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Mannered English eccentricity never sounded so deliriously thrilling.
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Parallax Error Beheads You improves upon [his previous] albums’ strengths--wide-eyed eclecticism among other things--managing greater coherence and scope than anything he’s ever done.
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It is a near masterpiece, elastic, eccentric and eclectic.
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All things considered, as long as you don't go in expecting an album to change the world or to tax the grey matter, you'll find much to enjoy in Parallax Error.
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It's packed with ideas, some of which work beautifully and some of which are just a joy to hear play out, but most of all, it's still a whole other world of pop music--an absolutely unique, enchanting, and irreplaceable vision of how the stuff can work.
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He still dabbles in more-chin-stroking fare, but he's able to ground his adventures in enough melody to preserve the album's flow--and your bearings.
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Ultimately, the listener must be contented with the reality that Parallax Error Beheads You is a record that truly speaks for itself.
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What Max has created as a result is nothing short of amazing.
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MojoThere's something for anyone with a taste for things multicoloured and marvellously eclectic. [Nov 2008, p.104]
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UncutAs the lounge-like 'Will Get Fooled Again' segues into the glitch-funk of 'Orphaned,' you'd have to concede it's a fine idea. [Nov 2008, p.120]
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Jacobs works in a peerless vacuum located in a hazy plot point on the pop timeline, located somewhere in-between outright sugary pop and nerdy bedroom electronica.
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Somewhat hit or miss pastiche pop, Parallax Error Beheads You is harder to like that it should be.
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This year has bubbled and bleeped with the sound of bedroom electronica that harks back to the past, but the third album by Max Tundra--aka London producer Ben Jacobs--is the most joyful of all.
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Under The RadarThe decision to release the limited edition of Parallax as a literal soup can is apt--this one is a rather diverse broth of fey sounds brought to a twee-funk boil. [Year End 2008]
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The WireHis maniacal energy is infectious. [Nov 2008, p.77]
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Max Tundra’s music is smart, engaging, and both challenging and fun to listen to. That’s what makes it unusual, and worth treasuring.
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The nostalgia of postmodernity, that backward glance, is apparent in every moment of Parallax Error Beheads You. While it can sometimes seem like a quagmire for the less creative, it’s transformative here.
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On his third album, experimental electro sounds that initially seem grating and disparate weave together to form bona fide pop melodies.