*** Welcome to piglix ***

You're Dead!

You're Dead!
You're Dead!.jpg
Studio album by Flying Lotus
Released October 6, 2014
Length 38:15
Label Warp
Producer Flying Lotus
Flying Lotus chronology
Ideas+drafts+loops
(2013)
You're Dead!
(2014)
V
(2017)
Singles from You're Dead!
  1. "Never Catch Me"
    Released: September 2014
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
AnyDecentMusic? 8.4/10
Metacritic 88/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4.5/5 stars
The A.V. Club A−
The Guardian 5/5 stars
The Irish Times 4/5 stars
Mojo 4/5 stars
NME 8/10
The Observer 5/5 stars
Pitchfork 8.3/10
Q 4/5 stars
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars

You're Dead! is the fifth studio album by American music producer Flying Lotus, released on October 6, 2014, by Warp Records.

The album's title and release date were announced on July 22, 2014.

You're Dead! received widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 88, based on 36 reviews. Andy Kellman of AllMusic stated, "Like his great aunt, and his great uncle John Coltrane, Ellison has created exceptionally progressive, stirring, and eternal art." Clayton Purdom of The A.V. Club stated, "You're Dead! is his most confidently structured work yet." Matthew Bennett of Clash stated, "This, his fifth album, is also an overt ode to limbo, the halfway house of consciousness and true death. And this is where all 19 tracks dwell, in between the failing light of traditional jazz and the bursts of neon emitted from his polyrhythmic, nocturnal electronica." Adam Kivel of Consequence of Sound stated, "The album works best as a single, unified listen." In a glowing review for The Guardian Paul MacInnes said, "There’s always been a sense that Ellison was stretching for a new musical vernacular, one that would continue the lineage of free jazz (he is the great-nephew of Alice Coltrane). This album suggests he might have found it." Chris Cottingham of NME stated, "You're Dead! is a madly inventive record, one that takes hip-hop and jazz as starting points, beats them both to death and then brings them back to life in an almost unrecognisable form." Logan Smithson of PopMatters stated, "You're Dead! is arguably his most imposing album thus far."

Nate Patrin of Pitchfork stated, "Flying Lotus has the notion that death should be the only limiting factor, and when he's put out a work that wrings beauty out of that very thing, what's the point of fearing anything?"Will Hermes of Rolling Stone stated, "Ellison makes the boldest, most fully engaged fusion of the hip-hop-laptop era." Franklin Jones of Slant Magazine stated, "While it may not be clear where we're headed throughout the album, Ellison maneuvers through the bedlam with such confidence that it's not just easy to get swept up in his grand vision of the Great Beyond, but to return for repeat visits." Michael Blair of XXL applauded the album overall saying, "The genius of Flying Lotus, which has been invariably present throughout his preceding releases, but most especially on You’re Dead!, is that he has an incredible ability to both illustrate and extract exceptional amounts of emotion, without saying much at all." Staff writer at Exclaim! Stephen Carlickm described the album as, "Excitingly new yet classically evocative, You're Dead! is contemplative but never boring, an example of genre cross-pollination that transcends novelty and, occasionally, time and space as well."Robert Christgau was less enthusiastic in his column for Cuepoint, citing "Turkey Dog Coma" and "Ready err Not" as highlights and writing, "The problem isn't that it's less than the sum of its parts--the problem is that there is no sum, only parts".


...
Wikipedia

...