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Naytronix|Mister Divine

Mister Divine

Naytronix

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16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

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Following his sprawling bedroom electronica/disco/lounge debut Dirty Glow by three years, Mister Divine was harvested from hours of material written by Nate Brenner while touring the world as bass player for Merrill Garbus' tUnE-yArDs and sporadically for his solo project, Naytronix. The surprisingly streamlined outcome takes on a new synth pop flavor, due largely to having recorded the album as a trio with guitarist Mark Allen-Piccolo and percussionist Robert Lopez. Still distinctly experimental, more articulate arrangements and a reliable vocal presence make for a more welcoming, song-oriented electro-pop. The album opens with wind effects, guitar, and bass before hearing a single bleep, and then launches into flittering electronics, bongo-type percussion, and laid-back vocals for a wistful, strolling "Mr. Divine" that, it turns out, signals a much more consistently reflective tone than its predecessor. That doesn't mean the record lacks for keyboard and guitar noodling ("Dream"), playful polyrhythms ("Starting Over"), tempo ("Shadow"), or catchiness (clap-along "I Don't Remember"); rather, it remains angst-ridden or at least blasé throughout. The lyrics reflect the curbed tone, as in "Back in Time" ("Sometimes I want to go back") and "The Future" ("I hope to understand just any sort of explanation/Is this life or simulation?"), both with big bass grooves, gurgling effects, and dissatisfied vocals. Likewise, "Living in a Magazine" presents a druggy, rhythmically frenetic, funneled dreamscape that again questions reality ("It seems so real though I'll never know"). In the end, the more even tone and efficient arrangements are improvements for a project that doesn't skimp on whimsy; Mister Divine stays well clear of dullness or lazy musicality while providing plenty of loungy grooves and ruminative fare for late-night (possibly robot-delivered) martinis.

© Marcy Donelson /TiVo

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Mister Divine

Naytronix

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1
Mister Divine
00:03:58

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

2
Starting Over
00:04:35

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

3
Dream
00:04:33

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

4
Back in Time
00:04:23

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

5
The Wall
00:04:16

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

6
I Don't Remember
00:03:43

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

7
Future
00:04:39

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

8
Living in a Magazine
00:04:15

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

9
Shadow
00:03:38

Joao Seixas, Arranger - Nate Brenner, Composer - Naytronix, MainArtist - Alejandro Romero, Arranger - Leïla Séguin, Arranger - Joshua Oldershaw, Arranger - Thomas Bertrand, Arranger

2015 City Slang 2015 City Slang

Resenha do Álbum

Following his sprawling bedroom electronica/disco/lounge debut Dirty Glow by three years, Mister Divine was harvested from hours of material written by Nate Brenner while touring the world as bass player for Merrill Garbus' tUnE-yArDs and sporadically for his solo project, Naytronix. The surprisingly streamlined outcome takes on a new synth pop flavor, due largely to having recorded the album as a trio with guitarist Mark Allen-Piccolo and percussionist Robert Lopez. Still distinctly experimental, more articulate arrangements and a reliable vocal presence make for a more welcoming, song-oriented electro-pop. The album opens with wind effects, guitar, and bass before hearing a single bleep, and then launches into flittering electronics, bongo-type percussion, and laid-back vocals for a wistful, strolling "Mr. Divine" that, it turns out, signals a much more consistently reflective tone than its predecessor. That doesn't mean the record lacks for keyboard and guitar noodling ("Dream"), playful polyrhythms ("Starting Over"), tempo ("Shadow"), or catchiness (clap-along "I Don't Remember"); rather, it remains angst-ridden or at least blasé throughout. The lyrics reflect the curbed tone, as in "Back in Time" ("Sometimes I want to go back") and "The Future" ("I hope to understand just any sort of explanation/Is this life or simulation?"), both with big bass grooves, gurgling effects, and dissatisfied vocals. Likewise, "Living in a Magazine" presents a druggy, rhythmically frenetic, funneled dreamscape that again questions reality ("It seems so real though I'll never know"). In the end, the more even tone and efficient arrangements are improvements for a project that doesn't skimp on whimsy; Mister Divine stays well clear of dullness or lazy musicality while providing plenty of loungy grooves and ruminative fare for late-night (possibly robot-delivered) martinis.

© Marcy Donelson /TiVo

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