[4] With the summer feel of Neon Indian's "Deadbeat Summer"[6] and the overall presence of samplers, strings, drum machines, live drums, guitars, horns and homemade mbiras instrumentally,[2] No Más is a MGMT-inspired experimental pop and chillwave album[7][8] recreating the peak of every well-known genre,[2] examples including chicago soul, psychedelic pop and 1970s instrumental film soundtracks.
'"[2] The sound was described by Pitchfork Media's Rob Mitchum as "Less turntablism, more an FM tuner shoulder-jostling between low-watt stations playing electro, funk, world music, and early hip-hop.
[10] The schoolyard funk song[2] "Intervales Theme", with its arcade game sounds,[11] doubles its length from its original demo counterpart[9] and adds a smooth jazz piano, an artificial baritone sax,[12] percussion and guitar to the mix that is on No Más.
[10] The previously instrumental Stephin Merritt-style "pitch-perfect pop" of "Mossy Woodland",[13][2][9] was described by Allmusic's Rick Anderson as an odd case of synthesized children's vocals singing serious lyrics.
[6] New material on No Más includes the low-weight electro-funk opener "Vibrationz", which, with its handclaps, vocal samples,[16] house-influenced piano and analog synths,[13] is similar to an old half-remembered summer hit.
[7] The twisted 1980s-style electro new wave disco track "On It On It"[2][15][17] involves Buskirk doing a falsettoed Prince impression backed by shaking beats and twirling synth riffs.
Age"[13] and Jean-Jacques Perrey's work he made around the time Charles de Gaulle was president of France,[19] with wobbly surf guitar strums, 1960s funk keys and a pounding beat included in its instrumentation.