Catégories :
Panier 0

Votre panier est vide

Oneohtrix Point Never|Replica

Replica

Oneohtrix Point Never

Disponible en
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Musique illimitée

Écoutez cet album en haute-qualité dès maintenant dans nos applications

Démarrer ma période d'essai et lancer l'écoute de cet album

Profitez de cet album sur les apps Qobuz grâce à votre abonnement

Souscrire

Profitez de cet album sur les apps Qobuz grâce à votre abonnement

Téléchargement digital

Téléchargez cet album dans la qualité de votre choix

Replica, retro-synth drone maven Daniel Lopatin's return as Oneohtrix Point Never following his critically adored, profile-rocketing 2010 album Returnal (and his equally estimable work with Ford & Lopatin), offers repeat customers both familiarity and surprise in roughly equal measure. In the former column, Lopatin still grounds his creations in conspicuously beautiful, buzzing, humming, and twinkling Kosmiche synthscapes; once again, everything feels draped in a syrupy, soft-focus analog glaze. But only one track, the aptly titled "Submersible," sustains itself on warmly drifting, rhythmically unfettered synthetic sound washes alone. Elsewhere, gentle waves of gauziness give way, more or less gradually, to more dynamic elements: on "Remember," an intertwined pair of looped vocal snippets (one speaking the track's title, the other a muffled, mutilated moan) slowly emerges from the amniotic haze; dappled pace-setter "Andro"'s undercurrent of murmuring, garbled sound scraps flips in the final 30 seconds into a stuttered, ritualistic outburst of hand percussion and jungle screeches. By and large, though, rhythm is not merely appended to but fully foregrounded in these compositions, in a way that's essentially new for Oneohtrix -- rarely in the conventional guise of drum tracks and "beats" (though there is a stark, rudimentary one anchoring the first two minutes of "Up," which might be approximately danceable if it weren't in 7/8), but often in the form of sampled loops, creating a definite rhythmic structure without (in most cases) the use of "percussion" per se, a much calmer variation of the micro-sampling methods of Akufen and Matthew Herbert. "Power of Persuasion" introduces this approach with a shifting series of classical-sounding (acoustic) piano figures stuck on short-circuit repeat, to placid, gently numbing effect, while the rather less somnolent "Sleep Dealer" lassoes in a wider array of thuds, groans, and whirrs along with a perky keyboard fillip, indecipherable spoken bits, and a satisfied-sounding exhalation to form a pleasantly cheery little jaunt, and the gently erratic "Nassau" adds some rustling, shuffling footsteps that sound a bit like soft-shoe tap dancing. Even the lovely, lulling title track, which combines static buzzes and fluid, meandering melodic tones with no regular rhythmic matrix to speak of, creates a sense of gentle groove and motion in its soft, patient new age piano chords. Apart from his usual battery of analog keyboards (and a considerable amount of actual acoustic piano), Lopatin apparently culled much of the sound for this album from a DVD compilation of TV commercials dating from 1985 to 1993. Though it makes for an intriguing compositional back-story -- and it clearly provided him a rich sound palette from which to draw -- it's rare that that source material is specifically evident while listening; at best it functions on a more energetic, subconscious level, making the typically nebulous sonic nostalgia of the chillwave/hypnagogic pop movement -- with which these productions bear some strong commonalities -- more literally (if still somewhat imperceptibly) manifest.

© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

Plus d'informations

Replica

Oneohtrix Point Never

launch qobuz app J'ai déjà téléchargé Qobuz pour Mac OS Ouvrir

download qobuz app Je n'ai pas encore téléchargé Qobuz pour Mac OS Télécharger l'app

Vous êtes actuellement en train d’écouter des extraits.

Écoutez plus de 100 millions de titres avec votre abonnement illimité.

Écoutez cette playlist et plus de 100 millions de titres avec votre abonnement illimité.

