Deathconsciousness is typically referenced as being a shoegaze album, or as “doomgaze” to make light of its incorporation of industrial-sound. By this attempt to incorporate industrial-sound its label as being “shoegaze” disintegrates, never reaching the heights of either genre.
After “Bloodhail,” the production begins to lean heavily on saturation and compression, whereby the midrange becomes congested, and the instruments lose separation– a feat ... read more
The Alchemist is evidently a less varied producer than Madlib, which by extension, renders this album a more streamlined alternative to 2014's Piñata; it begs the question of how more content managed to be extrapolated between this duo for a subsequent collaboration in Alfredo 2
Jpegmafia's comments happened to be correct
It's telling that on November 28, 1991, Rolling Stone Magazine initially rated this album three stars, yet after Nirvana's surge in popularity the following year, the publication accordingly rated the album four stars. Further on, in the Rolling Stone's 2004 Album Guide, the publication entirely conceded their original assessment by rating the project a perfect-score of five stars.
As such, Nirvana became the paradigmatic example by which music journalism, particularly on ... read more
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