"Music for Steamed Rocks" . "Music for Steamed Rocks" (7:29)
Fact magazine critic Maya Kalev analyzed the track to have equal amounts of the style of Lopatin's releases on the labels Software and
Editions Mego before 2012 and that of
R Plus Seven (2013), which is one of the EP's several "markers that suggest Lopatin’s shift from the texturally dense, emotionally stirring albums on Software and Editions Mego to the sheeny plastic surfaces and spacious compositions of
R Plus Seven." and features elegant synthesized female voices,
synthesized splash sounds, clean electronically-produced organs and strings, and low-quality samples and synthesizer
drones a la
Returnal (2010). for the film
Quadrotor (2012), showcased at the 2012 New Directors' Showcase event by agency
Saatchi & Saatchi. Journalist Mark Keane compared it to tracks featured on Oneohtrix Point Never's album
Rifts (2009). However, Kalev found it the most similar to "Chrome Country" and "Problem Areas," two cuts from
R Plus Seven, because it involves "Lopatin zooming in on minute textural detail and solitary figures so that they’re rendered in pin-sharp detail." Described by Ilves as an "uplifting hymn," "Meet Your Creator" opens with spiraling 16-bit-game-esque synths before it "gives way to positively subterranean bass," wrote Goggins. Goggins analyzed the first half of a track to not have a
time signature, while the second half follows the same build-up structure of "Music for Steamed Rocks." Kalev writes the track consists of "melodic lines" circling around the song, drone synthesizer sounds, and choirs that "overlap and twist, building or subsiding quite unexpectedly." He wrote that "The palette Lopatin is working with is so limited, each element cushioned by so much space, that the precise points at which synth line, choir and pearly countermelody intersect are just as compelling as the timbres themselves." As Ilves analyzed, "the nervy and alien-sounding arpeggios, dark drone sounds, ecstatic synths and symphonic organs lead towards the culmination -- the hopeful, harmonious and playful arpeggios, which seem to close the loop bringing the track back to the start -- all in sync with the visual play before your eyes."
"I Only Have Eyes For You" , the writer of "
I Only Have Eyes For You" The final track on
Commissions I is what Kean described as an ominous and disordered cover of
Harry Warren and
Al Dubin's "
I Only Have Eyes For You," (7:20) created for
Doug Aitken's Happening installation event held in 2012 at the
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Label by Goggins to be the most "challenging" commission out of the three that are on
Commissions I and having very little resemblance to the original recording of the song from the 1930s, the song consists of dark synthesizer drones and vocal snippets that
pitch bend and constantly change in
sustain throughout. As he analyzes, "it feels as if it should be soothing, but there’s an implied foreboding to the instrumentation and something unshakeably disconcerting about the irregular, layered vocal that seems intended to throw you off." Kalev also called the song similar to
R Plus Seven as well as having the "widescreen feel" of
Rifts and
Returnal. In fact, he highlighted the voices used on the track to be the part of the EP most similar to
R Plus Seven. ==EP history==