2012–2017
2012–2017 is the debut studio album by Against All Logic, an electronic music alias of Chilean-American producer and composer Nicolás Jaar, released digitally on February 17, 2018, through his label Other People Records.[1] The record serves as a compilation of previously unreleased tracks Jaar created between 2012 and 2017, marking his first full-length release under the Against All Logic moniker after earlier EPs and singles.[2] Spanning 11 tracks with a total runtime of approximately 66 minutes, the album delves into deep house and experimental electronic styles, featuring prominent sampling from soul, R&B, and pop sources integrated with driving beats and atmospheric textures. Key tracks include the opener "This Old House Is All I Have," and the extended groove of "I Never Dream," noted for its funky basslines and hypnotic rhythms.[3] Other highlights encompass "Know You," with its emotive vocal chops, and "Like Late" featuring guest vocals from FKA twigs, blending outsider house elements with tech house influences.[4] The production emphasizes bold, refined club tracks that balance accessibility with avant-garde flair, drawing from Jaar's broader discography while revitalizing his early Against All Logic output from the mid-2010s.[5] Upon release, 2012–2017 garnered widespread critical acclaim for its innovative sampling techniques and infectious energy, earning a Metacritic score of 82 out of 100 based on five reviews.[6] Pitchfork rated it 8.8 out of 10, describing it as a "surprise release of sample-heavy cuts both bolder and more refined than his early club tracks."[3] The album was later ranked number 35 on Pitchfork's list of the 50 best albums of 2018, highlighting its role in advancing contemporary house music.[7] Its vinyl edition followed on May 18, 2018, further boosting its cult status among electronic music enthusiasts.[8]Background
Against All Logic alias
Nicolás Jaar, a Chilean-American electronic music producer based in New York, initially adopted the Against All Logic (A.A.L.) alias in the early 2010s to release a handful of club-oriented tracks and DJ mixes targeted at underground dance audiences.[9] This pseudonym allowed Jaar to explore raw, functional electronic sounds separate from his more experimental work under his own name, such as his 2011 debut album Space Is Only Noise. The alias remained largely dormant for several years following these initial outings, as Jaar focused on broader projects including collaborations and film scores.[10] In 2016, Jaar revived Against All Logic for a series of online mixes distributed through his Other People label, featuring continuously blended house tracks that showcased a return to club-friendly production.[11] This revival culminated in the 2018 full-length debut 2012–2017, compiling and expanding upon material from those mixes into a standalone album that marked A.A.L.'s emergence as a distinct entity.[9] Coming shortly after Jaar's introspective 2017 album Sirens—a politically charged work blending ambient and orchestral elements under his real name—the A.A.L. project represented a deliberate shift toward more immediate, house-inflected output released with intentional anonymity to emphasize the music's independence from his established persona.[12] This anonymous approach extended to the album's presentation, with no artist name appearing on the cover art or initial Bandcamp and digital store listings, which simply credited the release to "A.A.L." to reinforce the alias's self-contained identity.[11]Compilation concept
2012–2017 serves as a retrospective compilation of tracks produced by Nicolas Jaar under his Against All Logic (A.A.L.) alias, encompassing material created over a five-year span from 2012 to 2017, rather than being conceived and recorded as a unified studio album.[3] The project gathers a selection of house-oriented pieces that reflect Jaar's exploration of dance music conventions during this period, resulting in a looser, more informal collection compared to his typically structured solo releases.[3] Many of the album's tracks draw from Jaar's early house work in the style of his Wolf + Lamb releases and originate from A.A.L. singles and EPs such as the 2012 The Bend EP and 2014's "You Are the One," alongside material from the 2016 A.A.L. online mixes where segments appeared in blended, continuous form rather than as standalone compositions.