Solarstone Finishes Off Masterful "One" Album With Closing Act . . . – –

So here we are… and here it is. The culmination a project that now comprises 27 pieces music, delivered over a 3-/4-year arc – all heralded by many a meaningful dot and dash.

In the instant-hit world today, its cyphered titles have been a premeditated move to provide an album bomb with a longer fuse. A project assured enough in time & scope to draw the listener in, rather than hustle for short-lived attention in a consume/forget manner. The reason: well, several. Chief among them though is if you cross paths with but one Solarstone long-player in your life, better it’s his most considered, expansive & honed ‘One’.

Solarstone Finishes Off Masterful "One" Album With Closing Act . . . - -

It’s also though provided its creator Richard Mowatt with both the opportunity and – crucially – time to fully flex a second artistic muscle. That specifically was Pop Art in nature – a form that captivated him as a child, motivated him as a teenager and one he’s immersed himself in as a man. It was only with a project that had the magnitude ‘1’, ‘2’ & ‘3’ though that he felt he could make his own worthy addition to it. On the subject, Solarstone says: “my love Pop Art began in the '80s with Frankie Goes To Hollywood & ZTT’s work and Peter Saville's Pet Shop Boys partnership. ry is an integral part my branding and marketing and the ‘One' project is, I guess, my own little contribution to an art form that fascinates me.

Today Solarstone releases not just the third and concluding long-player in the series . . . – – but also the album works as they were always intended, united together as ‘One’.

With ten compositions making up ‘3’s runtime (increased from the eight its preceding two ) Solarstone’s final action has a fan-thrilling weight about it. With the first two long-players respectively marked as ‘deep’ and ‘uplifting’, it was clear at its earliest production stage that this would be the ‘collaboratory’ one. That’s born out by its extensive list co-producers, writers and singer/songwriters. The album features team-ups with fellow studio-heads including Robert Nickson, Orkidea, Lostly, Future Disciple, Gabriel & Dresden, Activa, and Gai Barone. Further, it’s afforded Richard the opportunity to reteam with Julie Scott and Betsie Larkin – two the voices behind some his most applauded contemporary work.

As the overall project itself, this album is as inherently ‘Solarstone’ as they come – the very embodiment some might say (not least Solarstone himself). It a compression downtempo pieces that give contrast to its club-connected, higher altitude numbers. Elsewhere there are soul-touch vocals and endlessly interpretable lyrics – each with their own unique nature. There are tracks like ‘Sky’ that will cheer the long-term fan and ones like ‘Slowmotion V’ (his fifth collaboration with Orkidea) that anchor it to ‘1’ & ‘2’. It also features works that affect like ‘Father’, those that lyrically intrigue (‘Rainbow King’), innovate (no better example than the G&D co-written ‘Endeavour’) and uplift – ‘Monkey Mia’ and ‘Spirit’ to point to just two.

This though is an album that has nothing if not time. Having produced it, Solarstone is content for those who discover to do so today, tomorrow, next month, next year or in a half dozen from now. After all, ‘One’s here now and music this quality isn’t disappearing anywhere anytime soon.

https://blackhole.complete.me/one

Solarstone.