Sun-baked ambient/superior new-age from three masters of the craft. Roach I know fairly well, and featured him here not long ago; Braheny and Stearns were names I'd heard, perhaps heard the odd track a while back, so was very happy to pick up this collaborative effort between all three of them the other week. Desert Solitaire was based on the book of the same name by writer and naturalist Edward Abbey, who died shortly before the album's release and thus became its dedicatee.
Roach, Braheny and Stearns approached recording with the intent of evoking America's natural landscapes in the same way that the first two of them had with Western Spaces three years previous, but this time with extra desert: in long, parched drones that evoked scorching, barely breathable air and exploration at the mercy of oppressive sunlight. Given this intent, don't let the beat-driven album opener put you off - it's merely the start of the journey. Soon the album opens up, with early highlight Specter sounding like Eno In The Mojave.
The tracklist indicates which musician(s) was/were the main composer(s) for each piece, which varies throughout, giving the album a good sense of variety, even though just 65 minutes of unrelenting drones of this quality would've been impressive enough. Braheny's Knowledge & Dust adds flute and percussive effects to evoke Native Americans on a vision quest encountering a rattlesnake, and the low tones in Stearns' Shiprock are intended to represent the inner sounds of stones and minerals. If that's starting to sound a bit new agey, don't worry - there's more sun-bleached, heavy-air drone still to come.
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pw: sgtg