Review
The Octopus Project
Fever Forms

Peek-A-Boo Records (2013) Loren

The Octopus Project – Fever Forms cover artwork
The Octopus Project – Fever Forms — Peek-A-Boo Records, 2013

When did the Octopus Project add vocals? Well, it’s not exactly a lead singer—think more along the lines of Black Moth Super Rainbow (with whom they released a collaborative record in 2006)—it’s mostly loops, reverb, and effects, but it really changes the dynamic of the four-piece group from Austin, TX.

Dubbing themselves “experimental pop,” Fever Forms is their fifth full-length and first since Hexadecagon in 2010. The band has a synthetic, moody, and ambient feel while the beat delivers a pop pulse, something with a danceable beat and a clear progression of energy. The live shows are trippy affairs, zoning into the world of Yvonne Lambert as she alternates between Theremin and sampler whilst the tunes, alternately sprawling and concise, shine on the room like an in-and-out disco ball reflection. The addition of lyrics disrupts the wandering aspect, pulling the songs into a tighter formation in line with the beat and giving a somewhat narrower appeal. A song like the closing “Sharpteeth” features full-on vocals and it sounds like a dry pop song with an electrobeat that keeps on running. It’s a catchy rhythm, but it lacks in depth and just feels too pop and dismissible once five minutes have passed. 

Things start out nicely, with “The Falls” carrying something of a post-punk angular aspect with an extra emphasis placed on the layered beat. It slowly pulls away from guitars as the beat increases in prominence and the heavily-effected vocals shift the tone. It works well as an opener, setting that askew tone with an ability to consistently change directions. Follow-up “Pyramid Kosmos” incorporates some “Nintendo-key” sound and I’d go a step further, saying “Choi Sighs,” later on the record, could function in a Super Mario Bros. underwater world. Piled atop that base, wandering melody, however, the group inserts ambient Theremin, fuzzed out guitar and, yes, even a bit of glockenspiel. The primarily live band creations, with assistance from keyboards, add more depth and fullness in sound. It works quite well during instrumental bits, peaking in “Mmkit” and “Deep Spice,” but I always find the vocals pulling me out of that atmospheric fog and back into pop conventions when I’d rather not.

The band has long had a challenge in recreating their live show on record, and the manufactured vocal elements adding another level of separation rather than bringing them closer. Perhaps I read “experimental pop” to focus on the former while others wish for the latter, but it feels like a step in the wrong direction.

6.8 / 10Loren • September 16, 2013

The Octopus Project – Fever Forms cover artwork
The Octopus Project – Fever Forms — Peek-A-Boo Records, 2013

Related news

The Octopus Project plan April release

Posted in Records on January 27, 2017

Recently-posted album reviews

Painkiller

The Great God Pan
Tzadik (2025)

Painkiller, the trio of John Zorn, Bill Laswell, and Mick Harris shows no signs of slowing down. The Great God Pan is their third full-length, since their reunion in 2024, and in many ways it is an unexpected offering. In keeping with their interests in the metaphysical realm, Painkiller find inspiration from the famed Arthur Machen horror novella. Here, the … Read more

Painkiller

The Equinox
Tzadik (2025)

Painkiller sees three absolute masters of extreme music join forces. John Zorn of Naked City and a billion other projects, Mick Harris who transcended from Napalm Death drummer to illbient guru with Scorn, and producer extraordinaire Bill Laswell. Their first two records, Guts of a Virgin and Buried Secrets are strange meditations traversing between free-jazz, grindcore and dub. Still hungry … Read more

Dauber

Falling Down
Recess (2025)

The lazy approach would be to call Dauber "ex-Screaming Females," but that barely scratches the surface. If I had to pick one band to namedrop a comparison to, it would be labelmates Night Court. They play a familiar style but with a lot of quirks that set it apart from the genre standard-bearers. It's driving and energetic -- more importantly, … Read more