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Motion Pool

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Download links and information about Motion Pool by Main. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Jazz, Rock genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:03:41 minutes.

Artist: Main
Release date: 1994
Genre: Jazz, Rock
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:03:41
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. VII 4:38
2. Rail 5:53
3. Crater Scar 9:51
4. Core 6:02
5. Spectra Decay 4:37
6. Rotary Eclipse 4:46
7. Reformation 5:42
8. Heat Realm 11:20
9. VIII 6:42
10. Liquid Reflective 4:10

Details

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Starting out with "VII," a continuation in both sound and song-title sequence of the absolute minimalism of the first Firmament release, Motion Pool for the most part focuses on the abstract ominousness of the band's earlier work, dealing in, as the slogan for the album puts it, "...drumless space." Such space is not devoid of rhythm, though, and the established pattern of clipped, looped bass and guitar pieces combined with various production and studio touches, with Robert Hampson's vocals snaking out of the ambient fog, reestablishes itself on such tracks as "Crater Scar" and "Reformation." "Spectra Decay" sounds a little more 'normal' in context, centering on an open-ended repeating riff, though everything around it remains as cryptic and moody as it has ever been. Towards the end, things return to the nearly evanescent beginning, as such songs as "Heat Realm" and, unsurprisingly, "VIII" often times sound barely there, low pulses of bass, minimal reverb echoes and the subtlest of background hums and hisses filling the tracks. "Heat Realm" itself practically disappears towards its end, resulting in having to crank the volume to hear the actually quite lovely sonic touches in the final minutes. It may sound unlistenable, but the tracks have their own quiet, compelling nature to them, not ambient enough to simply ignore but not hooky enough to hum. Given how future releases would aim even further down this particular route, Motion Pool remains a key release for the band, a last stop with their initial (and even then quite obscure) style before almost completely embracing the outer reaches of what makes a song a song.