Goldfrapp Unleash "Supernature"
The initial buzz surrounding Supernature only escalated when a copy of the CD was found in the hands of one very high-profile fan, Madonna, who was spotted clutching a copy following a workout. "She's said a lot that she really loves the album," Goldfrapp says of the Material Girl. "I don't care what people do with [the album]. Music is a very personal thing. If they like it and they respond to it, then that's great."
Unable to write while on tour for their second album, Black Cherry, the duo -- a one-time collaborator of trip-hop pioneer Tricky and her production partner Will Gregory -- decamped to a remote cottage in Bath, England, in late 2004. "We [worked in] just a small house in the country overlooking some fields. It was very basic," Goldfrapp says of the birth of Supernature. "We quite like the relaxed atmosphere of renting a cheap house and just making it our own. And it's nice to be somewhere that's not too close to neighbors because then you can make some noise."
Goldfrapp and Gregory spent several months in the rented home, jamming during the daytime and composing cuts like the sultry, floaty electro-jam "Ride a White Horse" and the euphoric "Number 1." "When I was writing it," she says of the latter, "it was about saying how things can mean so much but don't necessarily last."