Alias
http://www.anticon.com

styles:
instrumental, hip-hop sample-trained electronica, taxtronica, IDM
others: Boom Bip, Mum, Fennesz,
cLOUDDEAD, Why?, The Postal Service


Plane That Draws a White Line (with Tarsier)
Anticon, 2006
rating: 4/5
reviewer: chadwicked

Alias and Tarsier complement each other. If you've ever had the sense that Alias' instrumental offerings were lacking something, fret no more. A voice — a voice to take on those compositions and catapult them to heights unattained. Alias, like Mark Bell to Tarsier's Björk, support and supplement one another. Let's observe just how they complement each other.

Alias: You really provide my instrumentals with something great, Tarsier — an added oomph.
Tarsier: Why, thank you, Alias. I wouldn't be anywhere without the music you've made, though.
Alias: Oh, you are far too kind.
Tarsier: It's fortunate that you left your former pieces absent of all singers and rappers.
Alias: I suppose it is.
Tarsier: Indeed. Otherwise you would have never attracted me to them. I would've been too discouraged. But I heard your music and thought it needed something else.
Alias: I'll take that as a compliment.
Tarsier: You should! I also like your beard.
Alias: Well, thank you. I'll tell the wife. By the way, did I mention she enjoys all the songs you've sung to my music?
Tarsier: I think you have.
Alias: Oh, well, you can receive the compliment twice over. She also likes your fashion sense. And the fact that we are miles apart when we do music together.
Tarsier: I liked Deep Puddle Dynamics.
Alias: I like your prior producer compadre, Healamonster.
Tarsier: I like your friends — Neotropic, Nosdam, and Boom Bip. They are giving.
Alias: As is your mother. Those cookies she baked for me were delicious. Give my compliments to the chef.
Tarsier: Will do. I like your friend Sole.
Alias: Like him, or like like him?
Tarsier: I like like him.
Alias: No you don't. You're just being silly.
Tarsier: I know, I know. Don't blame a girl for having a sense of humor.
Alias: Oh, I don't. I admire your sense of humor. I think it's sharp.
Tarsier: You play drum machines well.


And so they continue to compliment each other. They complement each other well. The usage of compliment/complement can be confusing, but a music journalist must make do. Alias and Tarsier (if they are smart and obliging) = 2gether 4ever.

1. Plane That Draws a White Line
2. Nocturnal Eye
3. 9:24 Cigarette (Version 1)
4. Sleepy.
5. Plane That Draws a White Line (Boom Bip remix)
6. Rissing Sun (christ. red shift remix)
7. 5 Year Eve (Neotropic remix)
8. Ligaya (Odd Nosdam remix)
9. Dr. C (Healamonster remix)


Lillian (with Ehren)
Anticon, 2005
rating: 4/5
reviewer: chadwicked


Music has always seemed to profit from family affairs, especially when siblings are involved. Whether it's the Bee Gees, Mum, the Stooges, the Meat Puppets, or the Osmounds, siblings compliment one another in the studio in a way non-familial collaborators can't (excluding the Osmounds from this point forward). Blood (we're talking lineage here, not the amount shed -- disregard the Stooges from this point forward) apparently aids in the creative process, and for the brothers Whitney, that bloodline traces back to grandmother Lillian. Titled in honor of their grandmother, a vital ancestor to the musically-gifted Whitney family, Brendon (Alias) and younger brother Ehren salute their forebear by showcasing their own expertise. The Whitneys' family tradition of music, passed down through generations like a top dresser drawer heirloom, has landed in the laps of Alias and Ehren.

The songs on Lillian range from passive atmospherics to more eventful compositions -- the latter of which is the case with a track like "Misc Stomp." A drum break emerges out of some dismal, chilled electronic cellar to add life, as well as surprise, to the track. The thud and grumble of a drum break proves Alias still keeps a tight hold on where he's come from as a producer. There is restraint in this music -- patience that is rewarded by the occasional sudden push, the push sometimes coming from frigid percussion and sometimes coming from an unveiled melody. The songs sound like the North East feels, matching the photographs in the album layout -- it's all slightly blurred, biting, and gently raw.

