Alias Fever Dream Zip

Birth nameBrendon Whitney
BornApril 5, 1976
OriginHollis, Maine
DiedMarch 30, 2018 (aged 41)
GenresHip hop
Instrumental hip hop
Occupation(s)Producer, rapper
InstrumentsSampler, drum machine, synthesizer, guitar
Years active1996–2018
LabelsAnticon, Mush, 6months
Associated actsDeep Puddle Dynamics
So-Called Artists
Alias & Ehren
Alias & Tarsier
Sole
B. Dolan
Websitewww.anticon.com

In 2008, Alias released the album Resurgam. The album is titled after the Portland city motto, which is Latin for 'I shall rise again.' 'Well Water Black' featuring Yoni Wolf of Why? Was a popular song from the album, but was never officially released as a single. In 2011, Alias released the instrumental album Fever Dream. Alias drops his fifth album and first new full length in three years with the sample heavy MPC beats of 'Fever Dream'. Interestingly he's not got any guests or eve his own raps on board, it's almost a purely instrumental affair, bar the well placed samples on 'Talk In Technicolor'. The beats are reservedly old-skool leaning and free of any over-used effects or the kind of complex, knitted.

Brendon Whitney (April 5, 1976 – March 30, 2018), better known by his stage nameAlias, was a producer and rapper from Hollis, Maine.[1] He was a co-founder of the indie hip hop record label Anticon.[2]

History[edit]

Alias originally performed as a rapper with Sole in the group Live Poets. He also produced his own songs, but would still rap over another producer's beats. He moved to California in 1999 to start the label Anticon, as well as to focus on his music. Later on, as Alias began working with Anticon, he produced tracks for the emcees on the label.[citation needed]

In 2002, Alias released his first solo album The Other Side of the Looking Glass. He produced and rapped on the album.[3] After that, Alias moved away from rapping to focus solely on production. His production work also moved away from sampling and began to involve more synthesizers and instruments such as guitar. He released his first instrumental album Muted in 2003.[4] The compilation of his remix works, Collected Remixes, was released in 2007.[5] He returned home to Portland, Maine in August 2007.

In 2008, Alias released the album Resurgam. The album is titled after the Portland city motto, which is Latin for 'I shall rise again.' 'Well Water Black' featuring Yoni Wolf of Why? was a popular song from the album, but was never officially released as a single.[6]

In 2011, Alias released the instrumental album Fever Dream.[7]

He died on March 30, 2018, of a heart attack at age 41.

Discography[edit]

Studio albums

  • The Taste of Rain... Why Kneel? (Anticon, 1999) (with Doseone, Slug & Sole, as Deep Puddle Dynamics)
  • Paint by Number Songs (Mush, 2001) (with Sole & DJ Mayonnaise, as So-Called Artists)
  • The Other Side of the Looking Glass (Anticon, 2002)
  • Muted (Anticon, 2003)
  • Lillian (Anticon, 2005) (with Ehren)
  • Brookland/Oaklyn (Anticon, 2006) (with Tarsier)
  • Resurgam (Anticon, 2008)
  • Fever Dream (Anticon, 2011)
  • Pitch Black Prism (Anticon, 2014)
  • Less is Orchestra (Anticon, 2018) (with Doseone)

EPs

  • Three Phase Irony (6months, 2001)
  • We Ain't Fessin' (Double Quotes) (Anticon, 2002) (Deep Puddle Dynamics)
  • Eyes Closed EP (Anticon, 2003)
  • Plane That Draws a White Line (Anticon, 2006) (with Tarsier)
  • Resurgam Residual EP (Anticon, 2008)
  • Indiiggo EP (Anticon, 2014)

Compilation albums

  • Bits & Pieces (2000)
  • All Things Fixable (Good with Money, 2005)
  • Collected Remixes (Anticon, 2007)
  • All Things Fixable 2.0 (Good with Money, 2011)

