Tame Impala – “Deadbeat” review

Kevin Parker or better known by his stage name Tame Impala is a 39 year old singer/songwriter, musician, producer & DJ from Sydney, New South Wales, Australia making his full length debut Innerspeaker back when I was finishing up 7th grade & came back during my sophomore year of high school for the widely acclaimed follow-up LonerismCurrents a couple months after my high school graduation has already become amongst the greatest albums of the 2010s & The Slow Rush would be more moderately received, returning halfway through the ongoing decade to make his major label debut under Columbia Records with his 5th studio LP.

“My Old Ways” begins with him singing over a house instrumental about falling back into his old habits whereas the “No Reply” shouts out the Fox Corporation’s flagship network’s animated hit series Family Guy every Friday night going for a tech house vibe. “Dracula” was my favorite single personally fusing nu-disco, dance-pop, alternative R&B, synth-funk, boogie, synthpop, French electro & Halloween music singing about the way daylight makes him feel just before “Loser” mixes neo-psychedelia, psychedelic pop, indie pop, synth-funk, indie rock & funk rock together gives a nod to the Beck track of the same name.

My least favorite track on Deadbeat & maybe one of the worst Tame Impala songs I’ve ever heard goes to “Oblivion” for it’s repetitiveness & weak vocal performances, which is a shame because I don’t mind the tropical house beat whatsoever. The instrumental on “Not My World” feels reminiscent to the soundtrack of the PS2 game Jak & Daxter always taking the long way to give each day it’s own meaning & after the Pet Sounds-inspired “Piece of Heaven” sings about lying all your life not making any differences, “Obsolete” goes full blown dance-pop to ask if his love is outdated.

“Ethereal Connection” starts the final leg of the album with my favorite tech house song here promising his family that he’ll always be with them until the end of time & despite the peppy synthesizers on “See You on Monday (You’re Lost)”, the lazily repetitive songwriting bogs it down tremendously. “Afterthought” tackles insecurity over a bass-line kin to the late Michael Jackson’s timeless “Thriller” while “End of Summer” finishes by pulling from melodic techno, progressive house, deep house & melodic house

Given the amount of time it’s been since Deadbeat & The Slow Rush, my anticipation for the musical genius that is Kevin Parker a.k.a. Tame Impala’s return turned to slight disappointment because his full foray in electronic dance music & dance pop leaves me more divided than I’ve ever been with his material. I additionally don’t have any issues with the fatherhood theme or the secondary influences of alt-pop, tech house, indietronica, neo-psychedelia & synthpop. It’s simply not anything special compared to what he’s done previously.

Score: 3/5

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