R Plus Seven
R Plus Seven is the sixth studio album by American electronic musician Daniel Lopatin, performing under his primary alias Oneohtrix Point Never.[1] Released on September 30, 2013, it serves as his debut full-length on the influential British electronic label Warp Records.[2] The album comprises ten tracks, including "Boring Angel," "Americans," "He She," "Inside World," "Zebra," "Along," "Problem Areas," "Cryo," "Still Life," and "Chrome Country," clocking in at approximately 43 minutes.[3] Known for its innovative sound design, R Plus Seven builds upon Lopatin's prior work by exploring the "bright yet cold textures of the early computing age," blending short-burst samples, fake orchestral elements, and digitized vocal manipulations to create a sense of emotional depth amid synthetic abstraction.[4] Drawing influences from ambient pioneers like Jon Hassell and Brian Eno, as well as the process-oriented minimalism of Terry Riley, the record evokes a virtual "fourth world" of music that contrasts real and simulated instrumentation.[4] Critically acclaimed upon release, it earned an 8.4 rating and "Best New Music" designation from Pitchfork, praised for its musicality and ability to convey feeling through controlled, digital parameters.[4]Background and recording
Development
R Plus Seven is the sixth studio album by Oneohtrix Point Never, the project of American musician and composer Daniel Lopatin, and marked his debut release on the Warp Records label following his previous work with Editions Mego.[5][6][7] In developing the album, Lopatin shifted his creative approach from the sample-based collages of his 2011 album Replica to composing original material through synthesis, utilizing MIDI sequencing, synthesizer presets, and virtual studio technology (VST) plugins.[5][6][7] This evolution allowed for a more intuitive process, where Lopatin began by generating melodies at the keyboard rather than manipulating pre-existing audio samples.[5][6] Lopatin drew conceptual inspirations from object-oriented ontology, a philosophical framework that influenced his treatment of sounds as autonomous objects within a sculptural composition space.[5][6][7] His domestic life in Brooklyn provided a grounded context, emphasizing engagement with everyday environments over escapist tendencies, while visual artist Takeshi Murata's explorations of synthetic imagery encouraged Lopatin's delve into artificial timbres and textures.[5][6][7] The album's title originated from the Oulipo literary group's N+7 constraint method, where nouns in a text are replaced by the next seventh word in a dictionary, here conceptually transforming "R" from Replica through procedural addition—evoking a progression in series and timelines alongside a structural reimagining.[5][6] To align with this synthetic focus, Lopatin deliberately avoided traditional hardware synthesizers such as the Roland Juno-60, instead relying on software emulations that recreated presets from 1980s and 1990s samplers to evoke nostalgic yet abstracted electronic forms.[6][7]Recording process
The recording of R Plus Seven took place primarily in Daniel Lopatin's apartment studio in Brooklyn during 2012 and 2013.[6][5] The process extended over approximately a year and a half, beginning with demo sketches and intensifying during focused winter sessions, before final mixing abroad.[6][5] Lopatin handled the core production solo, relying on digital audio workstations to enable procedural composition methods.[7][8] He emphasized virtual instruments and software-generated patches triggered via MIDI, avoiding traditional hardware synthesizers like his previous signature Roland Juno-60.[9][8] This approach incorporated experimentation with early computer music software sounds, emulating vintage presets from 1980s and 1990s samplers to evoke dated digital timbres.[8] The timeline aligned with Lopatin's signing to Warp Records in early 2013, after which he finalized the tracks for release later that year.[5] While minimal external collaboration occurred during the primary sessions, assistance from engineer Paul Corley supported daily workflow in the apartment setup.[6]Composition
Musical style
R Plus Seven predominantly features synthesized sounds drawn from 1980s and 1990s presets, evoking the bright yet cold textures of early digital music production, such as hauntingly clean Fairlight-inspired wispy digitized voices and chintzy approximations of common instruments like fake horns and whooshing vocal samples.[4] This approach stems from artist Daniel Lopatin's self-described "digital hoarding" process, where he amassed vast indexes of digital sounds to curate ethereal, glitchy textures that mimic blocky, pixelated representations of exotic or nostalgic scenes.[10] Marking a transition from the sample-based collages of his prior work Replica, the album emphasizes hand-crafted synth palettes, including Juno-60 arpeggiators and synthetic organs, layered to create a postmodern electronic style blending nostalgia with deconstruction.[5][11] The album's sonic palette incorporates ambient, experimental electronic, and vaporwave-adjacent elements, with influences from late-1990s IDM, post-rock structures, and Fourth World ambient traditions akin to Jon Hassell and Brian Eno's collaborative work.[4] Tracks like "Zebra" employ procedural, MIDI-driven progressions with programmed staccato synth pulses and algorithmic bursts, generating kaleidoscopic, entrancing patterns that evoke washed-out rave aesthetics amid formless ambient fog.[12] Comparisons to the Art of Noise's sample manipulation and Philip Glass's minimalism—particularly through repetitive motifs reminiscent of Terry Riley—highlight the glitchy, discordant interruptions that punctuate cohesive synth noodling and noise elements.[4][11] Individual tracks exhibit abrupt shifts and choral-like synth layers, constructing hypnotic, vertical structures without traditional drums or vocals, instead relying on MIDI melodies and bleak breaks to distort time and evoke surreal tension between sacred pipe organ tones and secular synthetic chamber music.[5][4] These elements foster an album-as-unit cohesion, with thematically interconnected sketches that prioritize memorable chords, tunes, and sections over standalone songs, spanning genres like musique concrète, drone, and abstract glitch.[11][13] Clocking in at 42:58 across 10 tracks, R Plus Seven maintains a concise runtime that rewards repeated listens, allowing its layered, contradictory sound bits to reveal evolving microcosms within a unified digital landscape.[14]Themes and concepts
R Plus Seven explores themes of morphogenesis and cryogenics through its abstract, evolving soundscapes, presenting music as a series of experiments in transformation and preservation. Morphogenesis, the process of shape formation, is evoked in tracks that build and splinter organically, such as "Zebra," where synth progressions transition into new sections, mimicking biological growth in a digital context.[15] Cryogenics appears in claustrophobic ambient spaces and the track "Cryo," suggesting frozen, detached states amid processed sounds that imply suspended evolution.[15][16] These concepts underscore a piecemeal approach to composition, where motifs recur and mutate, reflecting procedural generation in electronic music.[15] The album draws influence from postmodern literature, particularly Georges Perec's Life: A User's Manual, incorporating constrained, transformative structures to weave disparate elements into a cohesive narrative. Perec's use of matrices and lists to catalog a building's rooms parallels Lopatin's assembly of fragmented samples and synth layers, creating a labyrinthine whole from isolated parts.[16] This literary constraint manifests in the album's dynamic shifts, avoiding repetition to maintain tension and discovery.[17] Central motifs include digital nostalgia, object agency drawn from object-oriented ontology, and a fragmented human experience. Digital nostalgia surfaces through microsamples of 1980s media like TV commercials and instructional videos, evoking an era of early computing innocence now tinged with alienation.[4][16] Object agency, inspired by object-oriented ontology, treats sounds—such as pitch-shifted voices and arpeggiated synths—as autonomous entities with secret lives, prioritizing their intrinsic qualities over human imposition.[10] This fragmentation mirrors a disjointed human condition, amplified by digital hoarding and internet scavenging, where personal archives blend into impersonal data streams.[10] Subtle narrative arcs emerge across tracks via layered, conversational vocals forming a non-specific "Greek choir," fostering introspection and unease without lyrics, as elements obscure and tease resolution.[17] The album achieves conceptual unity by tying these motifs to a "domestic" yet alienating digital realm, where familiar synth presets and samples construct an intimate, home-like space infiltrated by virtual disorientation. This inward-focused environment captures contemporary life under technocratic influences, balancing freedom with stratification.[4][10] Inspirations from philosophy and artists like Takeshi Murata briefly inform this realm's surreal, breakable veneer.[18]Visual and artistic elements
Album artwork
The album's cover artwork features a reproduction of a still from Swiss animator Georges Schwizgebel's 1982 short film Le ravissement de Frank N. Stein, depicting a surreal scene of morphing, humanoid figures emerging in a distorted, laboratory-like environment that evokes themes of creation and metamorphosis.[19][13] The image, originally from the film's exploration of life's genesis through fluid, transforming forms, was recreated by artist Robert Beatty with permission from Schwizgebel.[20][21] Beatty collaborated with Oneohtrix Point Never (Daniel Lopatin) on the overall design, adopting a minimalist, abstract aesthetic with subdued colors and sparse typography to highlight the eerie, otherworldly quality of the central image.[22] This approach extends to the album packaging, where the core imagery remains consistent across formats while emphasizing visual restraint to mirror the music's fragmented, synthetic structures. Physical releases include a double vinyl LP pressed in a matte gatefold sleeve, featuring black-printed inner pockets instead of the conventional white for a more immersive, shadowed effect; a standard jewel-case CD; and digital versions, all sharing the film's still as the primary visual element.[23][2] The vinyl edition also includes a download code for high-quality audio files. The album launched in standard editions via Warp Records, alongside limited-run pressings available through select outlets, with no significant reissues documented since its 2013 debut.[24] The artwork's portrayal of fluid, hybrid forms symbolically resonates with the album's conceptual focus on transformation, including ties to morphogenesis as a motif of organic and digital evolution.[20]Video collaborations
The video collaborations for R Plus Seven extended the album's exploration of digital abstraction and synthetic forms through a series of artist-directed works tied to specific tracks, creating multimedia extensions that complemented the music's conceptual depth.[25] One prominent collaboration was with visual artist Jon Rafman for the track "Still Life (Betamale)," released in September 2013. The video features unsettling footage sourced from internet fetish sites, depicting distorted human figures in surreal, voyeuristic scenarios that evoke themes of alienation and virtual intimacy.[26][27] For "Problem Areas," media artist Takeshi Murata created an abstract CGI animation in August 2013, characterized by glitchy, fluid morphing of geometric shapes and organic forms that shift unpredictably, mirroring the track's bubbling electronic textures.[25][28] Jacob Ciocci, known for his work with the collective Paper Rad, directed an interactive digital piece for "Zebra" in September 2013, employing colorful, lo-fi pixelated aesthetics with fragmented animations that evoke early internet art and vaporwave influences.[29][30] The "Boring Angel" video, directed by John Michael Boling and released in December 2013, consists of a sequence of emojis that illustrate a simple narrative of love, life, and death, tying into the album's themes of emotional abstraction.[31] These videos were primarily released online via YouTube and Vimeo throughout 2013, allowing fans to experience the album's synthetic themes through dynamic visual interpretations that broadened its multimedia impact.[26][32]Release and promotion
Announcement and formats
R Plus Seven was announced on June 19, 2013, by Warp Records, which revealed pre-order options and the album's tracklist as Oneohtrix Point Never's debut release on the label.[33][24] The album was released on September 30, 2013, in digital download, CD, and double LP formats under Warp Records (catalog number WARP240).[2][24][13] The standard edition features 10 tracks, while select digital versions and the Japanese CD edition include the bonus track "Gone" (1:06).[22][34] As of November 2025, no major reissues or remasters of the album have been released.[24][13]Marketing and tour
Warp Records promoted R Plus Seven through a series of pre-release previews, including the abstract video for "Still Life (Excerpt)", directed by frequent collaborator Nate Boyce and shared in June 2013.[35] Although no traditional singles were issued, tracks like "Americans" were highlighted in early audio clips and live previews on Lopatin's website, alongside the "Still Life" excerpt, to build anticipation for the album's conceptual evolution.[36] Marketing efforts leveraged Warp's established channels, with Lopatin conducting interviews that underscored the album's shift toward more structured, song-oriented compositions compared to the sample-based Replica. In a September 2013 Stereogum feature, Lopatin discussed the record's focus on virtual environments and emotional ambiguity, positioning it as a departure into "weird pop" territory.[5] Similarly, an October 2013 Quietus interview emphasized the album's exploration of digital uncanny valley aesthetics, drawing parallels to early computer interfaces and choral simulations. These discussions, amplified via Pitchfork announcements and features, highlighted the work's innovative synthesis of ambient, electronic, and vocal elements.[33] Following the album's release, Oneohtrix Point Never embarked on a 2013-2014 tour spanning North America and Europe, commencing with appearances at Festival Ceremonia in Mexico City and EMPAC in Troy, New York, in September 2013.[37] The itinerary expanded in late 2013 with European stops like Le Guess Who? in Utrecht, followed by 2014 North American dates including Lincoln Hall in Chicago and the Wexner Center in Columbus.[38] Live sets featured Lopatin's performances on analog synthesizers, layered with real-time processing to recreate the album's glitchy textures, often accompanied by immersive visual projections.[39] Promotional tie-ins extended to visual collaborators, integrating the album's aesthetic into gallery and festival contexts; for instance, a multimedia event titled "R Plus 6 / Affect Index" at MoMA PS1 on November 3, 2013 showcased interactive installations drawing from the record's themes, co-presented with video elements by artists like Nate Boyce.[40] Limited merchandise included double-vinyl editions in a matte gatefold sleeve with embedded artwork prints and a digital download card, offered through Warp and Bandcamp to complement the album's artistic packaging.[23]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in 2013, R Plus Seven received widespread critical acclaim, with reviewers praising its innovative synthesis and ambitious conceptual framework. The album holds a Metacritic score of 81 out of 100, based on 30 reviews, signifying universal acclaim.[41] Pitchfork awarded it an 8.4 out of 10, lauding the "beautifully disorienting" synthesis that evokes the bright yet cold textures of early personal computing, while highlighting its conceptual ambition in exploring decontextualized musical landscapes and the collective unconscious of technology.[4] AllMusic gave it 4 out of 5 stars, emphasizing its evolution toward more ambient and choral elements, marking a refined progression in Oneohtrix Point Never's experimental sound.[42] Rolling Stone rated it 3.5 out of 5 stars, noting gains in accessibility compared to prior releases, with its blend of vaporwave influences and orchestral swells making it more approachable for broader audiences.[43] Not all responses were unqualified praise; NME scored it 6 out of 10, describing it as "overly cerebral" and akin to gleaming but hard-to-love art, critiquing its arch detachment from raw emotion.[44] Some critics similarly observed a lack of emotional directness, pointing to the album's intellectual layering as occasionally distancing listeners from visceral impact.[45] In year-end retrospectives, R Plus Seven topped Tiny Mix Tapes' list of favorite albums of 2013, ranked #24 on Pitchfork's top 50 albums, and placed #23 on Spin's 50 best albums of the year.[46][47]Accolades
Upon its release, R Plus Seven received significant recognition from music critics and publications, topping Tiny Mix Tapes' Favorite 50 Albums of 2013 list for its innovative electronic compositions and conceptual depth.[46] It also ranked at number 24 on Pitchfork's Top 50 Albums of 2013, praised for advancing Lopatin's experimental sound into more accessible yet challenging territory.[47] The album appeared in year-end selections by The Guardian, where multiple writers included it among their top picks, and Spin, which placed it at number 23 on its 50 Best Albums of 2013 for blending vaporwave influences with orchestral elements.[48] Despite this critical acclaim, R Plus Seven did not secure major industry awards such as Grammy nominations, reflecting its niche position within experimental electronic music. In retrospective lists, the album earned further honors, including placement in Tiny Mix Tapes' Favorite 100 Music Releases of the Decade (2010s) for its enduring influence on digital-age sound design.[49]Post-release impact
Commercial performance
R Plus Seven achieved modest commercial success upon its release, reflecting its position within the niche electronic music market. In the United States, the album peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart.[50] Internationally, it entered several charts in Europe. In the United Kingdom, R Plus Seven reached number 28 on the Official Dance Albums Chart and number 37 on the Official Independent Albums Chart.[51][52] The album received no certifications from major industry bodies such as the RIAA or BPI, consistent with its targeted appeal in the experimental electronic genre. Initial sales in 2013 were bolstered by Warp Records' established distribution network and the surrounding critical acclaim, though exact figures remain unreported. Over time, it has seen steady growth in streaming platforms, amassing over 25 million streams on Spotify as of October 2025, underscoring its enduring cult following in niche markets.[53]Legacy and influence
R Plus Seven marked a pivotal moment in Daniel Lopatin's career as Oneohtrix Point Never, facilitating his shift toward mainstream recognition following its release as his debut for Warp Records. The album's critical success propelled him into high-profile opportunities, including composing scores for films such as Uncut Gems (2019), and contributed to broader trends in electronic music by integrating synthetic elements with emotive structures.[54] Regarded as a landmark in the evolution from hypnagogic pop toward advanced digital ambient and experimental electronica, R Plus Seven influenced subsequent artists in the genre, whose works echo its innovative manipulation of digital textures and emotional resonance.[55] Its experimental approach has been credited with expanding the boundaries of electronic composition during the 2010s.[56] Retrospective assessments, particularly around its 10th anniversary in 2023, have lauded the album as a touchstone for experimental electronica, emphasizing its enduring blend of digital innovation and human sentiment.[54] As part of Warp Records' acclaimed 2010s catalog, it bolstered the label's reputation for championing boundary-pushing electronic works.[56] Although no reissues have been produced, R Plus Seven maintains strong availability on streaming services such as Spotify and Bandcamp.Track listing and credits
Track listing
The standard edition of R Plus Seven features 10 tracks with a total runtime of 42:56. All tracks were written by Daniel Lopatin.[57]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Boring Angel" | 4:16 |
| 2 | "Americans" | 5:18 |
| 3 | "He She" | 1:33 |
| 4 | "Inside World" | 3:53 |
| 5 | "Zebra" | 6:44 |
| 6 | "Along" | 5:23 |
| 7 | "Problem Areas" | 3:06 |
| 8 | "Cryo" | 2:47 |
| 9 | "Still Life" | 4:53 |
| 10 | "Chrome Country" | 5:06 |