Singles

Alias Fever Dream Zip Pullover

  • 'Rainmen' (Anticon, 1999) (Deep Puddle Dynamics)
  • 'Sideshow' (Mush, 2001) (So-Called Artists)
  • 'Final Act' (Anticon, 2001)
  • 'Unseen Sights' (Anticon, 2004)
  • 'Dr. C / 5 Year Eve' (Anticon, 2006) (with Tarsier)

Guest appearances

  • DJ Krush – 'Song for John Walker' from The Message at the Depth (2002)
  • Styrofoam – 'Misguided' from Nothing's Lost (2004)
  • Saroos – 'During This Course' from Saroos (2006)
  • Prolyphic & Reanimator – 'Survive Another Winter' from The Ugly Truth (2008)
  • B. Dolan – 'Survived Another Winter' from House of Bees Vol. 1 (2009)
  • Themselves – 'Cross Section of Wreckage' from The Free Houdini (2009)
Alias Fever Dream Zip

Compilation appearances

  • 'Divine Disappointment' on Music for the Advancement of Hip Hop (1999)
  • 'Props 2000' on Strictly Indee (2000)
  • 'Watching Water' on Giga Single (2001)
  • 'Watching Water' 'Pill Hiding' 'Sixes Last' 'Dec. 26th, 2002' 'Unseen Sights' on Anticon Label Sampler: 1999-2004 (2004)

Production credits

Fever Dream Lyrics

  • Sole – 'Bottle of Humans' from Bottle of Humans (2000)
  • Sage Francis – 'Message Sent' from Personal Journals (2002)
  • Sole – 'Shoot the Messenger', 'Tokyo', 'Plutonium', 'Slow, Cold Drops', 'Pawn in the Game Pt. 1', 'Pawn in the Game Pt. 2', 'The Priziest Horse' & 'Teepee on a Highway Blues' from Selling Live Water (2003)
  • Pedestrian – 'O Silent Bed' from Volume One: UnIndian Songs (2005)
  • Sole – 'Every Single One of Us' & 'Imsotired' from Live from Rome (2005)
  • Sage Francis – 'Sea Lion', 'Escape Artist' & 'Product Placement' from A Healthy Distrust (2005)
  • Subtitle – 'Gio-Graph-Ick' from Young Dangerous Heart (2005)
  • Sage Francis – 'Clickety Clack', 'Midgets and Giants' & 'Keep Moving' from Human the Death Dance (2007)
  • B. Dolan – 'Heart Failure', 'Bombzo for Baghdad' & 'Kate' from The Failure (2008)
  • B. Dolan – Fallen House, Sunken City (2010)
  • Astronautalis – 'Dimitri Mendeleev' from This Is Our Science (2011)

Remixes

  • Themselves – 'Only Child Explosion' from The No Music of AIFFS (2003)
  • 13 & God – 'Into the Trees' from 'Men of Station' (2005)
  • Son Lux – 'Weapons VI' from Weapons (2010)
  • Themselves – 'Gangster of Disbelief' from CrownsDown & Company (2010)

References[edit]

  1. ^Alias at Allmusic
  2. ^Grandy, Eric (August 31, 2011). 'Alias: Fever Dream'. Pitchfork Media.
  3. ^Thomas-Glass, Daniel (July 2, 2002). 'Alias - The Other Side of the Looking Glass'. Dusted Magazine.
  4. ^Tabron, Chris (September 19, 2005). 'Alias and Ehren - Lillian'. Dusted Magazine. Archived from the original on October 25, 2011. Retrieved May 18, 2012.
  5. ^Kerr, Dave (8 September 2007). 'Alias: All Things Remixable'. The Skinny.
  6. ^Lily Clarke, Mia (November 7, 2008). 'Alias: Resurgam'. Pitchfork Media.
  7. ^Woolfrey, Chris (August 5, 2011). 'Alias – Fever Dream'. Consequence of Sound.

Alias Fever Dream Zip Line

External links[edit]

Alias Fever Dream Zip Codes

  • Alias on SoundCloud
  • Alias on Discogs

Alias Fever Dream Zip Free

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