Stratosphere

Stratosphere

by Duster
Stratosphere

Stratosphere

by Duster

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record - Anniversary Edition / 180 Gram Vinyl)

$31.99 
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Overview

Duster's first album is aptly named Stratosphere. It nimbly navigates outer space and inner space like a capsule drifting (mostly) peacefully with no real destination in mind. Clay Parton and Canaan Dove Amber concoct a lo-fi, highly imaginative sound that stitches together precise noise rock, melancholy emo, glacial post-rock, and smudged shoegaze in a tapestry that works as a blanket to hide under or a cape to soar with. One can hear bits and pieces of Sonic Youth in the way the guitars are layered, Elliott Smith in the numbed melodies, Pavement in the staggered rhythms, and even bands like Jawbreaker in the granite-heavy chords that occasionally make their way into the mix. Duster has a lot in common with Codeine -- the two bands share the same slowcore DNA and emotional heft. They whip all the influences and genres into something familiar while also being unfamiliar enough that it awakens new possibilities. They do all of this calmly, never pushing hard or playing two notes when one will do. Most of the songs ramble along with muddy guitars simple chord changes; vocals lurk low in the mix, and heartbroken melodies are slowly revealed. Songs like "The Landing" or "Inside Out" are beautiful in their own small and broken-sounding ways, coming across like lonely transmissions from a desolate outpost far from happiness. Most of the album follows this basic template, sometimes with cheap keyboards added or some gloriously cruddy guitar distortion. It's all very lulling, hypnotic even, until the group pull the rug out with a blast of avant-garde indie like "Echo, Bravo" with its thundering drums, keening feedback, and heavy metal grind or the title track, which hums and buzzes for almost seven minutes, sounding like a 4AM dorm room version of My Bloody Valentine at their most trancelike and abrasive. The juxtaposition of the two approaches keeps the listener somewhat on guard throughout, but mostly they meld nicely, as if they were flipsides of the same coin. When they're combined in the same song, as on "Reed to Hillsborough" or the almost exciting "Earth Moon Transit," it's indie rock at its most brilliant. By the time the album ends after an hour of mumbled vocals, delicate melodies, stark noise, and low-key dreaminess, it feels like a journey has taken place. One that feels familiar, but also brand new. On Stratosphere, Duster put all the components together perfectly and truly arrive. ~ Tim Sendra

Product Details

Release Date: 09/29/2023
Label: Numero
UPC: 0825764192538
Rank: 16826

Tracks

  1. Moon Age
  2. Heading for the Door
  3. Gold Dust
  4. Topical Solution
  5. Docking the Pod
  6. The Landing
  7. Constellations
  8. The Queen of Hearts
  9. Two Way Radio
  10. Inside Out
  11. Stratosphere
  12. Reed to Hillsborough
  13. Shadows of Planes
  14. Earth Moon Transit
  15. The Twins/Romantica
  16. Sideria

Album Credits

From the B&N Reads Blog

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