With the release his third studio album, it's evident that Los Angeles producer Jasper Patterson, aka
Groundislava, has come a long way since his chiptune hip-hop days. With the lead track, "Girl Behind the Glass," Patterson sounds like he's matured by spending his time listening to pop music rather than playing computer games. Pop sensibility and '90s dance music were influences on his former albums Groundislava and Feel Me, but this time around it has been taken to new extremes. Feel Me had elements suggesting that the creative direction was shifting -- as it was for so many producers in the early 2010s -- toward house, and Frozen Throne has drifted even further away from that. Perhaps the stand-out tracks here are the ones sans vocals provided by fellow L.A. residents Rare Times. The instrumental tracks are more forthcoming musically and feature many beautifully flowing synth-line freakouts, and with the duo featured six times on the album, it feels more like a collaborative effort. The vocals are also performed in such an emotional and theatrical manner that it wouldn't be too far-fetched to suggest that they could also be performed in a stage show. Highlights include the aptly titled "October Acid" and "Terminate Uplink," two
Aphex Twin-esque light acid techno tracks that could have been lifted from
Richard D. James' early records. ~ James Pearce