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Event II

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (3 ratings)
Event II album cover
01
Stardate
1:23
$1.29
02
The Return
6:40
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03
Pay The Price
4:23
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04
Nobody Can
4:36
$1.29
05
Lawnchair Quarterback Part One
0:58
$1.29
06
Melding Of The Minds
4:04
$1.29
07
The Agony
3:21
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08
Back In The Day
1:29
$1.29
09
Talent Supercedes
3:38
$1.29
10
Look Across The Sky
4:41
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11
The Future Of Food
1:18
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12
What Is This Loneliness
3:52
$1.29
13
My Only Love
3:50
$1.29
14
Lawnchair Quarterback Part Two
1:10
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15
City Rising From The Ashes
3:32
$1.29
16
Do You Remember
5:23
$1.29
Album Information
EXPLICIT // NEW

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 54:18

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

09.30.13
A retro-futurist opus with too many cameos to count
2013 | Label: BULK RECORDINGS (BKR)

When ordinary hip-hoppers get famous, they usually bring along their new-money friends and strike while the iron’s hot. For Dan the Automator, producer of Dr. Octagon, Cornershop, Gorillaz, and other unconventional acts, success means waiting 13 years to issue a follow-up and recruiting Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Deltron 3030: Event II, the long-delayed sequel to Dan Nakamura, turntablist Kid Koala and emcee Del tha Funkee Homosapien’s 2000 debut, opens with a spoken monologue by the star, and features cameos by fellow actors David Cross, Amber Tamblyn, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and the Lonely Island. Oh, it also includes restaurant entrepreneur David Chang; MCs Black Rob and Casual; and vocals by Rage Against the Machine’s Zach De La Rocha, Awolnation’s Aaron Bruno, Faith No More’s Mike Patton, Pillowfight’s Emily Wells, Blur’s Damon Albarn and, lastly, jazz smoothie Jamie Cullum.

That kind of talent roster would be utterly top-heavy in lesser hands, but Nakamura’s finely finessed aesthetic specializes in off-the-wall excess: It’s everywhere on this retro-futurist opus. It’s unclear if the jazzy cop-show grooves that appear throughout out are sampled or freshly orchestrated; they sound like the former, but feel like the latter.

Nakamura presides deftly over the affair, keeping all of its disparate parts moving without… read more »

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