[11][13] A handful of pieces are newly presented for this release, blending previously available cuts with fresh edits to form a cohesive yet non-chronological overview of the alias's output. This approach underscores the album's retrospective intent, compiling disparate elements from Jaar's hard drive to showcase the evolution of his house productions without a singular narrative arc.[11] Although marketed as Jaar's first full-length studio album under the A.A.L. moniker—following earlier EPs and singles—the record's patchwork assembly has sparked discussion among critics and listeners regarding its classification, with many viewing it more accurately as a compilation due to the disparate timelines and sources of its components.[3] In a 2016 interview, Jaar framed the Against All Logic project as an extension of his early career focus on house music, emphasizing its role in allowing him to engage with genre traditions separately from his experimental solo endeavors.[14] This release effectively revives the alias, positioning the compilation as a deliberate archival effort to document and disseminate this phase of his creative output.Recording and production
Track origins
The tracks on 2012–2017 originated as sketches and experiments by Nicolas Jaar under the Against All Logic alias, spanning a five-year creative period marked by his immersion in house music production alongside extensive DJing and touring. The project began in 2012 as an outlet for Jaar's club-oriented work, distinct from his more experimental solo output, with initial ideas emerging from live sets and informal sessions that emphasized sample integration and rhythmic drive. By the mid-2010s, these efforts had evolved through repeated performances, allowing Jaar to test and iterate on motifs in real-time environments before committing them to more structured forms.[3] A pivotal moment in the tracks' development occurred in 2016, when Jaar compiled many of them into a continuous DJ mix for Network Radio 333's Channel 279, presenting early versions in a seamless flow that highlighted their dancefloor potential. Several key pieces, including "This Old House Is All I Have," "I Never Dream," "Some Kind of Game," "Hopeless," and "Such a Bad Way," debuted in this format, capturing raw energy from ongoing refinements during Jaar's global performances. For the album, these were extracted, isolated, and polished—exemplified by "Some Kind of Game" and "Hopeless," which transitioned from mix segments into standalone tracks with added depth in layering and dynamics—transforming ephemeral sketches into a cohesive collection. Later additions, such as "Rave on U" and "Cityfade," built on this foundation in 2016–2017, incorporating extended builds suited to live improvisation before final studio completion.[15][3] Jaar's worldwide travels and frequent DJ residencies during 2012–2017 profoundly shaped the sketching process, as he often captured ideas using portable setups amid tours with projects like Darkside and solo sets across Europe, North America, and beyond. This nomadic lifestyle fostered a backlog of unfinished house fragments, drawn from diverse club scenes and cultural encounters, which Jaar later curated from his archives to form the album's 11 selections—prioritizing those that balanced immediacy with emotional resonance without overhauling their original club roots. Full realization waited until 2017, enabling a retrospective assembly that preserved the era's spontaneous spirit.[3]Sampling techniques
In the production of 2012–2017, Nicolas Jaar, under the Against All Logic moniker, heavily relied on soul, gospel, and obscure R&B vocal samples as foundational elements, chopping and looping them to construct infectious house grooves. These samples serve as repetitious building blocks, providing structural backbone rather than mere embellishments, a more straightforward approach reminiscent of hip-hop production techniques compared to Jaar's earlier, more abstract work.[16][17] A prime example is the track "This Old House Is All I Have," where Jaar layers a haunting, 1970s-inflected gospel vocal sample over intricate percussion and driving beats, creating a dense yet danceable texture. He employs bursts of distortion to mar the sample's honeyed quality, adding tension and electronic sizzle that intensifies as the track builds, while subtle tone shifts—likely involving pitch manipulation—enhance the emotional depth without overpowering the groove. Similar techniques appear throughout the album, with tempo manipulations allowing samples to transition fluidly from weighty intros to breezy, refined house rhythms, blending analog warmth from the source material into bold digital arrangements.[9][18][17] Jaar's sampling philosophy in this project emphasizes repurposing overlooked or forgotten vocal snippets from soul and gospel traditions, infusing them with modern house energy to align with Against All Logic's underground ethos of subverting commercial expectations—exemplified by the album's unannounced digital release. This method not only revives obscure sounds but also critiques industry commodification, prioritizing artistic integrity and listener discovery over promotion.[17][16][3]Musical style and themes
