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Search Results for: omegaboy

New OMEGABOY: “Parallel Dance”

In which OMEGABOY hits on my ultimate sonic pleasure – sounding like the battle music that plays during the fight segments in the video game Earthbound. There is more going on in “Parallel Dance” than just Super Nintendo days – it’s one of the more claustrophobic tracks the Osaka producer has created yet, every sound wrapping around to create a tunnel of noise. Yet like the soundtrack for Earthbound, “Parallel Dance” boasts an electro strangeness that draws one in without ever really knowing what is actually happening. Listen below.

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New OMEGABOY: “Komakinoin”

You know that thrill you get when you listen to a song and recognize a sample? Nothing like it, that moment you feel like a super smart music fan and think maybe…just maybe…you and the artists behind the track have similar taste. Exciting! I remember when I first listened to a DJ Shadow album and heard a snippet of a Bjork song, nearly hit my summer-camp bunk bed. Yet what happens when you recognize a sample…and feel a twinge of shame for knowing what it is almost instantly?

OMEGABOY’s newest song “Komakinoin” mashes pulsating, choking fuzz and dance synths against what sounds like a freestyle rap battle of some sort. The song itself is nice, especially the way it seems like the surging music could completely devour the silly rhyming dictionary action happening around it. Truth be told though, it’s tough for me to focus on the music when I instantly recognized the sample two seconds in. If you have any passing knowledge of contemporary professional wrestling, the opening “Hey, Cena!” should be a big hint as it is referring to WWE superstar John Cena who once boasted a “rapper” gimmick which featured a dash of homophobia (on display here!). This specific bit of “freestyling” – which is fake like, oh, every aspect of pro wrestling – comes from this clip which happened before the 2003 edition of the No Mercy pay-per-view. I did not see said 30-dollar program, as I actually stopped actively watching WWE around this time, but I still read about it and went on the occasional YouTube binge. So yeah…OMEGABOY has stirred a lot of strange feelings in me with this one. Listen below.

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New OMEGABOY: “Rustyslide” And Obscure Voice EP

The Internet has allowed music fans to watch artists they like mutate right in front of them, like starting at bacteria under a microscope. This happened before, of course, but whereas in the 90’s it sometimes took years to see what new direction a musician would shift into, the flood of new music in the digital age means young artists release new music at a faster clip than ever before, months and weeks now being the standard waiting period. Sometimes this can be thrilling – finding a new project and watching them grow like a Chia Pet on speed – and other times harmful to young musicians just starting to figure things out, the ebb and flow of the “blog hype” cycle pushing people who need time to develop artistically into positions that can be potentially overwhelming.

Osaka’s OMEGABOY popped up on our radar late last year via wonky pop songs coated in vocal modification and traditional Chinese music influences. It was very DIY, his synths sounding like they were found in an alley behind The Salvation Army, but everything arranged in such a way that it came off like imperfect, catchy pop. Now, in early 2012, he’s made a slight shift in style – OMEGABOY holds onto the junkyard electronics, but with his new Obscure Voice EP and the song “Rustyslide,” he’s moving into the realm of dance music. The Obscure Voice EP stands as his best work to date in his (extremely young) career, something approaching the work of Nicolas Jaar except with rougher edges. The sweltering “Babyrousa” and the tinny house party of “XoXoXoX” stand out as the highlights, dance tunes slightly off-balance but frequently captivating. “Rustyslide,” not on the release, builds upon an inviting groove before introducing windy synths that could soundtrack the climax of a Spaghetti Western. Here’s hoping OMEGABOY’s development as an artist continues at a pace that results in music as enjoyable as this. Listen to “Rustyslide” below, and grab Obscure Voice for free here.

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OMEGABOY Keeps Truckin’: “Babyrousa” And “Night1”

Osaka’s OMEGABOY has been keeping himself busy – he kicked of 2012 with a handful of intriguing tracks, and a few weeks on he isn’t stopping. He’s posted a few new tracks to his Bandcamp, highlighted by “Babyrousa” which does away with vocals entirely in favor of pure dance, the whole thing pulsing with the vague “Asian” feel OMEGABOY breathes into his songs (think of the background music for a “Tin Tin in China” cartoon). Also new is “Night1,” a squelchy, brief number that feels more like a sketch of a robot than a fully realized mechanical being. Oh, and a remix of the already bumping “China X.” Listen to “Babyrousa” below.

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Far East Sweet: OMEGABOY

Osaka’s OMEGABOY shows an affinity for Asian imagery all over his official Bandcamp page, ranging from pictures of Hindu deities including Ganesha to Chinese images. Save for the above picture which, in my infinite wisdom, chose to represent this post, OMEGABOY plays up this continental angle to the point he tags several of his songs as “Chinese” or “China.” Sometimes this Far East feel bleeds into his music, traditional-sounding touches played on an especially chirpy keyboard. “Eternal Friend” shambles ahead on thrift-store drum machine and twinkling synth, a charming bit of DIY pop that probably should be sold on Etsy. “Me Can Not Be Found” matches synth popcorn with the sort of whirring sounds you would expect on an Oneohtrix Point Never to create a restrained number imaging what Peking opera would sound like in Blade Runner.

Those songs feature relatively normal vocals, mumbly at times but ultimately unremarkable. It’s when OMEGABOY digitally twists his voice into something alien, though, when his best music comes out. “Azteca” already would have been a highlight with its frenetic synth and dance-leaning percussion, but stirring his voice into a sonic porridge stands out as the most interesting element here, giving “Azteca” an out-of-body vibe. Similarly, the driving “Lindh” benefits from OMEGABOY muffling his voice up as he sings like The Teenagers. Listen to “Azteca” below, and listen to a lot more OMEGABOY here.

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