À partir de 12,49€/mois

1
Andro
00:03:54

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

2
Power of Persuasion
00:03:28

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

3
Sleep Dealer
00:03:10

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

4
Remember
00:03:23

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

5
Replica
00:04:35

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

6
Nassau
00:04:42

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

7
Submersible
00:03:50

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

8
Up
00:03:56

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

9
Child Soldier
00:03:13

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

10
Explain
00:06:43

Daniel Lopatin, Composer, Producer - Oneohtrix Point Never, MainArtist - Joel Ford, Producer - Al Carlson, Producer - Warp Music, MusicPublisher

2011 Warp Records 2023 Ridge Valley Digital under exclusive licence to Warp Records Limited

Chronique

Replica, retro-synth drone maven Daniel Lopatin's return as Oneohtrix Point Never following his critically adored, profile-rocketing 2010 album Returnal (and his equally estimable work with Ford & Lopatin), offers repeat customers both familiarity and surprise in roughly equal measure. In the former column, Lopatin still grounds his creations in conspicuously beautiful, buzzing, humming, and twinkling Kosmiche synthscapes; once again, everything feels draped in a syrupy, soft-focus analog glaze. But only one track, the aptly titled "Submersible," sustains itself on warmly drifting, rhythmically unfettered synthetic sound washes alone. Elsewhere, gentle waves of gauziness give way, more or less gradually, to more dynamic elements: on "Remember," an intertwined pair of looped vocal snippets (one speaking the track's title, the other a muffled, mutilated moan) slowly emerges from the amniotic haze; dappled pace-setter "Andro"'s undercurrent of murmuring, garbled sound scraps flips in the final 30 seconds into a stuttered, ritualistic outburst of hand percussion and jungle screeches. By and large, though, rhythm is not merely appended to but fully foregrounded in these compositions, in a way that's essentially new for Oneohtrix -- rarely in the conventional guise of drum tracks and "beats" (though there is a stark, rudimentary one anchoring the first two minutes of "Up," which might be approximately danceable if it weren't in 7/8), but often in the form of sampled loops, creating a definite rhythmic structure without (in most cases) the use of "percussion" per se, a much calmer variation of the micro-sampling methods of Akufen and Matthew Herbert. "Power of Persuasion" introduces this approach with a shifting series of classical-sounding (acoustic) piano figures stuck on short-circuit repeat, to placid, gently numbing effect, while the rather less somnolent "Sleep Dealer" lassoes in a wider array of thuds, groans, and whirrs along with a perky keyboard fillip, indecipherable spoken bits, and a satisfied-sounding exhalation to form a pleasantly cheery little jaunt, and the gently erratic "Nassau" adds some rustling, shuffling footsteps that sound a bit like soft-shoe tap dancing. Even the lovely, lulling title track, which combines static buzzes and fluid, meandering melodic tones with no regular rhythmic matrix to speak of, creates a sense of gentle groove and motion in its soft, patient new age piano chords. Apart from his usual battery of analog keyboards (and a considerable amount of actual acoustic piano), Lopatin apparently culled much of the sound for this album from a DVD compilation of TV commercials dating from 1985 to 1993. Though it makes for an intriguing compositional back-story -- and it clearly provided him a rich sound palette from which to draw -- it's rare that that source material is specifically evident while listening; at best it functions on a more energetic, subconscious level, making the typically nebulous sonic nostalgia of the chillwave/hypnagogic pop movement -- with which these productions bear some strong commonalities -- more literally (if still somewhat imperceptibly) manifest.

© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

À propos

Distinctions :

Améliorer les informations de l'album

Qobuz logo Pourquoi acheter sur Qobuz ?

Les promotions du moment...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
À découvrir également
Par Oneohtrix Point Never

Magic Oneohtrix Point Never

Oneohtrix Point Never

Magic Oneohtrix Point Never Oneohtrix Point Never

Again (Blu-ray Edition)

Oneohtrix Point Never

Again (Blu-ray Edition) Oneohtrix Point Never

Again

Oneohtrix Point Never

Again Oneohtrix Point Never

Oneohtrix Point Never - Ambients

Oneohtrix Point Never

Oneohtrix Point Never - Ambients Oneohtrix Point Never

R Plus Seven

Oneohtrix Point Never

R Plus Seven Oneohtrix Point Never

Playlists

Dans la même thématique...

Tourist (Remastered Hi-Res Version)

St Germain

Hyperdrama

Justice

Hyperdrama Justice

Moon Safari

Air

Random Access Memories

Daft Punk

Random Access Memories

Daft Punk