Genre and sound
The album 2012–2017 is primarily a deep house record, incorporating experimental house, tech house, and elements of funk, soul, and techno.[1][3][19] Spanning eleven tracks with a total runtime of 66:42, it draws on traditional house structures like predictable kick-snare-hi-hat motifs at around 128 beats per minute, while integrating midtempo disco edits and chunky grooves.[20][3][9] Its sound profile emphasizes sample-heavy grooves built from long, coherent portions of funk and soul vocals, often looped with heavy kicks to create a familiar yet slightly off-kilter feel, evoking records from a parallel universe.[3][9] Bold distortions and crackling textures disrupt these elements, as in the opening track "This Old House Is All I Have," where chanted vocals and odd bursts of noise mar an otherwise honeyed sample, producing a textured, entrancing quality.[9][21] Refined melodies emerge through big, transcendent lines on piano or synth, contrasting brooding, steady builds in tracks like "Know You"—which features a commanding beat with minimal additional layers and a wildly chirpy vocal refrain—with the extended, rave-like immersion of "Rave on U," a 9:55 composition that forages for uplifting, mood-shifting crescendos.[3][9] This sonic approach marks an evolution from Against All Logic's earlier club-oriented tracks, which were looser and more abstract, toward bolder, more refined full-length compositions that prioritize beats and dancefloor energy over ambient experimentation seen in Nicolas Jaar's solo work.[3] Sampling serves as a core tool here, enabling the post-modern layering of soulful refrains and pitched-down vocals to drive the album's hypnotic, party-ready struts.[9][21]Lyrical content
The lyrical content of 2012–2017 primarily relies on fragmented vocal samples sourced from soul, gospel, and R&B records, with limited original vocal elements such as in the opener, in favor of evocative, chopped phrases that layer emotional depth over the album's instrumental house tracks. These samples, often looped and distorted, create a sense of abstracted narrative rather than straightforward storytelling, drawing from vintage sources to infuse tracks with haunting resonance. For instance, the opening track "This Old House Is All I Have" features chanted vocals sampling David Axelrod's 1970 composition "The Warnings (Part II)" with phrases like "The foundations of the world are being broken," alongside soulful refrains from Mike James Kirkland's "Doin' It Right" (1973), culminating in the repeated assertion "This old house is all I have," an original vocal by Nicolás Jaar. This arrangement evokes themes of transience and attachment, symbolizing impermanence amid personal upheaval.[22][23][9] Across the album, these vocal elements underscore motifs of longing, urban isolation, and fleeting joy, inferred through disjointed phrases that hint at emotional disconnection in nocturnal, rave-like settings. In "I Never Dream," filtered and twisting vocal samples fade in and out, building an ebullient yet disorienting energy that reflects 1990s-inspired rave culture and moments of ecstatic release, while tracks like "Such a Bad Way" incorporate pitched-down samples—including unnerving screams from Kanye West's "I Am a God" (2013) in the original release—to convey unease and bad-trip introspection (the sample was removed from streaming versions in September 2022). The title "Hopeless" itself, paired with its brooding atmosphere and subtle chanted undertones, amplifies a sense of resigned isolation without explicit words, prioritizing mood over verbosity. Overall, Nicolas Jaar employs these samples to imply narratives of personal reflection spanning 2012–2017, capturing the era's introspective undercurrents in electronic music.[3][21][9][24] In contrast to Jaar's releases under his primary moniker, which frequently incorporate more narrative-driven vocals or spoken elements, the Against All Logic project remains deliberately abstract, using samples to suggest rather than declare themes of urban solitude and ephemeral connection. This approach heightens the album's instrumental focus, where vocal fragments serve as emotional anchors amid relentless rhythms, fostering a conceptual exploration of rave culture's highs and lows without overt lyrical exposition.[3][9]Release and promotion
