The Soloist Series / a numbered catalog.

Each TheSoloist object is signed and numbered. The number is not decoration — it is a record of which master performed.

Soloist No.001 · Released

TheSoloist.Sound

A 110cm Brutalist speaker-sculpture by Takahiro Miyashita. Tribute to the Flatiron Building.

7-channel · 2000W · Polycarbonate composite · Hand-finished. Four editions, from US $6,200 to US $13,700. Available worldwide.

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Soloist No.002 · In development

The Refrigerator

A category most consumer-electronics brands fail to elevate beyond commodity. TheSoloist treats it as architecture: a vessel for daily ritual, sculpted with the same Brutalist DNA as Soloist No.001. Soloist designer to be announced.

Targeted reveal: 2026.

Soloist No.003 · In development

The Cigar Humidor

For the ritual of fine tobacco — humidity-engineered, hand-chiseled wood and cement composite, climate-controlled. A vessel that earns its place beside the cigars it holds. Soloist designer to be announced.

Targeted reveal: 2026.

Future · Under consideration

Desktop audio · Lighting · Ceremonial vessels

The studio considers any object that lends itself to the marriage of architectural form and embedded technology. Categories under exploration include compact desktop audio systems, sculptural lighting, and ceremonial vessels.

Why numbered?

Two reasons. First: it tells you who performed. Second: it tells you the object is part of a longer composition.

Most luxury electronics brands name products by feature (Phantom, Hi-Phi, Beoplay) or generation (Series 5, Mark III). TheSoloist names by performance — Soloist No.001, No.002, No.003. Each number is a chapter; each chapter is a different master at the instrument.

This means: when you own a TheSoloist piece, you are not collecting a category. You are collecting an edition of a performance — one that carries the studio's standards and one specific guest's voice.