Don Solaris

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Don Solaris album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 55:51

eMusic Features

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Six Degrees of Screamadelica

By Michelangelo Matos, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Although Manchester’s first breakthrough acid house band hadn’t disappeared entirely from the production scene, their sporadic recordings following 1993′s Gorgeous were limited either to Japanese-only pressings or to members of their fan club, State to State. Don Solaris, the group’s first widely available album in more than four years, is thus something of a return for the group. And somewhat surprisingly, it’s accomplished stuff, successfully avoiding the twin slumps of blandness and derivativeness that so often attend the post-hiatus of once innovative groups. The album roams freely from anthemic acid house to trip-hop to jungle to dense, warping electro, with studio chops that raise well-written songs to a higher level of listenability. Although vocal contributions from the likes of M. Doughty of Soul Coughing, Louise Rhodes of Lamb, and James Dean Bradfield of the Manic Street Preachers occasionally prove intrusive, the group deftly integrate pop song structure with a focused experimentalism. – Sean Cooper

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