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R Plus Seven

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (10 ratings)
R Plus Seven album cover
01
Boring Angel
4:16 $0.99
02
Americans
5:18 $0.99
03
He She
1:33 $0.99
04
Inside World
3:53 $0.99
05
Zebra
6:45 $0.99
06
Along
5:24 $0.99
07
Problem Areas
3:06 $0.99
08
Cryo
2:47 $0.99
09
Still Life
4:54 $0.99
10
Chrome Country
5:05 $0.99
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 43:01

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eMusic Review 0

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

10.01.13
Ambitiously detailed tendrils of sound
2013 | Label: Warp Records

Daniel Lopatin’s work as Oneohtrix Point Never has been evolving in recent years to a fine point. R Plus Seven, his ninth Oneohtrix album overall, is ambitiously detailed, each tendril of sound — whatever its source, human voice or digital static — seemingly painted onto the aural canvas with a fine brush. Maybe he was inspired by his December 2012 participation, with visual artist Nate Boyce, in a multimedia evening at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; there’s a fine-art quality to R Plus Seven‘s gradations. But there’s a public-spiritedness that it shares, along with a few compositional qualities, with the ’70s downtown New York minimalism in whose steps it proudly follows.

On the 94-second “He She,” Lopatin cuts and arranges a litany of vocal sounds into a tune that evokes both Todd Edwards (who cut up the vocals on Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” and “Face to Face”) and Meredith Monk. Sometimes it can get abstruse — “Inside World” stops and starts so much it can grow wearying, despite some lovely embellishments — but more often the trickery opens the music up wide rather than making it hermetic. “Chrome Country,” the closer, is an uplifting organ and choir chamber number. It’s… read more »

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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 »