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Las Cosas - Solarística CD (album) cover

SOLARÍSTICA

Las Cosas

Psychedelic/Space Rock


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Cesar Inca
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars Las Cosas released in 2010 its first long playing CD entitled "Solarística". Just now the band has been cut down to a trio format, although the presence of guitarist Ariel Isarahoff (who in turn replaced the departing Pablo Acosta) is still noticed in over half of the album's tracklist. After installing a psychedelic dynamics in its eponymous debut album, Las Cosas has used the concept of "Solarística" as a capitalization of its own sonic expansion, which currently focuses dominantly on the heritage of krautrock (lots of krautrock sources inspired by Neu! and Can) , and also space-rock, math-rock, noise-rock and a nostalgia for the early stages of 80s British techno-pop. Generally speaking, Las Cosas has become a genuinely versatile act whose enhanced experimental vibe is stated against its arithmetic decrease. 'Neurolab' is a synthetic prelude that serves as a brief mental preparation for the arrival of 'Boitevique', a piece that starts on a funk-rock note and further develops into a resource of psychedelic intensity where space-rock colors and noise-rock moods are mixed in an exciting way, ultimately leading to a terrific climax. It's a pity that this track shouldn't be longer than it actually is? but again, this is something that could be equally said about half of the tracks comprised in this album. 'Camun' brings an exercise of heavy psychedelia that is in-your-face but not overwhelming, related to 80s King Crimson in some ways; this is the only piece with vocal interventions, which are filtered through the vocoder in order to sound robotic. 'Base & Cumbre' is a noise-centered rendition of a piece from Cluster & Eno's second album ('Base & Apex'). This cover performed by Las Cosas is not too unorthodox, but it is peculiarly interesting since the band provides a fuller rocking feel to it while retaining the original's ambient flavor. 'Monotemático' finds that band at its most Neu!-friendly and bringing the space-rock factor to a more extroverted field, which makes the band sound like Explosions In The Sky fed with musical amphetamines. In spite of the notoriously recurrent expression of the main motive, it never gets tiring, and may I add that the fade-out arrives too soon. 'Agri' is the electronic interlude that paves the way for the mysterious nuances of 'Stalker', a futuristic, dreamy piece revolving around a Can-like central motif, conveniently recycled through post-punk nuances and techno-pop tricks. The electronic environment is perpetuated in 'Una Serie De Eventos Inconexos', which consists basically of a challenging series of abstract explorations on electronic vignettes that clearly exemplify the particular expansion that Las Cosas' musical vision has benefitted from. 'CTA (Surplus Arbeitzeit)' delivers a defined architecture that gives room for the guitar interventions to fill spaces, but the cybernetic element remains the essential factor for the main motif's idea. 'Nacimiento Y Muerte Del Alien' fills the last 8- minutes in the álbum: this extended time span is the perfect excuse for the band to continue confidently experimenting with the abstract side of krautrock. The sequence of tracks 6-10 is an integral manifesto of Las Cosas' interest in expanding its sonic palette, and while the band is at it, offering a dynamic refreshment to the current area of experimental rock in Argentina. "Solarística" is a most pleasing work to be enjoyed by real lovers of eclectic experimentations in the language of rock.
Report this review (#308308)
Posted Thursday, November 4, 2010 | Review Permalink
4 stars I've just feel tempted to brief the meaning of the word "Solarística".

In the Spanish translation of Stanislaw Lem's Sci-Fi novel "Solaris", it is the name of the science studying the eponymous planet, which is covered with a living ocean. With the advance of solaristic investigation, it is revealed that the ocean is also a sentient and inteligent being, probably not constrained by the limited duration of human life. The detailed report occupying almost an entire chapter of the book, and taking the form of a bibliographic search, is not present in the film adaptation by Andrej Tarkovsky.

The track title "Stalker" is also taken from another movie by Tarkovsky.

Report this review (#2462150)
Posted Sunday, November 1, 2020 | Review Permalink

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