we are still trying to understand. I had heard Moby on the also seminal soundtrack to the film, The Saint and was kind of blown away. I decided to buy a CD and, after acquiring the cheekily-titled I like to Score I bought Play. Wow. Just Wow. Moby was using samples, combined with his own original compositions to create completely new songs, but he also was a pretty good bespoke song writer. Play weaves a marvelous musical tapestry, with a variety of existing, usually obscure source material -- such as a virtually unknown song by Southern Gospel group BIll Landford and the Landfordaires (Run On) – to which he adds own musical enhancement, sometimes beats, sometimes background chords, sometimes melody to create something completely new. The opening track, Honey, sets the tone with its combination of a “call and response” type of African American tune with a fierce drum track, and Moby’s trademark muscular piano. Then he effortlessly weaves in, a few tracks later, the achingly beautiful Porcelein, which has become a Moby standard and one of his most beloved songs. Here, he inverts the formula, and most of the song is his music and lyrics, with a sampled backround vocal of a man singing “woman”. Again, wow. I could go on, but if you like Electronica, you like great music, drum, piano, guitar, great song-writing, and can stomach sampling done in a way that you probably have never heard before, Play is for you. In some ways this is the album that really put Moby on the map. And oh, what a country the elfin, balding musical geek is. Thank God Moby exists in our world.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Amazing Album
*by E***. on August 8, 2025*

This is a classic album, and having the superior quality of CD only elevates it. Plus, you get the version of South Side with Gwen Stefani. (Since it isn't on Spotify 🙄)

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Best of the 1990s
*by D***S on January 15, 2000*

This January 1999 release from Moby is widely regarded as his best or at least his most ambitious work to date, winning a "Best of the 90s" status from Spin, Rolling Stone, The Onion's AV Club and, interestingly enough, The Des Moines Register. Well known in the rave-techno-ambient-electronica scene, Moby's music shows the future direction of this genre and probably much else too. It's not just the music of rave clubs anymore. It is the music of a mass-society that finds itself awash in voices, information, and echoes from a cultural history that has turned increasingly inward. Play's subtleties -- buried samples and sonic textures -- allow the medium to comment on the message. Play's liner notes contain Moby's views on Fundamentalism, prisons and crime, his Vegan diet, the holocaust, and non-Pacificist Christians. He also lists a number of quotes from world religious leaders about animals. He adds, "These essays are not really related to the music, so if you hate the essays, you might still like the music, and if you like the essays you might hate the music. Who knows, maybe by some bizarre twist of fate you'll like them both." Moby's views on animals as food may not pertain to the tracks on Play, but there is no doubt that his spiritual orientation does pertain. Composed of Philip Glass-like minimalist melodies and samples from Hip-Hop artists, old Blues and Gospel songs, Play employs the materialist-spawned tools of what Walter Benjamin called the Age of Mechanical Reproduction in order to engage our digitized souls in a sustained self-examination. Play begins with "Honey" (sampled from Bessie Jones' "Sometime") which leads into "Find my Baby" (Boy Blue's "Joe Lee's Rock"). Both songs have some heavy synthesizer overlays that establish one of the album's motifs along with a theme of loss and longing for the return of a lover. "Porcelain," an intimate confession of dreams of death and jealousy, a song of farewell and regret (vocals by Moby), opens with the heavy synth, acquires a slow beat, and finally a piano melody tripping out note by note that re-emerges in many of the later tracks. "Why does my heart feel so bad?" (Shining Light Gospel Choir) asks that question again and again, the contemporary equivalent of a liturgical recitative. "Southside," words and vocals by Moby, describes a dark day and night marked by endless cycles of routine: artificial light, rain, television, driving across town packing weapons, and picking up friends. "Rushing" begins slowly and returns to the piano of "Porcelain," picking up tempo and arriving at a rushing-stream, Glass-like melody somewhat reminiscent of Moby's "God Moving over the Face of the Waters" and the dramatic fourteenth track, "Everloving." "Bodyrock" loops fast-paced samples of Bobby Robinson's "Love Rap" (performed by Spoony G and the Treacherous 3). "Natural blues" is based on samples from Vera Hall's pleading "Trouble So Hard" where the major question is "Don't nobody know my troubles but God?" In the eleventh track, "Run on" (samples from "Run on for a Long Time" by Bill Landford and The Landfordaires), Moby levels the gospel guns at us. You can "run for a long time," but "God Almighty is gonna cut you down" if you don't help your fellow man or if you "go to church just to signify," among other things. "If things were perfect" is a spoken word piece where Moby meditates on a cold, empty city at night, wishing for summer. The next three tracks-"Everloving," "Inside," and "Guitar flute and string"-are instrumental. Another spoken-word track, "The sky is broken," observes the morning after a storm, acting as a reprise to the confessional "Porcelain."

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*Product available on Desertcart India*
*Store origin: IN*
*Last updated: 2026-05-03*