Release details
The album 2012–2017 by Against All Logic was released as a surprise digital download on February 17, 2018, through Nicolas Jaar's Other People label, with no prior announcement or promotional buildup.[11][3] The release appeared exclusively on Bandcamp initially, allowing immediate streaming and download in formats such as MP3, FLAC, and WAV under catalog number AWD340537, before expanding to wider digital distribution platforms.[25][1] Physical editions followed later in 2018, including a double vinyl LP pressed on Other People's OP048 catalog number, available in the US and Europe.[8] The packaging and artwork credited the project solely to the A.A.L. alias, omitting Jaar's name to preserve the mystery surrounding the moniker.[11] This unheralded launch came shortly after Jaar's 2017 full-length Sirens under his own name, representing a swift shift toward compiling and releasing house-oriented material from his earlier productions.[3]Marketing and singles
The release of 2012–2017 eschewed traditional single promotions, aligning with its surprise digital drop on February 17, 2018, via Nicolas Jaar's Other People label.[26] Instead, tracks such as "Rave on U" and "This Old House Is All I Have" were spotlighted in Bandcamp previews, drawing attention from existing fans familiar with A.A.L.'s earlier output.[25] These selections underscored the album's role as a curated compilation rather than a vehicle for new chart-driven singles.[1] Marketing efforts leaned heavily on organic word-of-mouth within Jaar's established audience, amplified by a subtle tease from Pitchfork, which reviewed standout track "I Never Dream" just days after the launch.[27] The initial rollout avoided mainstream advertising, preserving A.A.L.'s underground club roots and fostering a sense of discovery among electronic music enthusiasts.[3] A subsequent physical vinyl edition, pressed on May 18, 2018, saw limited copies sell out rapidly through the label's store, further capitalizing on demand without broader campaigns.[25] Post-release visibility was boosted by 2018 tour dates performed under the A.A.L. moniker, where album tracks were integrated into sets, exposing the material to live audiences without conventional promotional tie-ins.[28] This approach reinforced the project's ethos of authenticity over commercial hype, allowing the music to gain traction through communal and performance-based engagement.[3]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its surprise release in February 2018, 2012–2017 garnered widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic aggregate score of 82 out of 100 based on five reviews, indicating universal acclaim.[6] Pitchfork awarded the album 8.8 out of 10 and designated it "Best New Music," lauding its bold samples and overall refinement as "both bolder and more refined than his early club tracks," while describing the track sequencing as a particular "wonder."[3] Clash rated it 8 out of 10, highlighting its adherence to house music tropes in a manner that made it danceable and precise, with standout tracks like "Know You" featuring accessible Motown-inspired vocals over commanding beats.[29] AllMusic gave it 4 out of 5 stars, praising the entrancing grooves that defined its sample-heavy house sound.[30] In contrast, Resident Advisor was less enthusiastic, assigning 2.8 out of 5 and critiquing the uneven bursts of distortion that marred otherwise promising elements, such as on the opening track "This Old House Is All I Have."[9] The album's unannounced drop amplified initial buzz within electronic music publications, catching reviewers off guard amid expectations of more experimental fare from Nicolas Jaar.[26]Accolades and retrospective views