Rather than getting into the age-old electronica music hot/cold debate, let's just say Ehren's contributions supply a truly organic flair to the music. Ehren arrived in Oakland draped with instrument luggage -- alto sax, soprano sax, flute, and clarinet. The young and naturally-gifted multi-instrumentalist set to work adding serene and tasteful panache to his older brother's already-laid groundwork.

All the songs on Lillian segue cleanly, sneaking up on and culminating with the soothing and compassionate final track, "Netting Applause," where the brothers do just that. The clapping hands of their audience demand an encore and receive one in due time with the haunted hidden track, where we hear from the inspirational Lillian for the first and only time. The song seeps deep, leaving the listener with the vision of an empty parlor, decked out in bric-a-brac, wood-framed family photographs, and forsaken oil lamps. Alias and Ehren compliment their late grandmother wonderfully, in terms of both sound and technique. They seem to be sharing the parlor room, shoulder-to-shoulder in an after-dinner melody. They don't sound decades apart, only a microphone's length.

With the release of Lillian, we can now see the Eyes Closed EP and Muted as transitional albums. Alias was taking a risk in moving away from the vinyl-sampling methods and style he honed so well. This isn't to say the aforementioned electronic-based projects leading up to Lillian were by any means trivial or weak, but they should be observed as stages of development leading to this current example of Alias' capabilities. He's shown he won't be limited by specific genre's customs or tactics. Ehren's part in attaining this milestone is subject to debate, but his contributions can not be overlooked. The visit from Ehren seemed to be just the company Alias needed to become comfortable in his new setting.

1. eman ruosis iht
2. Back and Forth
3. Lillian
4. Sunfuzz
5. Misc Stomp
6. Ladders
7. Blurry Edges
8. 52nd & West
9. Most Important Things
10. Moonfuzz
11. Narrowed Iris
12. Cobblestoned Waltz
13. Netting Applause


Eyes Closed EP
Anticon, 2003
rating: 3/5
reviewer: amneziak


As someone who had his musical paradigm changed at the beginning stages of instrumental hip-hop, I frequently find myself feeling like everything in the genre has been done a thousand times.  Since DJ Shadow and DJ Krush brought the craft of hip-hop collage making in 1996 to the forefront, there have been at least a hundred instrumental hip-hop albums produced with great and lasting results; but countless others have fallen short with less than original ideas.  Anticon, while being a collection of pioneering turntablists and emcees, has set themselves apart from this long list of others by relying on an extremely distinctive sound.  

Alias, one of the harder working Anticon affiliates, has always been one of my other favorite artists from the collective.  His previous work with just about every Anticon collaborator has shown that he’s capable of standing shoulder-to-shoulder with some of the best.  With his new EP, titled Eyes Closed, Alias continues to drudge forward with five tracks of instrumental hip-hop.  “Eyes Closed” begins with dialogue of a woman discussing various aspects of American and foreign policy.  It’s then accompanied by typical sounds we are all used to hearing by Anticon DJ’s like Odd Nosdam and Controller7.  Other tracks like “Must Consume” and “Things Got A Little Ugly” carry on in the exact same fashion with snippets of dialogue and dreary electronics. 

Contributing to other projects has been a primary aspect of Alias’ career, but it’s his solo material that shows him at his best.  The five songs here, while nothing new to anyone who’s heard an Anticon album before, are mostly just safe reconstructions of past styles.  They are all, however, very decent songs.  The samples that have been used are probably the only thing that makes this stand out as an individual contribution.  Although I find myself irritated by a lot of what I’m hearing these days in this genre, Eyes Closed reiterates this idea by only falling somewhere near the middle of the pack.   


1. Eyes Closed
2. What Used to Be
3. Must Consume
4. Dec. 26th, 2002
5. Things Got a Little Ugly