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Whole Numbers Play the Basics

Whole Numbers Play the Basics
Whole Numbers Play the Basics.jpg
Studio album by Casino Versus Japan
Released September 17, 2002 (2002-09-17)
Recorded 2001
Genre Electronic
Length 45:04
Label Carpark
Producer Erik Kowalski
Casino Versus Japan chronology
Go Hawaii
(1999)
Whole Numbers Play the Basics
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
Pitchfork 3.3/10

Whole Numbers Play the Basics is an album by Eric Kowalski under the alias of Casino Versus Japan. It was released in 2002 by Carpark Records. On its release, the album was praised by AllMusic, the BBC and Uncut while being panned by Pitchfork.

AllMusic and Pitchfork Media likened the sound of the album to Tomita, an electronic musician from the 1970s. and contemporary artists such as Boards of Canada. In relation to Boards of Canada, AllMusic stated that the album contains "a similar emphasis on stately breakbeats, a track listing that alternates short vignettes with longer pieces, and a series of light, airy melodies that frequently sound as though warped by long periods spent trapped in nearly forgotten synthesizers."

Whole Numbers Play the Basics was released by Carpark Records on September 17, 2002 in the United States. The album was released on compact disc, vinyl record, and as a digital download.

AllMusic awarded the album four and a half stars out of five, calling it a better album than his previous work titled Go Hawaii as it was "less precious" and that "nearly every one of the first eight songs is as delicious as anything produced by the indie-electronic pop movement of the past five years". The BBC praised the album, referring to it as "a welcome alternative to microscopic sonic manipulation and squeaky clean digital noises". The review concluded that "What stops it became mere flotation tank fodder is the sense of unease that sometimes lurks beneath its sublime drift" and "Utterly gorgeous".Uncut awarded the album a four out of five, opining that it "takes us back to the good old days when electronica wasn’t afraid to be beautiful" and "Probably the most wistful music you’ll hear this year".


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