Fever Dream

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Fever Dream album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:39

eMusic Review 0

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Nate Patrin

eMusic Contributor

01.26.12
Narrowing the gulft between oddity and catchiness
Label: anticon / IODA

If there’s such a thing as an in-house production style over at anticon, it usually contains the prefix “avant,” as though it’s both inaccessible to casual listeners and removed from their beatmaking peers. But after more than a decade with the collective he helped assemble, Alias has narrowed the gulf between oddity and catchiness until the two are practically inseparable. Fever Dream is off-kilter enough for people who prefer their beats lysergic, and its sun-bleached mutations of 808-derived drum patterns are appealingly jarring – whether they flash back to ’84 NYC, 2000Memphis or contemporaryLos Angeles.

The screw-warped “Revl Is Divad” and the Neptunes-via-John Carpenter “Lady Lambin’” are far-out enough to justify Alias’s reputation for advanced weirdness, but the bulk of the album – the underwater pop-lock of opener “Goinswimmin,” the boom-clap bounce of “Wanna Let It Go,” the surreal-yet-sincere R&B move “Talk in Technicolor” – offers a woozily psychedelic, dreamlike analog to the conventions of synth-driven midstream hip-hop. It’s more conversational than combative, though a taste for chromed-out bass, choppy snares and ghostly vocal hooks reverbed into compelling abstraction sure doesn’t hurt. It’s still avant – just more like avant-pop.

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They Say All Music Guide

Aptly titled, Fever Dream builds on the welcoming and positive vibrations left-field hip-hop producer Alias explored on his 2008 effort, Resurgam. Here, that album’s sound is blown up into an Orb-sized dream world, starting with off-world voices on “Goinswimmin” that give way to bleeps and a slowly rolling backbeat. Voices drift in and out of this primarily instrumental effort with vocalist Dax Pierson living up to the dream title “Talk in Technicolor,” while female vocal samples are run through a giant echo chamber for the distant and beautiful “Lady Lambin’.” Designated chillout areas and other blue rooms will find Fever Dream a worthwhile soundtrack, while longtime fans get that wistful vagabond indie-hop style once again, only this time it’s transmitted from deep, blissful space. – David Jeffries

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