eMusic Review
Working under several aliases, Matthew Dear practically owned dance music in the mid '00s thanks to a slew of 12-inches, but the most enduring belonged to a full album issued under his real name. Leave Luck to Heaven is probably microhouse's smartest crossover title, due essentially to “Dog Days,” an instant sing-along classic that features plastic strings as sharp and zingy as an old Prince synth riff, but the whole thing is terrific, from the (I think) guitar tintinnabulation undergirding “Nervous Laughter (Intro)” to the clacking synth lines of “The Crush” to the near-subliminal clipped handclaps and dry, blurred vocals of “Huffing Stuff.”