Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Oxy Music

2022 studio album by Alex Cameron From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oxy Music
Remove ads

Oxy Music is the fourth studio album by Australian musician Alex Cameron, released on 11 March 2022 by the record label Secretly Canadian.[2] Produced by Cameron himself, the album maintains his distinct storytelling style from the perspectives of various characters. Initially inspired by Nico Walker's autofictional novel Cherry (2018), Oxy Music primarily revolves around a fictional man grappling with the opioid epidemic in the United States.[3] The album's release was preceded by the singles "Sara Jo",[4] "Best Life"[5] and "K Hole".[6] Critically, the album has garnered generally favorable reviews.[7]

Quick facts Studio album by Alex Cameron, Released ...
Remove ads

Critical reception

Summarize
Perspective
More information Aggregate scores, Source ...

Oxy Music was released to a positive reception from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 73, based on 11 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[7] Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave it 6.9 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[8]

Ryan Bell of DIY wrote, "Its steady pace and relatively tame nature (by his standards) means it might not be his most immediately striking release, but it's still testament to his talent as an astute alt-pop songwriter."[11] Michael Di Gennaro of Exclaim wrote, "Oxy Music's greatest strength is that it makes the plight of an addict easy to understand and sympathize with, and may even help addicts who tune in feel less alone."[12]

In a negative review, Sophie Kemp of Pitchfork criticized the album's production as being among the weakest in Cameron's career. Kemp also criticized its concept, writing, "More than anything, it takes on the quality of a short story written by a young student trying to cram as many neon lights, bongs, uzis, blow jobs, g-strings, and jokes into 10 pages as possible. For how clearly smart, ambitious, and upsettingly tuneful Cameron is, it’s a pity that he uses his talent for these exercises in sophistry, music that feels so vacuous and fleeting that it becomes one with the very modernity it seeks to lampoon."[15]

Remove ads

Track listing

All tracks are written by Alex Cameron, with contributions by Justin Nijssen, Roy Molloy, Lloyd Vines and Jason Williamson.

More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

Personnel

Performance
  • Alex Cameron – vocals, piano, keyboards, drum machine
  • Henri Lindström – drums, percussion
  • Justin Nijssen – bass, guitar, vocals
  • Lilah Larson – guitar, vocals
  • Jess Parsons – piano, keyboards, vocals
  • Roy Molloy – saxophone
  • Chris Pitsiokos – saxophone
  • Lloyd Vines – vocals
  • Jason Williamson – vocals
  • Jackie McLean – vocals
Technical
  • Alex Cameron – production, recording
  • Justin Nijssen – additional production
  • Lilah Larson – additional production
  • Lauri Eloranta – drum recording
  • Kai Campos – mixing (all tracks)
  • Danny Trachtenberg – mixing (1)
  • Joe LaPorta – mastering
Art
  • Jemima Kirke – cover photography
  • McLean Stephenson – cover photograph edit
  • Nick Scott – layout

Charts

More information Chart (2022), Peak position ...

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads