Mister Divine Biog English

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Naytronix
Mister Divine
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LP/CD/DIGITAL
16.10.2015
Slang50085
City Slang
Strangers to the touring life refer to it as “living the dream,” while generally the ones
actually doing the touring see it more as living in a dream. The difference is subtle to the
uninitiated, yet is intimate to Nate Brenner, AKA Naytronix, who has spent much of the
past four years touring the world as bassist for the mighty tUnE-yArDs. Consider
Naytronix’s second full-length, Mister Divine (2015, City Slang), his treatise on the
subject, which sees him turning from the disjointedly funky party dance anthems of his
debut Dirty Glow (2012, Plug Research) to a surrealist stream of consciousness
poignancy.
Conceived in tour busses, hotel suites, and basement studios initially as fodder for DJ
sets, Mister Divine is the feeling of déjà vu between delirious post-show fevers and the
road-torn sleep through the night on the way to the next city, driving the circumference of
the Earth in nine weeks, dreams of Pangaea, of forever ago and infinity from now.
Imagine: impossibly, and without the recollection of flying, you’re in Europe maniacally
driving through the pre-dawn to catch the first ferry to Belgium, to Spain, to Sweden.
There is Dur Dur on the stereo, William Onyeabor, Khaira Arby, and Dizzy K,
compilations and mixtapes of unknown origin and content. This too is a dream, and
tomorrow you’re starting over, another opportunity to bask in the irrelevance of the
present moment, “all we have,” while keeping one eye on the future and one on the
past.
Naytronix’s music is the key to this, as if the slipstream of time that our lives drag behind
could be cross-cut, altogether avoided, or drafted and overtaken. The expression of this
for Brenner is simplicity. The intricate and wide-spanning production of his debut is
cinched tight as a racing foil as he goes back to where it all started: his bass, his voice,
the secrets of drum machines and dreams, narrowing down his songwriting style to
focus on narrative and cohesive arrangements; The Song. The result was hours of
music not likely to see the light of day, tracks taken to the chopping block at the now
iconic Oakland studio “New, Improved Recording“ with friend, collaborator, and guitarist
Mark Allen-Piccolo. He and Brenner, along with percussionist Robert Lopez, sculpted
nine songs into something resembling a compact trio album, which was then finished
with sounds and textures from fellow Oberlin Conservatory family members Matt Nelson
and Noah Bernstein (tUnE-yArDs saxophones) and synth master Michael Coleman
(Beep!).
Brenner has digested a lot in the three years since introducing this world to Naytronix.
tUnE-yArDs has turned into something of a perpetual motion machine, taking him to far
corners of the Earth, as well as Carnegie Hall and the TV sets of Jimmy Fallon, Conan
O’Brien, Jools Holland, and Austin City Limits. He did some recording and performing
with music royalty Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon, got to collaborate and learn from Cibo
Matto’s Yuka Honda, and even found some time to take the Naytronix band around the
US and across the Atlantic, from London to Istanbul.
While his music keeps its characteristic reflection of ‘70s Onyeabor and Bootsy Collins,
there is a new facet of the sincerity and vulnerability of Arthur Russell amidst the
psychedelia, as if wishing to land the Naytronix Mothership down to stay with us for a bit.
Brenner returns to his adopted hometown Oakland (he’s originally from Bloomington, IN)
to find friends lost one by one to the allure of New York City in “Living in a Magazine.”
On the track “Back in Time,” he grapples with a fleeting youth, crooning, “Time is tricky
‘cause you only get a single play, not like a record you can throw on every single day.”
As music and life become one for the touring musician living (in) the dream, the line
between plays and days gets more and more blurred. And in the Naytronix dreamland,
no one’s there to dictate which is which.
Tracklist
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Mister Divine
Starting Over
Dream
Back in Time
The Wall
I Don’t Remember
Future
Living in a Magazine
Shadow
http://www.cityslang.com
http://naytronix.com
https://www.facebook.com/Naytronix
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