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Review: When Duster was recording their space rock mini-epics on wobbly 4-track in a makeshift San Jose home studio in the late ’90s, it’s likely they weren’t imagining that their records would someday be fetching exorbitant prices and that a classy reissue label would someday issue a box set. No doubt they were just having fun making music, expressing themselves and exploring sound for its own sake, but history has a way of taking strange turns and in 2019 the Numero Group’s Capsule Losing Contact was released. The lavishly packaged set gathers the two albums (1998’s Stratosphere and 2000’s Contemporary Movement) and one EP (1999’s 1975) they released for Up Records and adds the Transmissions, Flux EP, the Apex, Trance-Like single and a handful of rare and previously unreleased tracks. The collection finally restores the music of Duster to people who can now afford to own it and every fan of slowcore, lo-fi, space rock and unassumingly brilliant indie rock should plunk down their money and get this set. The band (initially the duo of Clay Parton and Canaan Dove Amber, which became a trio when Jason Albertini joined) were making music inspired by all those sounds but somehow separate from them all, or at least they combine them in a way that still sounds unique decades later. The recording techniques are mostly primitive, the sounds unpolished and the vocals often mumbled, but every song thrums with buried passion and grasps for great ideas just beyond their reach. The early singles are raw expressions of their sound, scratchy and noisy with some shoegaze elements (especially on the song “Orbitron”) and their obsession with space travel already established. Stratosphere is a stunning debut album made up of seventeen tracks of lo-fidelity gems that are melancholy and muddy, the songs seemingly rescued from under a couch and haphazardly reconstructed on cheap guitars at half speed. It’s a perfect opening shot that served to define their sound in wonderfully understated fashion. The 1975 EP was the first time Albertini joined Parton and Dove and the trio moved on from the bare esthetics of the album. They addied new sounds to the mix like keyboards, drum machines and more tape effects, while still sounding warped and recorded on a whim. Contemporary Movements was made by the trio as a cohesive unit and it’s their most realized and expansive album. Albertini’s drumming adds a new power to the sound and the songs sound also polished in comparison to previous works. Still scruffy and weird, but with sharper hooks and more impressive presentation; like a real band instead of a studio project. It’s less magical that Stratosphere — which is nearly perfect in an imperfect way — but it’s still some masterful indie rock. Capsule Losing Contact sounds great, looks amazing and totally justifies the prices people are asking for the original records. Duster may not have mattered much at the time, but in 2019 they are close to essential.
3 Discs
Summary: Country: USA Genre: indie-rock, lo-fi, post-rock
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FILE LIST
Filename
Size
cover.jpg
2.9 MB
Disc 1/01 - Moon Age.flac
6.4 MB
Disc 1/02 - Heading for the Door.flac
20.4 MB
Disc 1/03 - Gold Dust.flac
12.9 MB
Disc 1/04 - Topical Solution.flac
28.6 MB
Disc 1/05 - Docking the Pod.flac
11.1 MB
Disc 1/06 - The Landing.flac
14.3 MB
Disc 1/07 - Echo, Bravo.flac
30.8 MB
Disc 1/08 - Constellations.flac
20.8 MB
Disc 1/09 - The Queen of Hearts.flac
26.5 MB
Disc 1/10 - Two Way Radio.flac
1.9 MB
Disc 1/11 - Inside Out.flac
13.8 MB
Disc 1/12 - Stratosphere.flac
42.8 MB
Disc 1/13 - Reed to Hillsborough.flac
27.3 MB
Disc 1/14 - Shadows of Planes.flac
10.8 MB
Disc 1/15 - Earth Moon Transit.flac
32.8 MB
Disc 1/16 - The Twins ; Romantica.flac
24.2 MB
Disc 1/17 - Sideria.flac
9.9 MB
Disc 1/audiochecker.log
1 KB
Disc 2/01 - Get the Dutch.flac
27.3 MB
Disc 2/02 - Operations.flac
22.2 MB
Disc 2/03 - Diamond.flac
23.1 MB
Disc 2/04 - Me and the Birds.flac
11 MB
Disc 2/05 - Travelogue.flac
32.1 MB
Disc 2/06 - The Phantom Facing Me.flac
19.5 MB
Disc 2/07 - Cooking.flac
31.3 MB
Disc 2/08 - Unrecovery.flac
25.6 MB
Disc 2/09 - The Breakup Suite.flac
21.6 MB
Disc 2/10 - Everything You See (Is Your Own).flac
17.7 MB
Disc 2/11 - Now It’s Coming Back.flac
18 MB
Disc 2/12 - Auto-Mobile.flac
13.7 MB
Disc 2/audiochecker.log
791 B
Disc 3/01 - Orbitron.flac
16.6 MB
Disc 3/02 - Fuzz and Timbre.flac
2.6 MB
Disc 3/03 - My Friends Are Cosmonauts.flac
12.1 MB
Disc 3/04 - Closer to the Speed of Sound.flac
18.8 MB
Disc 3/05 - Stars Will Fall.flac
11.1 MB
Disc 3/06 - Four Hours.flac
22.7 MB
Disc 3/07 - Light Years.flac
20.5 MB
Disc 3/08 - Capsule Losing Contact.flac
42.7 MB
Disc 3/09 - East Reed.flac
5.8 MB
Disc 3/10 - And Things Are Mostly Ghosts (Version Over Dose Mix).flac