
If it wasn't for Theo Huxtable, Brendon Whitney might might have never left the woods of Southern Maine. Raised by a church organist/hobby store clerk and a fire-fighting jazz drummer on six acres of land in rural Hollis, little Bren never had cable television. Naturally, when the MTV receptors started flaring up in his 13-year-old brain, something had to be done. With only three general stores in town, the musical pickings were slim, so Bren and big sis Aubrey would stay up combing their five TV channels for some sort of sign. And that was when they found Theo, hosting NBC's now defunct Friday Night Videos.
Specifically, it was the video for Special Ed's "I'm the Magnificent" that did it. A 16-year-old rapping about owning 74 Honda scooters is hot shit to a kid whose nearest peer lives on the other side of a small forest populated by toothless itinerants. Bren bought every hip-hop magazine he could find, and plastered the walls of his and younger brother Ehren's bedroom with pictures of rappers feverishly grabbing their crotches. His parents were unsure about the imagery, but supportive of his passion, so on Christmas of 1992 they gave him his first drum machine. Exit little Bren, enter big Alias.
In 1993, a trip to the Maine Mall in Portland brought Alias, 17, to the feet of a real life Karl Kani-fitted hip-hop scholar. He listened to the wisdom spoken through this guru's then-patchy red beard, and soon would be battle-rapping in the "ciphers" he'd only read about. The mythical Moodswing9 would teach him to use an MPC3000 and an ADAT machine, how to find vinyl records with drum breaks and, three years later, he joined Sole (who'd since ditched the Karl Kani) as a member of the Live Poets crew.
Still, it wasn't until 1998, after finishing the seminal Deep Puddle Dynamics project alongside Sole, Dose One, and Atmosphere's Slug, that Alias realized he was a lifer. He and his wife Jenn were on their way to the laundromat when they got a copy of the finished DPD record. They subsequently sold the car, quit their jobs, packed everything into a U-Haul to head west. In East Oakland, they moved into an old warehouse with the rest of Anticon's first migratory wave. Here, Alias concocted his first album--a rap-heavy, poetic and brooding introspective called The Other Side of the Looking Glass (2002).
But after producing tracks for Sole's Selling Live Water and watching Dax Pierson play keyboards in Themselves' touring band, Alias began to focus on wordless moodpieces. His Eyes Closed EP and Muted full-length (2003) wedded rich atmospherics to guitars, keys, synth, and drums (both tapped out and played live), announcing a new direction for the artist. In 2005, Alias' little brother Ehren--quite the musician now--flew to California to visit and record. The resulting instrumental LP--a gorgeous, swirling work of woodwinds and signature Alias sounds--was named after their grandmother, Lillian.
2006 brought a new Alias-anchored duo, this time in collaboration with New York electro chanteuse Tarsier (Rona Rapadas), and the album Brookland/Oaklyn, which paid homage to vintage trip-hop even while pushing the boundaries of contemporary electronica. In 2007, Collected Remixes gathered intricate and icy reworkings of pieces by The One AM Radio, John Vanderslice, Christ., 13 & God, Lali Puna, and Lunz, among others. And later that year, partly in an attempt to shake off creative stagnation (which seems absurd considering his steady output), Alias and wife Jenn once again packed for a cross-country trip.
Alias now calls Portland, Maine, home, and has just completed his fifth full-length album, titled Resurgam.
Alias has been keeping busy. Check out this remix (right-click) he did for The Delta Mirror by way of Stereogum, and over here, you can download a free track off of the record he just produced for B. Dolan.
Alias' Resurgam
Order Deal is now available. For an extra $4, the deal comes
with a bonus 7-song EP of residual material Alias crafted during the
same period as he made Resurgam.
Anticon is proud to announce two of our upcoming summer
releases! August will bring Alias' forthcoming solo-return,
Resurgam. The album features
contribution from WHY? and The One AM Radio. Pitchforkmedia
posted "Well Water Black (feat. WHY?)" in their forkcast.
More info on the album here!
Alias just submitted his remix to Radiohead's "Nude"
Remix Contest. You can stream and vote for his remix right here
in this widget!
RE:UP magazine just forwarded on their review of Alias' Collected Remixes. Read their kind words here.
More press has been rolling onto the artists' pages. Check out this Alias feature in the new XLR8R.
There are no shows listed for Alias right now.
Noise Pop - October 2008
Resurgam
Medium Fidelity - October 2008
Resurgam
XLR8R - September 2008
Resurgam
All Music Blog - September 2008
Resurgam
Word Blog - September 2008
Resurgam
Treble - September 2008
Resurgam
Pitchforkmedia - November 2008
Resurgam
KEXP Blog - October 2008
Resurgam
Grooves - August 2007
Collected Remixes
RE:UP - July, 2007
Collected Remixes
XLR8R - May 2007
general
Fat Planet - May 2007
Collected Remixes
Filter Magazine - May 2007
Collected Remixes
Music For Robots - February 2007
Collected Remixes
CMJ - February 2007
Collected Remixes
Pitchforkmedia - January 2007
general
orlandoweekly.com - Aug 25, 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
indieworkshop.com - Aug 25, 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
SF Weekly - Aug 31, 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Textura.org - Sept 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
PrefixMag - Sept. 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Tiny Mix Tapes - Sept. 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Grooves - 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Textura.org - September 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Village Voice - December 16, 2005
alias and ehren - lillian
Village Voice - December 2005
general
San Francisco Bay Guardian - July 2002
the other side of the looking glass
SF Weekly - October 8-14th, 2003
general
Dusted Magazine - 2002
the other side of the looking glass
Kerrang - August, 2002
the other side of the looking glass
While You Were Sleeping #18
the other side of the looking glass