Upon its release, 2012–2017 earned Pitchfork's Best New Music designation, with the album receiving an 8.8 out of 10 for its bold, sample-heavy deep house tracks that refined Nicolas Jaar's earlier club work.[3] It also secured notable placements in several 2018 year-end lists, including #35 on Pitchfork's 50 Best Albums, #27 on Treble's Top 50, #41 on The Skinny's rankings, #49 on Mixmag's list, and #67 on Noisey's roundup.[7][5] On Rate Your Music, the album holds a 3.79 out of 5 rating based on over 18,300 user votes, reflecting sustained appreciation for its groovy, eclectic production.[2] The album garnered no major industry awards such as Grammys, yet it received enduring praise for its innovative sampling in A.A.L.'s 2020 follow-up 2017–2019, often referenced as a landmark that contrasted with the sequel's shift away from soulful flips toward harsher techno.[31] By 2023, retrospective user reviews on Album of the Year hailed it as a "cornerstone of underground deep house," praising its diverse samples and atmospheric depth, with an average user score contributing to its #29 ranking among 2018 releases.[5] Some initial 2018 reviews noted reservations about the album's cohesion, describing it as more a loose compilation than a unified statement.[32]Commercial performance and legacy
Charting and sales
The album 2012–2017 did not achieve mainstream commercial success, failing to enter major charts such as the Billboard 200 or the UK Albums Chart top 100.[33] Instead, it registered minor placements on specialist UK charts operated by the Official Charts Company, reflecting its appeal within niche electronic and independent music communities. Specifically, it peaked at number 35 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart, number 27 on the Official Record Store Chart, and number 14 on the Official Independent Album Breakers Chart, each for one week in late May 2018.[34] Sales were driven primarily through digital platforms and limited physical releases, underscoring the album's grassroots distribution model under the Other People label. The initial double vinyl edition, released via Bandcamp, quickly sold out, indicating strong demand among dedicated fans despite the absence of traditional retail push.[25] This direct-to-consumer approach aligned with A.A.L.'s underground ethos, prioritizing quality pressings over mass-market availability, though exact unit sales figures remain undisclosed by the label.[35] On streaming platforms, 2012–2017 demonstrated robust engagement early on, bolstered by word-of-mouth and critical buzz rather than radio airplay. As of November 2025, the album has accumulated over 25 million streams on Spotify, contributing to Against All Logic's monthly listener base of approximately 250,000.[36][37] Overall, the album's commercial trajectory exemplified underground success in the electronic genre, thriving through niche chart entries, sold-out specialty formats, and streaming momentum without broader promotional infrastructure or mainstream exposure. This performance mirrored A.A.L.'s positioning as a non-commercial alias for Nicolás Jaar, emphasizing artistic experimentation over chart dominance.[3]Cultural impact
The album 2012–2017 played a pivotal role in reviving interest in sample-heavy deep house within electronic music, blending vintage soul and disco samples with contemporary club rhythms to influence productions in the 2020s. Pitchfork described it as featuring "sample-heavy cuts both bolder and more refined than his early club tracks," highlighting its role in reenergizing the genre's experimental edge.[3] Tracks such as "Rave on U" became staples in club sets and DJ culture, with its euphoric cowbell-driven groove frequently cited in retrospectives as a peak of the album's dancefloor potency. Resident Advisor noted the album's overall "warm and soulful" quality, making it a go-to for DJs seeking infectious, sample-infused house anthems.[9] The track's inclusion expanded the Against All Logic project's legacy, directly inspiring the follow-up album 2017–2019 released in 2020, which shifted toward harder techno while retaining the sample-heavy ethos established in 2012–2017.[38] In broader retrospectives on Nicolas Jaar's oeuvre during the 2020s, 2012–2017 has been featured prominently for its contributions to house music's evolution amid the rise of digital listening sessions on Twitch, which drew thousands and amplified its reach.[38] By 2025, the album is recognized in electronic music histories as a bridge between the 2010s' experimental underground and the 2020s' revival of accessible, sample-centric house.Track listing and credits
Track listing
All tracks are written and produced by Nicolás Jaar under the moniker Against All Logic, with no additional co-writers or producers credited.[4][2][1]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "This Old House Is All I Have" | 3:39 |
| 2 | "I Never Dream" | 6:46 |
| 3 | "Some Kind of Game" | 6:47 |
| 4 | "Hopeless" | 5:41 |
| 5 | "Know You" | 4:25 |
| 6 | "Such a Bad Way" | 4:53 |
| 7 | "Cityfade" | 5:41 |
| 8 | "Now U Got Me Hooked" | 5:51 |
| 9 | "Flash in the Pan" | 7:28 |
| 10 | "You Are Going to Love Me and Scream" | 5:35 |
| 11 | "Rave On U" | 9:56 |