eMusic Review
The first two minutes of Steven Ellison's 2006 debut provide a fantastic introduction to the shape of things to come. Faint, spooky murmurs and whizzing flying saucers clear a path for a simple yet bewitching 8-bit melody. Ellison is best known, depending on your personal canon, either as a composer for Adult Swim or as Alice Coltrane's great-nephew, and these two seemingly disparate sensibilities converge and collide throughout the wide-ranging 1983. "Bad Actors" teeters and surges with a gorgeous melody, a cascade of strings and hiccupping percussion keeping things quirky and off-kilter, while the ethereal drive of "Untitled #7" suggests a success in the thriving but oft-disappointing genre of Kid A-inspired hip-hop. One hears many of the ideas Ellison would develop in his more recent (and more buzzed-about) solo work for Warp Records, especially on the blissfully spaced-out "Hello" and the throbbing, slippery "Shifty," as sluggish, dragging rhythms and hard crystalline melodies meet in a dense thicket of noise.