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Beams

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (30 ratings)
Beams album cover
01
Her Fantasy
6:14 $0.99
02
Earthforms
3:34 $0.99
03
Headcage
3:46 $0.99
04
Fighting Is Futile
5:00 $0.99
05
Up & Out
4:16 $0.99
06
Overtime
3:12 $0.99
07
Get the Rhyme Right
3:48 $0.99
08
Ahead of Myself
3:49 $0.99
09
Do the Right Thing
4:42 $0.99
10
Shake Me
4:31 $0.99
11
Temptation
6:10 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 49:02

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eMusic Review 0

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Andrew Parks

eMusic Contributor

08.28.12
Not quite a pop star just yet, but getting there
2012 | Label: Ghostly International / The Orchard

At this point — 13 years, five albums, and several side projects into a preconception-skirting career as a producer/DJ/performer — it shouldn’t be surprising to find Matthew Dear fully embracing his inner Eno, Bowie and Byrne. And yet, longtime fans still shout “play ‘Dog Days’!” at some of his shows, as if they wish he’d stop trying to be a bandleader and return to his twisted techno roots behind the soft glow of a laptop and some MIDI triggers.

That’s not gonna happen. Beams is yet another step in Dear’s welcome evolution as a songwriter. Not a party-rocker. Not a floor-filler. A songwriter. And since he started off as more of a club crawler — a micro-house auteur, to use the short-lived, oh-so-2003 term — Dear isn’t quite a pop star just yet. He’s getting there, though, as proven by the unparalleled perfection of this album’s lead-off single, “Her Fantasy.” A career standout, it’s willfully wild and downright weird, from its Kenneth Anger-cribbing music video to its woozy rave whistle and incessant sampled chorus of “Pump it!/ Pump the bass!” The rest of the record follows suit with one decidedly strange detour after another, including the tortured nervous tics of… read more »

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2

Interview: Matthew Dear

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Matthew Dear came up in the murky, mesmerizing underground of electronic dance music before venturing out to start playing songs smeared with impressions of moody new-wave pop and rock. His debut Leave Luck to Heaven was instrumental in popularizing the timely sound of minimal-techno when it came out in 2003, and it helped establish the label Ghostly International as a rare American force in a scene that had migrated mostly to Europe and beyond. While… more »

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