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LPレコード

Garden Of Delete

5.0

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5,690
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フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2015年11月13日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルWarp Records
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 WARPLP266
SKU 801061026615

構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Oneohtrix Point Never's Daniel Lopatin is the kind of artist you expect to keep evolving, even if exactly how he evolves on each album is unpredictable. That said, he still throws listeners a few curves on Garden of Delete, an album inspired by his adolescence and his 2014 tour with Nine Inch Nails and Soundgarden. Any expectations that this is OPN's "guitar album" are quickly dashed: Lopatin's palette is far wider-ranging, incorporating aspects of his previous albums (as well as a nod to his work as Chuck Person on "ECCOJAMC1") and elements of metal, trance, R&B, and Top 40 pop that, when combined, feel unmistakably like Oneohtrix Point Never. The way he transforms different sounds and eras into something nostalgic yet new has always been one of his greatest strengths. He goes one better on Garden of Delete, imbuing these songs with powerful, wide-ranging emotions. "Animals"' lugubrious melody is mournful to the point of uneasiness, while "No Good"'s deceptively soothing flow and distorted vocoder make it a self-destructing love song. As dense as R Plus Seven was cleanly sculpted, there's a lot to unpack within Garden of Delete, including its title: a phrase that suggests the meticulous task of editing music as well as the union of creation and destruction (and shortens to G.O.D.), it's the perfect mission statement for an album that combines past and present in surprising, and surprisingly organic ways. While "Lift"'s crystalline melody is classic OPN, the vocals that dominate the album add to its personal feel -- even if they're courtesy of the software instrument Chipspeech. Lopatin uses the software to give voice to Ezra, an alien who figured heavily in Garden of Delete's promotional campaign and who lends the album its emotional arc. We first hear his slurred tones on "Intro," but it's "Ezra" that offers a proper introduction to the character as well as the album's scope: the track's rapid shifts between heavily processed alt-metal guitars, stark, glistening synths, dueling vocals, and frenetic arpeggios feel like extraterrestrial mood swings. Shorter songs like "SDFK" and fragmented excursions like "Mutant Standard," which combines a looping melody that morphs from morose to triumphant with vertiginous atmospheres, only add to the feeling that everything on Garden of Delete is teetering on the brink. Lopatin uses his music's porous boundaries brilliantly, whether he's fusing molten R&B with death metal's growls and rapid-fire kick drums on the standout "Sticky Drama," crafting dizzying juxtapositions and edits on "I Bite Through It"'s violent melancholy, or naming one of the album's most beautiful ambient pop moments after the child abuse documentary Child of Rage. These fascinating dualities make Garden of Delete some of Lopatin's most intellectually engaging music as well as some of his funniest, darkest, and most cathartic. ~ Heather Phares

1. Intro
2. Ezra
3. ECCOJAMC1
4. Sticky Drama
5. SDFK
6. Mutant Standard
7. Child of Rage
8. Animals
9. I Bite Through It
10. Freaky Eyes
11. Lift
12. No Good

  1. 1.[LPレコード] DISC 1:
    1. 1.
      Intro
    2. 2.
      Ezra
    3. 3.
      ECCOJAMC1
    4. 4.
      Sticky Drama
    5. 5.
      SDFK
    6. 6.
      Mutant Standard
  2. 2.[LPレコード] DISC 2:
    1. 1.
      Child of Rage
    2. 2.
      Animals
    3. 3.
      I Bite Through It
    4. 4.
      Freaky Eyes
    5. 5.
      Lift
    6. 6.
      No Good

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Oneohtrix Point Never

商品の紹介

Rolling Stone - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Immediate standout 'Mutant Standard' hits like a rock opera in miniature, maintaining a sense of drama-packed suspense over eight wordless minutes." Spin - "These are pieces meant not to confuse, but to provoke feeling, appropriate for recalling a teenage period in which emotions are so outsized." Spin - "It's an apocalyptic racket that vaults from ghoulish menace to peaceful repose at a moment's notice, total chaos until a closer listen reveals a guiding hand giving these productions purpose and grace." Pitchfork (Website) - "GARDEN OF DELETE is unlike anything that Lopatin has done, in terms of technique, mood, or scope. It is denser than his previous albums, by several orders of magnitude." Clash (Magazine) - "GARDEN OF DELETE once again takes fragments of unfashionable genres -- in this case EDM and metal -- and re-fashions them to his own abstracted, contrarian and evocative ends."
Rovi

名門ワープへ移籍して放った前作で評価を決定的なものにしたダニエル・ロパティン。ラウドな面々とのツアーや映画音楽を手掛けるなど才能の発露は止まらず、2年ぶりとなったOPN名義の本作でも新たな意匠は見え隠れする。先行曲"I Bite Through It"をはじめ、織り重なる電子音のレイヤーと的確に配されたサンプルの解像度はすこぶる高く、前作の路線をアップデートというよりは数段ヴァージョンアップした印象だ。
bounce (C)藤堂輝家
タワーレコード(vol.384(2015年10月25日発行号)掲載)

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寝る前に聴いたら悪夢でうなされること間違いなしの「Intro」からスタートする終始不穏な1枚。エイフェックスの「カム・トゥ・ダディ」にも似たノイズと凶悪ビート、効果的に使用されるサンプリングされた数々の人の声、キャリア史上最もスラッシーなメタル・サウンド、それらが結びついて異能なポップ・ミュージックを生み出すロパティンはとてつもない。
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