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In a review for AllMusic, Dave Shim proclaims that "A-Trak has released a mix tailor made for dance floor enthusiasts rather than fader-flicking musos." FabricLive.45 brings together older club styles with newer club beats "seamlessly mashed up in jaw-dropping new configurations".
A collaborator since the beginning of his career, A-Trak has focused on co-producing music with other artists since the early 2000s and has been part of musical groups The Brothers Macklovitch (2020–present), Duck Sauce (2009–present), Low Pros (2014), DJ crew The Allies (1998–2000), [1] and hip hop crew Obscure Disorder (1997–2000).
A-Trak was featured on the 2016 Fool's Gold Records compilation album Fool's Gold Presents: Night Shift, for his song "Only One" with Ookay. On May 3, 2016, A-Trak premiered his single "Parallel Lines" (featuring Phantogram) on Zane Lowe's Beats 1 Radio show. A-Trak embarked on an Australian Tour with fellow producer What So Not on June 30 ...
The two had several studio sessions, resulting in the first Low Pros' records. [1] Their first release, the song "Jack Tripper" was well received by critics. Consequence of Sound described it as "a sweaty, swaggering banger down to the last swift beat" [ 2 ] and Max Weinstein of Vibe called it "one hell of a recipe."
The music video for "Heads Will Roll" was directed by Richard Ayoade, and premiered on NME.com on May 26, 2009. [8] It features the band playing in a (presumably) underground venue when a dancing werewolf whose dancing is reminiscent of Michael Jackson (who died four days before the single was released and 30 days after the music video premiered) appears on stage.
It should only contain pages that are A-Trak songs or lists of A-Trak songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about A-Trak songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
At Metacritic, the album earned a score of 75 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [2]Much of the praise was directed at Corey's production. In a positive review for the album, Chris Dart of Exclaim! called him "Injury Reserve's real driving force", [3] and Kyle Kohner of The 405 wrote that Corey "mix[es] things up with some of the most wonky-sounding production you will hear ...
In a mixed review from PopMatters, Matthew Collins said, "Love Comes Close shows some potential for artist growth with a little more seasoned songwriting." [ 3 ] The track "Life Magazine" was used in a 2009 RadioShack commercial, [ 8 ] and as a soundtrack in the Konami game Pro Evolution Soccer 2012 .