Oneohtrix Point Never: Age Of Vinyl LP
Daniel Lopatinâs last record (Garden Of Delete) was rolled out with such a hyped-up marketing circus that Age Of seems almost too fragile to penetrate in comparison. Without the force-fed dossier of influences and reference points, weâre left with no choice but to play the record from start to finish and draw our own conclusions - which is how we began consuming Oneohtrix Point Never records in the first place. Heâs been toying with outdated musics for a while now, putting his deranged spin on prog (Rifts, Good Time), new age (R Plus 7), rave and nu-metal (Garden Of Delete), but Age Of finds Lopatin going waaaay back, slicing up medieval folk music and harpsichord and even adding his own vocals to some of the tracks. He reached out to James Blake in the final stages of the recording process, whoâs credited with mixing and producing the album, and Blake is somewhat of a kindred spirit in the sense that he too put out a string of critically acclaimed instrumental productions before he decided to start singing. Itâs hard to say how much of an influence Blake had on Lopatinâs vocal delivery, but it works so well, itâs as if it was lurking there all along. âBabylonâ is a country-tinged autotune ballad poured over a sticky arrangement of plucked strings and coarse screamed adlibs courtesy of Prurient; it's almost like a perverted reimagining of Kid Rockâs âOnly God Knows Why.â ANOHNI picks up some of the vocal workload on the epic âSame,â and thereâs plenty of trademark OPN sound design brilliance to go around: âManifold,â âThe Station,â âToys 2,â âWarningâ and âWeâll Take It.â While his records sorta blur the lines between night and day, high-tech and lo-tech, this one seems the most *outdoors* to me for some reasonâŠcheck out the netherworld Rennaissance fair stroll of âRayCats,â or the chopped-up babbling brook vibes on album closer âLast Known Image Of A Song.â Black vinyl pressing with clear printed outer sleeve, printed inner sleeve and download code; recommended.
- housed in printed resealable outer bag
- printed inner sleeve
- digital download included
- music label:Â Warp Records 2018
reviewed by edward james almost 06/2018
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Oneohtrix Point Never: Age Of Vinyl LP
Oneohtrix Point Never: Age Of Vinyl LP
Daniel Lopatinâs last record (Garden Of Delete) was rolled out with such a hyped-up marketing circus that Age Of seems almost too fragile to penetrate in comparison. Without the force-fed dossier of influences and reference points, weâre left with no choice but to play the record from start to finish and draw our own conclusions - which is how we began consuming Oneohtrix Point Never records in the first place. Heâs been toying with outdated musics for a while now, putting his deranged spin on prog (Rifts, Good Time), new age (R Plus 7), rave and nu-metal (Garden Of Delete), but Age Of finds Lopatin going waaaay back, slicing up medieval folk music and harpsichord and even adding his own vocals to some of the tracks. He reached out to James Blake in the final stages of the recording process, whoâs credited with mixing and producing the album, and Blake is somewhat of a kindred spirit in the sense that he too put out a string of critically acclaimed instrumental productions before he decided to start singing. Itâs hard to say how much of an influence Blake had on Lopatinâs vocal delivery, but it works so well, itâs as if it was lurking there all along. âBabylonâ is a country-tinged autotune ballad poured over a sticky arrangement of plucked strings and coarse screamed adlibs courtesy of Prurient; it's almost like a perverted reimagining of Kid Rockâs âOnly God Knows Why.â ANOHNI picks up some of the vocal workload on the epic âSame,â and thereâs plenty of trademark OPN sound design brilliance to go around: âManifold,â âThe Station,â âToys 2,â âWarningâ and âWeâll Take It.â While his records sorta blur the lines between night and day, high-tech and lo-tech, this one seems the most *outdoors* to me for some reasonâŠcheck out the netherworld Rennaissance fair stroll of âRayCats,â or the chopped-up babbling brook vibes on album closer âLast Known Image Of A Song.â Black vinyl pressing with clear printed outer sleeve, printed inner sleeve and download code; recommended.
- housed in printed resealable outer bag
- printed inner sleeve
- digital download included
- music label:Â Warp Records 2018
reviewed by edward james almost 06/2018
Original: $18.95
-65%$18.95
$6.63Product Information
Product Information
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Description
Daniel Lopatinâs last record (Garden Of Delete) was rolled out with such a hyped-up marketing circus that Age Of seems almost too fragile to penetrate in comparison. Without the force-fed dossier of influences and reference points, weâre left with no choice but to play the record from start to finish and draw our own conclusions - which is how we began consuming Oneohtrix Point Never records in the first place. Heâs been toying with outdated musics for a while now, putting his deranged spin on prog (Rifts, Good Time), new age (R Plus 7), rave and nu-metal (Garden Of Delete), but Age Of finds Lopatin going waaaay back, slicing up medieval folk music and harpsichord and even adding his own vocals to some of the tracks. He reached out to James Blake in the final stages of the recording process, whoâs credited with mixing and producing the album, and Blake is somewhat of a kindred spirit in the sense that he too put out a string of critically acclaimed instrumental productions before he decided to start singing. Itâs hard to say how much of an influence Blake had on Lopatinâs vocal delivery, but it works so well, itâs as if it was lurking there all along. âBabylonâ is a country-tinged autotune ballad poured over a sticky arrangement of plucked strings and coarse screamed adlibs courtesy of Prurient; it's almost like a perverted reimagining of Kid Rockâs âOnly God Knows Why.â ANOHNI picks up some of the vocal workload on the epic âSame,â and thereâs plenty of trademark OPN sound design brilliance to go around: âManifold,â âThe Station,â âToys 2,â âWarningâ and âWeâll Take It.â While his records sorta blur the lines between night and day, high-tech and lo-tech, this one seems the most *outdoors* to me for some reasonâŠcheck out the netherworld Rennaissance fair stroll of âRayCats,â or the chopped-up babbling brook vibes on album closer âLast Known Image Of A Song.â Black vinyl pressing with clear printed outer sleeve, printed inner sleeve and download code; recommended.
- housed in printed resealable outer bag
- printed inner sleeve
- digital download included
- music label:Â Warp Records 2018


















