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Space Solo 2

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Download links and information about Space Solo 2 by Rafael Toral. This album was released in 2017 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Indie Rock, Progressive Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 35:32 minutes.

Artist: Rafael Toral
Release date: 2017
Genre: Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Indie Rock, Progressive Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 11
Duration: 35:32
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.00

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Modulated Feedback 1 1:15
2. Electrode Oscillator (Intro) 3:12
3. Modulated Feedback 2 0:53
4. Electrode Oscillator (Solo) 7:09
5. Modular Synthesizer (Intro) 2:27
6. Modulated Feedback 3 3:03
7. Modulated Feedback 4 1:13
8. Modular Synthesizer (Solo) 10:52
9. Glove-Controlled Sinewaves 1 2:11
10. Glove-Controlled Sinewaves 2 1:43
11. Glove-Controlled Sinewaves 3 1:34

Details

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Space Solo 1 is Rafael Toral's follow-up to Space (released by Staubgold in 2006) and is both the second album in his so-called "Space Program" and the first in his "Solo Series." Let's explain. The "Space Program" is the overall title of Toral's experiments with electronic music performance using self-built devices triggered by light, movement or other forms of interaction that engage the performer on a deeper level than a computer mouse. Space — the album — featured pieces played on several of these instruments. Space Solo 1 contains five pieces, each one focusing on a single instrument. "Portable Amplifier" and "Portable Amplifier 3" feature portable amplifier feedback with light-controlled filter. The first of these two pieces accounts for half of the whole album. The shorter pieces involve a delayed feedback empty circuit, another modified portable amplifier and a portable oscillator. The equipment is rather crude and the means used to control it are simple. As a result, the music thus produced has a "stark naked" quality to it and often evokes early electronic experiments, somewhere between a sci-fi "bleep" and childish experiments with feedback on a portable radio and microphone. Toral is doing the best he can to develop a musical vocabulary with this material, but that vocabulary remains very limited. He manages to create enough dynamic and diversity to sustain the listener's interest in short pieces, but the 22-minute "Portable Amplifier" simply gets too long too early. Maybe this music would work better on a DVD, with the visual component of the performance still attached to it. In any case, compared to Toral's past guitar soundscapes or even the more generous Space CD, Space Solo 1 is disappointing and thin. ~ François Couture, Rovi