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 Plastique, the follow-up LP to Sole & the Skyrider
Band's debut of the same name, is Sole's most cohesive, dynamic,
listenable and interesting record to date. In contrast to the
apocalyptic imagery of the first record, this album adopts the Jean
Beaudrillard idea that "when the spectacle took over, man ceased to be
man." What’s more, Skyrider's music finds itself more sparse and
deliberate on this record. Â
The fact is the idea behind this album is less about politics and
more about reflections on the postmodern mess that is the "me"
generation. Sole bounces from the ironic to the iconoclastic, from the
worldly to the deeply personal. Â Unlike many previous recordings,
sole's rapping is at the forefront and his lyrics are clearer than
ever. Â This is partly thanks to more immaculately composed music, and
partly to Son Lux collaborator Doc Harril on the mixing boards.
Sole has spent the last two years living in a cabin in the midst of
the Coconino National Forest in Arizona with no mayor, no phone lines,
broken cell phone reception, just books and environmental canyon
sprawl. This return to analog life inspired much of the reflection
found herein. Â Everywhere man goes he is in conflict, and such
conflicts are found throughout the album: the interpersonal, the
political, the anti-social, the city, the desert, the industries and
the anti-ideologies wherever they are found. Sole touches on everything
from touring in a recession, media and war, race, rap, wildlife, space,
identity politics and the insane tightrope one must walk to talk about
such issues without sounding like a book report. Â
While Sole was communing with his inner Walt Whitman, the Skyrider
Band relocated to Los Angeles. Â While there, multi-instrumentalist
William Ryan Fritch began working on film soundtracks and as a session
musician while working on his solo projects. John Wagner(drummer) and
Bud Berning(producer) formed a new group with Telephone Jim Jesus
called Furious Stylz. The trio have brought their dubbed out electro
outfit up and down the west coast and have joined the rotation at the
world renowned Low End Theory in LA. Â
Plastique opens with the line, "Now who am I? Â Lost in GPS
infinity" from the song "Children of Privilege." Sole does his best to
discuss our current epoch, "ridden with conspiracy, you can't blame
us.... raised in front of a TV, we just wanna be famous."Â
"Battlefields," featuring Markus Archer of the Notwist, is easily
sole's catchiest song. It is based on touring & the basic premise
that "Art is war" on all levels, all over a catchy dubbish guitar
melody. "Longshots" is a tongue and cheek southern rap/punk song where
sole professes, "I'm taking long shots, I got a long aim// my wife's
related to Muhammad she got a long name// we in the southwest cookin at
the ranch// that's where they tried to hang me but i broke the branch.
"More" is Sole at his most transcendental; the chaos of nature over a
catchy 5/4 standup bass track. The album ends with "Black," a monster
epic jam, where sole makes plays on colors and comes up with new
definitions for color in a "post racial America..." "White is the color
of death, charred black is the new spring condominium."
Tracklisting:
#1 Children of Privilege
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#2 Battlefields feat Markus Acher of The Notwist
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#3 Longshots
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#4 Nothing Pt 2
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#5 More
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#6 Pissing In The Wind
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#7 Bait
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#8 Mr Insurgent
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#9 Black