CD Shopper
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Music > General > And Everything Else...  
Categories
Music
DVD Movies
Video Games
Audio & Video
Books
Computers

And Everything Else...

And Everything Else...

zoom enlarge 
Artist: Nobody
Label: Plug Research
Category: Music

Buy New: $11.98



New (8) Used (1) from $8.78

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 135527

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 64
UPC: 612651006425
EAN: 0612651006425
ASIN: B000808Z18

Release Date: May 17, 2005
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks

Tracks:

  • Coast Is Clear (For Fireworks)
  • What Is the Light? - Chris Gunst, , Nobody, Nobody
  • Spin the Bringht Sun Rose
  • Go Go Interlude Go
  • Poor Angular Fellow
  • Tillijem's Forrest
  • You Can Know Her - Nobody, Nobody, Mia Doi Todd
  • Jose de la Rues!!!
  • Con un Relampago - Nobody, Nobody,
  • Wake Up and Smell the Millennium
  • Tori Oshi
  • Siesta Con Susana

Similar Items:

  • Pacific Drift: Western Water Music, Vol. 1
  • Tree Colored See
  • Revisions Revisions: The Remixes 2000-2005
  • Soulmates
  • Goodbye

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Its ooook...   December 4, 2005
 0 out of 7 found this review helpful

Its ok people. Anyone interested in Flunk or NOBODY well eventually settle with Daedelus for a release with non stop amazing tracks. Sorry to break it to you bu tthe only good tracks on this cd are "wake up and smell the millenium", "Tori Oshi" and "Siesta Con Susana." Peace.


3 out of 5 stars This man has potential   July 31, 2005
 2 out of 5 found this review helpful

I bought this album on a whim when I was in New York a couple of weeks ago because I had heard about this guy called 'Nobody', and by the sound of it it was my sort of thing. On hearing it I enjoyed it, it has inventive and imaginitive beats and sounds, and creates interesting moods, with a psychedelic edge that sets it apart from many others in the field. However, for one it is quite inconsistent, by that I mean it doesn't 'flow' very well as an album, and I believe this is important (you may not). It also seems sort of unfinished, there are many loops that are repeated for time, with little development, but again this could be something that most listeners would not find to be a problem. Still it's not bad at all, and worth a listen to fans of the genre.


5 out of 5 stars Nobody "Else"   May 17, 2005
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

Nobody does electronic hip-hop like Nobody.

Okay, seriously, jokes done. The DJ/producer -- also known as Elvin Estrella -- rose from the underground hip-hop revolution of the 1990s, only to become its chameleon. What came next was a stream of soulful jazz/funk/hip-hop, and sunny electronica. And in his third album, Nobody proves that he is just as good as ever.

"And Everything Else" lives up to its name. In his third album, Nobody seems to be exploring the musical niches he had previously left untouched, such as alt-folk, Latin music and psychedelic rock. But he also pays homage to his hip-hop roots, for fans of his previous sounds.

The resulting album is a complete mishmash of styles -- Hispanic rap, bass-heavy big-beats in the style of the Propellerheads, sunny psychedelica, music-box electronica, and even a sad, sweet acoustic solo at the end. Yes, none of the styles entirely fit together, but the catchy beats and odd electronic touches keep them linked.

Nobody's new musical bents are also shown in who he collaborates with. Sure, he collaborates with Prefuse 73 in the proggy-folky "Tori Oshi." But he also joins up with alt-folk chanteuse Mia Doi Todd, who sings sweetly over electronic swooshes and outdoorsy noises. He remixed some of her songs from "Golden State," but this is their first true collaboration.

But perhaps the peak of the album is "What is the Light," a cover of one of the Flaming Lips' best songs. Nobody gives it his own spin, with the same uplifting choruses and orchestral catchiness, but he gives it heavy beats, smooth-as-satin vocals and some stately music-box organ.

"And Everything Else" is good. It's fun. It's dancey, complex, gritty and exuberant one minute, then mellow and sweet. DJ Nobody proves that he can switch musical moods in an instant, being smoky and wry one second, then turning out a trippy outdoorsy song or a folky hoedown. Somebody push this guy into the limelight -- someone so versatile deserves it.

And Nobody knows how to go forward without losing the ability to step back. In "And Everything Else," he revisits some of those old underground roots, with the moments of grit and bombastic rapping, including a wonderfully ominous rap by his old pal Xololanxinco. But he also builds on his second album's sparkling electronica, making it all smoother, brighter and trippier.

DJ Nobody scores again with "And Everything Else," his third collection of electronica and hip-hop. Not a beat is out of place, not a note or sample gone wrong. Outstanding work.


Copyright 2006 - CD Shopper