|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Does It Look Like I'm Here?

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (140 ratings)
Does It Look Like I'm Here? album cover
01
Candy Shoppe
4:46 $0.99
02
The Cycle Of Abuse
4:59 $0.99
03
Double Helix
3:03 $0.99
04
Science Center
4:40 $0.99
05
Genetic
12:08
06
Goes By
4:12 $0.99
07
Does It Look Like I'm Here?
7:30 $0.99
08
Summerdata
4:49 $0.99
09
Shade
4:27 $0.99
10
It Doesn't Arrive
3:35 $0.99
11
Now You See Me
3:40 $0.99
12
Access Granted
4:04 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 61:53

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

You Said It

bclayj

Permafrost - I believe I remember someone (it may have been God) saying Music is about the three R's - repetition, repetition, repetition :)

user avatar

It doesn't have to be revolutionary to be good

Johnckane

Solid noise, electronic, experimental drone rock

user avatar

Fair but nothing revolutionary

Xrayman

Maybe some richness in sounds but lack of coherence from one song to the other. Some of the sounds are very harsh, almost metallic, which I cannot stand for more than one song. In conclusion, fair, but nothing revolutionary here...I actually listen to the album again, and I simply don't get it, some of the songs are inaudible, too many loops, two stars and no more...

user avatar

Me Too

permafrost154

...and Kitaro's been listening to Tangerine Dream, and Tangerine Dream's been listening to Syd Barrett and Stockhaussen. And thank god for that. Repetition is the essence of music.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Label Profile: Spectrum Spools

By Philip Sherburne, eMusic Contributor

File under: Pulsating synthesizer fugues; rumbling electro-acoustic abstractions; raw, primitivist techno Flagship acts: No UFO's, Hive Mind, Bee Mask, Container, Driphouse, Temporal Marauder Based in: Cleveland,Ohio If you ever feel the need for a cure to the music-fan blues - you know, the pervasive grumbling that everything sucks, we're just going in circles, kids these days, etc. - just seek out the company of Cleveland's John Elliott. If there were a prize for the most enthusiastic, upbeat and… more »

0

Who Is…Oneohtrix Point Never

By Marissa G. Muller, eMusic Contributor

Despite his stoner demeanor, Oneohtrix Point Never's Daniel Lopatin is as thoughtful in conversation as he is on tape. His abstract synthpop outfit's sixth full-length, Replica, is built from snippets of '80s commercials, gauzy loops and an almost-scientific curiosity about what music is. Though he says they're mostly improvised, Lopatin's instrumental meditations feel deliberate. Using DVD compilations of old ads as opposed to user-directed YouTube searches for specific words, Lopatin sought out to create Replica… more »

They Say All Music Guide

There are all kinds of familiar elements at work on Emeralds’ third album, and those elements will be especially familiar to anyone who was listening to avant pop electronic music in the 1970s. The slightly cheesy-sounding keyboard arpeggiations, the waveform generators, the sweet-and-sour analog synth sounds — these are all basic elements of the earliest synthesized pop (and synthesized classical) music. To say that Emeralds take these elements and make them new would be an exaggeration, but to say that they make them their own would not be. Does It Look Like I’m Here? consists largely of tracks previously issued as a series of 7″ vinyl singles but also includes new material recorded exclusively for this CD release; some of it sounds like a more energized Fripp & Eno (notice in particular the uptempo Frippertronics of “Candy Shoppe”) and some of it seems a bit too self-consciously dated (consider the rather silly Moogisms of “Genetic”), but there are many moments of pure genius: “Summerdata” is intensely involving despite being largely arrhythmic; “It Doesn’t Arrive” sounds like a slow helicopter going by with Brian Eno’s Music for Airports playing on its stereo; “Access Granted,” the album’s final track, is four minutes of pure, pulsing beauty. All of it occupies a slightly uneasy borderland between ambient music and avant-garde experimentation, and all of it is well worth hearing. – Rick Anderson

more »