Duster: Capsule Losing Contact (Colored Vinyl) Vinyl 4LP Boxset
Iāve always admired the Numero Groupās all-inclusive criteria - their ability to put well-worn acts under a microscope and squeeze out brilliant rarities has yielded some of the most interesting entries in their catalog (Blonde Redhead, White Zombie) and more generally, their examination of lesser-known artists existing outside of the soul/funk ether have fast become some of my favorite reissues of all time (Antena, Unwound). This exhaustive collection from San Jose space rock / slowcore trio Duster (as in, the shit you huff when youāre too broke to buy drugs) falls into this latter category. While their space rock progenitors spewed sprawling, reverb-soaked instrumental dirges as a means to tickle the urges of their childhood sci-if nerddom, or to provide a backdrop for their burnout homiesā sophomoric drug trips, Duster were clearly launching themselves into space as a means to escape the heartache and banality of life in shithole Silicon Valley circa the dot com boom. No really, drop the needle anywhere on Stratosphere and itās immediately apparent that these guysĀ have more in common withĀ Sonic Youth or Red House Painters than Spacemen 3 (listen real close and you can almost hear the blueprint for 2nd wave emo acts American Football and The Promise Ring). Both Stratosphere and Contemporary MovementĀ are full of visionary compositions pushing the confines of the traditional rock three-piece into the outer limits. While thereās so much to say about both albums, what really makes this set glow is the miscellaneous materials included on discs 3 and 4, as they include some of Dusterās rarest and most arresting moments⦠particularly the haunting āWant No Light To Shineā (from the 1975 EP), eastern-tinged compilationĀ cutĀ āAnd Things Are Mostly Ghosts,ā disappearerās anthem āFour Hoursā (from the Apex, Trance-Like 7ā) and the coveted āEcho, Bravoā (left off the original Stratosphere LP). Not to mention six previously-unreleased tracks. 51 tracks in total, fully remastered and spread across 4Ā clearĀ LPs housed in individual tip-on jackets, with hard outer box and full-color booklet containing lyrics, drawings and photos. Canāt recommend this enough!
- compilation of albums, rare singles + unreleased material from California space rock / slowcore band Duster
- 'diamond clear' colored 4xLP pressing
- housed in Stoughton tip-on jackets w/Ā hardcover outerĀ slipcase
- includes full color booklet w/ lyrics, drawings + photos
- limited edition
- music label: Numero Group 2022
reviewed by Isosceles Kramer 05/2019
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Duster: Capsule Losing Contact (Colored Vinyl) Vinyl 4LP Boxset
Duster: Capsule Losing Contact (Colored Vinyl) Vinyl 4LP Boxset
Iāve always admired the Numero Groupās all-inclusive criteria - their ability to put well-worn acts under a microscope and squeeze out brilliant rarities has yielded some of the most interesting entries in their catalog (Blonde Redhead, White Zombie) and more generally, their examination of lesser-known artists existing outside of the soul/funk ether have fast become some of my favorite reissues of all time (Antena, Unwound). This exhaustive collection from San Jose space rock / slowcore trio Duster (as in, the shit you huff when youāre too broke to buy drugs) falls into this latter category. While their space rock progenitors spewed sprawling, reverb-soaked instrumental dirges as a means to tickle the urges of their childhood sci-if nerddom, or to provide a backdrop for their burnout homiesā sophomoric drug trips, Duster were clearly launching themselves into space as a means to escape the heartache and banality of life in shithole Silicon Valley circa the dot com boom. No really, drop the needle anywhere on Stratosphere and itās immediately apparent that these guysĀ have more in common withĀ Sonic Youth or Red House Painters than Spacemen 3 (listen real close and you can almost hear the blueprint for 2nd wave emo acts American Football and The Promise Ring). Both Stratosphere and Contemporary MovementĀ are full of visionary compositions pushing the confines of the traditional rock three-piece into the outer limits. While thereās so much to say about both albums, what really makes this set glow is the miscellaneous materials included on discs 3 and 4, as they include some of Dusterās rarest and most arresting moments⦠particularly the haunting āWant No Light To Shineā (from the 1975 EP), eastern-tinged compilationĀ cutĀ āAnd Things Are Mostly Ghosts,ā disappearerās anthem āFour Hoursā (from the Apex, Trance-Like 7ā) and the coveted āEcho, Bravoā (left off the original Stratosphere LP). Not to mention six previously-unreleased tracks. 51 tracks in total, fully remastered and spread across 4Ā clearĀ LPs housed in individual tip-on jackets, with hard outer box and full-color booklet containing lyrics, drawings and photos. Canāt recommend this enough!
- compilation of albums, rare singles + unreleased material from California space rock / slowcore band Duster
- 'diamond clear' colored 4xLP pressing
- housed in Stoughton tip-on jackets w/Ā hardcover outerĀ slipcase
- includes full color booklet w/ lyrics, drawings + photos
- limited edition
- music label: Numero Group 2022
reviewed by Isosceles Kramer 05/2019
.Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Iāve always admired the Numero Groupās all-inclusive criteria - their ability to put well-worn acts under a microscope and squeeze out brilliant rarities has yielded some of the most interesting entries in their catalog (Blonde Redhead, White Zombie) and more generally, their examination of lesser-known artists existing outside of the soul/funk ether have fast become some of my favorite reissues of all time (Antena, Unwound). This exhaustive collection from San Jose space rock / slowcore trio Duster (as in, the shit you huff when youāre too broke to buy drugs) falls into this latter category. While their space rock progenitors spewed sprawling, reverb-soaked instrumental dirges as a means to tickle the urges of their childhood sci-if nerddom, or to provide a backdrop for their burnout homiesā sophomoric drug trips, Duster were clearly launching themselves into space as a means to escape the heartache and banality of life in shithole Silicon Valley circa the dot com boom. No really, drop the needle anywhere on Stratosphere and itās immediately apparent that these guysĀ have more in common withĀ Sonic Youth or Red House Painters than Spacemen 3 (listen real close and you can almost hear the blueprint for 2nd wave emo acts American Football and The Promise Ring). Both Stratosphere and Contemporary MovementĀ are full of visionary compositions pushing the confines of the traditional rock three-piece into the outer limits. While thereās so much to say about both albums, what really makes this set glow is the miscellaneous materials included on discs 3 and 4, as they include some of Dusterās rarest and most arresting moments⦠particularly the haunting āWant No Light To Shineā (from the 1975 EP), eastern-tinged compilationĀ cutĀ āAnd Things Are Mostly Ghosts,ā disappearerās anthem āFour Hoursā (from the Apex, Trance-Like 7ā) and the coveted āEcho, Bravoā (left off the original Stratosphere LP). Not to mention six previously-unreleased tracks. 51 tracks in total, fully remastered and spread across 4Ā clearĀ LPs housed in individual tip-on jackets, with hard outer box and full-color booklet containing lyrics, drawings and photos. Canāt recommend this enough!
- compilation of albums, rare singles + unreleased material from California space rock / slowcore band Duster
- 'diamond clear' colored 4xLP pressing
- housed in Stoughton tip-on jackets w/Ā hardcover outerĀ slipcase
- includes full color booklet w/ lyrics, drawings + photos
- limited edition
- music label: Numero Group 2022


















