EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
EARMILK EARMILK
EARMILK EARMILK
  • NEW MUSIC
    • DANCE
    • ELECTRONIC
    • EXPERIMENTAL
    • HIP-HOP
    • INDIE
    • POP
    • ROCK
  • INDUSTRY NEWS
    • DOCUMENTARIES
    • EVENTS
    • FASHION
    • LIFESTYLE
    • MUSIC GEAR
    • MUSIC INDUSTRY
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • OPINION
  • ALBUM REVIEWS
  • GEAR REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • FEATURES
    • FESTIVALS
    • EXCLUSIVES
    • LISTS
    • CONTESTS
    • Photo Journals
  • SERIES
    • Artist to Watch
    • Under The Crust
    • Flashback Friday
    • Suicide Sundaes
    • Daily 2%
    • The Club
    • Weekend Selector
    • Mashup Mondays
    • Artist Remixed
    • Wobble Wednesday
    • Night Rumours
    • Indie Sabbath
    • Straight No Chase
    • Straight From the Teet
  • Album Reviews
  • Chillwave
  • Feature
  • Indie

Toro Y Moi – Anything in Return [Album Review]

  • February 1, 2013
  • Michael Smith
Total
0
Shares
0
0

Focus. It’s not always the easiest task for a multi-talented, eclectic, and what some may call ingenious, artist. With two critically acclaimed albums under his belt, Columbia, South Carolina’s Chaz Bundick, more colloquially known as Toro Y Moi, now based in Berkeley, California, is that artist. Leading up to the release of his new album, it didn’t seem that Bundick had too much to prove. A critical scion, especially after the release of 2011’s Underneath the Pine, Bundick was already playing big festival slots, topping best-of lists, and being remixed like every DJ’s decks depended on it.

But after listening to Toro Y Moi’s newest full-length LP, Anything in Return, out now on D.C.’s Carpark Records, it becomes obvious that Bundick did have something to prove. Had listeners known what was in store in this new record, the expectations would have been surmounting. This proves to be the third installment in a series of ever-improving work. “Harm in Change,” the opening track, is the epitome of what makes this album Bundick’s best thus far. As soon as the song hits, it’s suddenly a more refined Toro Y Moi. From the vocals right down to the snare, it’s streamlined. His previous release was praised as chilled out, smooth, gazy pop music. But this album – this is pop music. It’s pop music in an aquatic Sonic the Hedgehog level – harnessed in lush, swimming synthesizers and electronic snares that hit and then flutter away like a robotic fish. But the songs are still clear as day. It’s remarkable. The airy layer from Underneath the Pine is minimized, and the sonic elusiveness and wandering trip-hop of Causers of This has been roped in and tamed. The melodies are direct, yet the aesthetic is freeflowing. It’s a balance that’s hard to achieve in what some call the “chillwave” genre. (Hence Bundick’s dismissal of the descriptor.) It’s clear throughout the album that young Chaz is really coming into his own as a pop songwriter.

The production is succinct and focused. There’s that word; that challenge. Bundick confronts it head on; that lost feeling toward the middle of the record is nonexistent. Each song has purpose; each song has proper placement. Each song has that kick that keeps the listener engaged, even in a land of floating clouds emitting washed out melodies. The album has reason.

Perhaps the most impressive aspect of Anything in Return is its consistency while incorporating a vast array of influences and allusions from a variety of genres. The vocal samples in “Say That” and “Never Matter” are pulled from mid-‘90s house, while the direct bassline and 2-4 backbeats on lead single “So Many Details” are reminiscent of Motown’s glory days, complete with an R&B vocal attack atop. Bundick’s crisp, clean vocal timbre is starting to sound like Todd Edwards. In “Studies,” which is really a dive into ‘70s New York City disco pop, one would think Creedence Clearwater Revival guitar licks are sampled alongside harpsichords played by the ’68 Beatles. The standout track, “Day One,” could be a bona fide radio hit if general listeners could hang with the lo-fi electronic flavor. Keys straight from fusion jazz records are sprinkled throughout the album, intertwined with even elements of classical music, as found in “Cola.”

