Solo Collective isn’t quite large enough to be called a supergroup, but it’s definitely a super trio. Combining the talents of Dictaphone’s Alex Stolze (violin), Nils Frahm collaborator Anne Müller (cello) and The War On Drugs’ Sebastian Reynolds (piano),
these versatile musicians demonstrate a great affinity for each other’s
work, as well as a sense of humility, each taking turns in the
spotlight. “Don’t try to be someone else”, sings the narrator of the
album’s only vocal track. None do, and their individual personalities
are responsible for the short album’s great variety. Never is this more
apparent than in the track and video “Holy Island”, dedicated to
Reynolds’ mother Sheenagh, lost to him only last year. As the
composition rides the piano to a surprising tonal conclusion, the video
switches its perspective as well.
The other tracks focus on strings, with occasional layers of chimes
(the meditative “Silbersee”) and electronics. Stolze’s “Cell to Cell”
has already inspired a Qrauer remix,
which may open the trio to new territories, but we still prefer the
original. The track grows from a light hover, with even-tempo notes
joined by counterpart before the melodies set in and take the song
aloft. One of the layers even sounds like theremin, an otherworldly
addition that presages the track’s percussion and foghorn notes. In the
final thirty seconds, the flight flirts with landing, sailing just
above the ground without flapping its wings. Then there’s “Ascension”,
whose opening moments sound like mechanical flight, an aircraft
ascending into the stratosphere in honor of the song’s title. The
extended glissandos offer a sense of tonal euphoria, even when they
begin to descend.
Combine these associations, and the album becomes one of vertical movement. Whether physical, mechanical or spiritual, the subjects end
up higher than they began, in the heavens or in the final track, in
heaven itself. And while all but Sheenagh eventually return to land,
the final image is an upward gaze: spirits and hopes lifted, bolstered
by visions of the world to come. (Richard Allen)
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