Album Info
Artist: | Oneohtrix Point Never |
Album: | Again |
Released: | UK, Europe & US, 2023 |
Tracklist:
A1 | Elseware | |
A2 | Again | |
A3 | World Outside | |
A4 | Krumville | |
B1 | Locrian Midwest | |
B2 | Plastic Antique | |
B3 | Gray Subviolet | |
B4 | The Body Trail | |
C1 | Nightmare Paint | |
C2 | Memories Of Music | |
C3 | On An Axis | |
D1 | Ubiquity Road | |
D2 | A Barely Lit Path | |
D3 | My Dream Dungeon Makeover (Bonus Track) |
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Description
Oneohtrix Point Never’s Again landed on September 29, 2023 via Warp Records, and it plays like a mirror held up to Daniel Lopatin’s past lives. He called it a speculative autobiography, which fits. The record keeps circling memories and imagined detours, not as nostalgia but as a way of testing what his music can carry. You can hear the through line that runs from Replica’s crumbling sample mosaics to R Plus Seven’s plastic chamber music and the widescreen mood of Magic Oneohtrix Point Never. Yet it never feels like a victory lap. It feels like he’s found a new way to thread his history into something that moves.
The opening stretch sets that tone. You get synths that refuse to sit still, voices that flicker in and out like channel surf ghosts, and melodies that bloom, collapse, then bloom again. When the acoustic elements arrive, they feel slightly out of time, like fragments pulled from an old hard drive and re-rendered with 2023 eyes. That tension is the record’s heartbeat. Lopatin has spent years scoring films for the Safdies and crafting pop ephemera with big budgets in mind, but Again is inward. Not smaller, just more personal in how it lets a motif stumble or a texture linger. There is space to notice the edges.
OPN fans who gravitate to the emotional gut punch of Garden of Delete will find a kindred chill here. The album’s closing track, A Barely Lit Path, is the moment that seals it. It stretches out and lets a theme float to the surface, patient and luminous. It is a reminder that he can write a melody that feels both alien and oddly familiar, the sort of line you hum without realizing it left a digital synth rather than a cello. If you’ve followed his journey from basement drone to a creative partner for The Weeknd, that track lands as a quiet statement. After serving as musical director on the After Hours til Dawn tour and helping shape Dawn FM, he came back to his solo world and chose restraint over spectacle.
What makes Again click is how it refuses to harden around any single idea. A piece might start like a suite for toy orchestra, drift into rusted techno, then erase the grid entirely. Yet the sequencing keeps it coherent. You feel a hand guiding the mood from track to track, using negative space as much as any lead sound. The production detail is ridiculous, but Lopatin never treats it like a showroom. Little breaths and digital grime poke through the lacquer. That is where the emotion lives, in the in-between.
The reception matched the ambition. Major outlets praised its clarity and nerve, noting how it folds the past into something that feels current rather than referential. It also found its way onto a number of 2023 lists, the kind of consensus that happens when a cult favorite turns in work that rewards deep and casual listening alike. It is not a hits album, but it does create a magnetic center. Walk into a Melbourne record store in late 2023 and you’d hear staff debating how it stacks against Age Of, which is exactly the kind of conversation his catalog invites.
On vinyl the record really breathes. The stereo field opens, and those ghosted voices and brittle keys find their own pockets. Warp’s mastering gives the low end a steady floor so the top can shimmer without fatigue. If you collect Oneohtrix Point Never albums on vinyl, Again feels essential, both for the sound and for the narrative thread it adds to the shelf. It pairs nicely with Replica if you want to trace the loop between memory and reconstruction. And if you are browsing a shop that specializes in vinyl records Australia wide, it is the sort of LP that rewards a quiet late-night spin when the city finally goes still.
People searching for Oneohtrix Point Never vinyl will already know the rabbit holes he opens, but Again makes a strong case for starting here and working backward. The album is a clean portal into the project’s core fixations, and it avoids the trap of museum-piece self-reference. If you plan to buy Oneohtrix Point Never records online, consider grabbing Again vinyl along with Magic Oneohtrix Point Never so you can hear how he moved from the mirrored pop universe of the early 2020s back into this interior space. It is a rich, generous record that lingers, the kind you think about the next morning while the kettle heats and the house is quiet.