By the end of Anything in Return, it’s almost like one has just listened to a Frank Ocean record steeped in pscyhedelia and jazz. Chaz Bundick has embraced his R&B tendencies and pop leanings and settled on a true meeting ground between open-minded, exploratory freedom and concise, purposeful pop music. Focus.

[soundcloud url="https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/73622007" params="" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]

[soundcloud url="https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/63051189" params="" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]

Everything Everything - Arc

Toro Y Moi

Anything In Return

9

6.2 Milkitude

  • Carpark Records
  • January 22, 2013
  • Anything in Return on iTunes
  • Official Website
  • Toro Y Moi on Facebook
  • Toro Y Moi on Twitter
Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Share 0
Share 0
Related Topics
  • carpark records
  • Toro Y Moi
Michael Smith

Previous Article
  • Events
  • Interviews
  • Mainstage
  • New York Events
  • Trance

Earmilk Interview: Armin van Buuren [+ Tour Preview]

  • February 1, 2013
  • Steph Evans
View Article
Next Article
  • Feature
  • Trap
  • Videos

Certified Trap 2 [Documentary + Mixtape]

  • February 1, 2013
  • Lindsay Blair
View Article
You May Also Like
View Article
  • Alternative
  • Indie
  • Indie Pop
  • Indie Rock
  • Pop
  • Psychedelic

Montazona brings in the patience with psychedelic masterpiece "Slow Your Roll"

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Americana
  • Country

Staci Gruber "Be Kind With My Heart" is a soulful country ballad

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Alternative Rock
  • Interviews
  • Punk

Neutral Snap chat new single "Danny ACOG", collaboration, waking up on a random golf course and more [Interivew]

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Lo-Fi
  • Mainstage
  • Post-Punk
  • Psych-rock

Captain Crocodile lures you in with “Your Slithery Fum”

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Indie
  • Indie Pop
  • Mainstage
  • New Music
  • Pop

Jadelyn reaches finds her true artistic purpose in genre bending "Daydream Diaries" EP [Review]

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Folk
  • Indie
  • New Music

Singer Songwriter Emma Harner releases folk single, "False Alarm"

  • June 6, 2025
View Article
  • Alternative
  • Funk
  • Hip-Hop

THEKOIWAY delivers a soundtrack of the streets in “La Calle Quema”

  • June 5, 2025
View Article
  • Alternative
  • Indie
  • Indie Rock
  • New Music
  • Post-Rock
  • Shoegaze

South London's Ain’t strikes gold with their latest single "Jude"

  • June 5, 2025
Popular Music
  • Telebox taps into a frantic yet atmospheric feel on "Shadow Of A Heart"
    • June 6, 2025
  • Honey Motel unveils striking genre-bending anthem offering "If You Didn’t Exist"
    • June 6, 2025
  • Captain Crocodile lures you in with “Your Slithery Fum”
    • June 6, 2025
  • Chloe Florence inspires listeners to disconnect and reconnect with "Log Off"
    • June 6, 2025
  • Montazona brings in the patience with psychedelic masterpiece "Slow Your Roll"
    • June 6, 2025
Recent Scoops
  • Matt Oakley is redefining country music with heart, soul and modernity
    • May 5, 2025
  • Texas’ Blacktop Mojo does rock music the way it should be done
    • April 29, 2025
  • Tha Rapper Haiti blends authentic style with musical passion
    • April 28, 2025
  • Glorybots redefines rock with latest album 'mad.end'
    • April 10, 2025
Community Voices
  • From Machismo To Mujeres: Women As The Face Of Reggaeton
    • July 14, 2022
  • Tyler the creator
    4 things I learned on the 'Call Me If You Get Lost' tour
    • March 31, 2022
  • 4 things every artist needs to think about in 2022
    • January 27, 2022
  • The TikTok Takeover of Hip-Hop
    • January 11, 2022

EARMILK EARMILK
  • Jobs
  • About EARMILK
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Music
All Milk. No Duds.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.