Critic's Notebook

DJ Mayonnaise

Eight years have passed since DJ Mayonnaise's debut LP, and while the Portland, Maine producer piled droning keyboards, brass, and ample noise on downtempo beats for Still Alive during this hiatus, he held fast on an apparent refusal to choose a less embarrassing moniker. Mayonnaise — er, let's use his...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Eight years have passed since DJ Mayonnaise’s debut LP, and while the Portland, Maine producer piled droning keyboards, brass, and ample noise on downtempo beats for Still Alive during this hiatus, he held fast on an apparent refusal to choose a less embarrassing moniker. Mayonnaise — er, let’s use his birth name, Chris Greer — won’t particularly blow minds with Still Alive, but his vision sporadically delivers compelling bedroom listening. “May Days” is a highlight in the album’s sunnier fraction, with a melody riding on three curt notes and clarinet that never climbs into solo dickery, but instead sways only slightly, like swamp cattails on a breezy spring afternoon. Although emcee K-the-I??? drops in for one tour on Still Alive, his verses spill over with simplistic knee-jerk political gripes, and the LP’s wordless stunts remain strongest. “Quiet on the Set” is busy and muddy, with Greer’s slick, slovenly cuts sandwiched between jumpy DJ Shadow-styled drum breaks. “Munjoy Moments” and “Easily Distracted” make notable use of glassy synth tones and tempo changeups, but by the end, Greer’s eight-year absence is somewhat un-accounted for: Was he so busy with Still Alive that he couldn’t alter his stage name?

This year, make your gift count –
Invest in local news that matters.

Our work is funded by readers like you who make voluntary gifts because they value our work and want to see it continue. Make a contribution today to help us reach our $30,000 goal!

$30,000

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...