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Tortoise

Tortoise Album: “Tortoise [Japan Track]”

Tortoise Album: “Tortoise [Japan Track]”
Album Information :
Title: Tortoise [Japan Track]
Release Date:2002-01-01
Type:Unknown
Genre:Indie Rock, Alternative Rock
Label:Crown Japan
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:4988008619836
Track Listing :
1 Magnet Pulls Through Video
2 Night Air Video
3 Ry Cooder Video
4 Onions Wrapped In Rubber Video
5 Tin Cans and Twine
6 Spiderwebbed Video
7 His Second Story Island Video
8 On Noble Video
9 Flyrod Video
10 Cornpone Brunch Video
11
Review - :
An album that not only set the tone for the new Chicago {\prog rock}, but also cemented the musical niche for {@Thrill Jockey Records}. Here, multi-instrumentalists {$John McEntire}, {$Dan Bitney}, {$John Herdon}, {$Douglas McCombs}, and {$Bundy K. Brown} share equal responsibility and trust in each other, pouring out a thick stew of meditative grooves, light production experiments, and rusty guitar-string ambience -- the likes of which have rarely sounded so approachable, but this is not to say the album is a sell-out leap into commercialism. There are a couple head-scratchers and murky moments that fail to make much of an impact, but the quintet have spun such a rich web of mood and personality that any fall from grace barely changes altitude. Steady frontman {$McEntire} wades confidently through uncharted waters, and his strength as a producer keeps a few odd moments from sinking. {^Tortoise} sounds like a dark and wonderful garage full of dusty instruments. It's like looking at Avedon photographs...the crevices and quirky imperfections are so richly explored that they become things of beauty. Disjointed twangy guitar riffs, distant harmonic overtones, bass mumblings, and a heartbeat make up tracks like {&"Flyrod,"} and {&"Ry Cooder"} ebbs and flows organically through multiple key changes, tempos, and moods: foreboding, tense, plodding, explosive, hip, jazzy, cool, and funky (a signature piece for the band). {&"Cornpone Bunch"} briefly tips its hat to {$the Who} before unraveling a "roll the credits" finale to the disc; a bittersweet dialogue between bass, vibes, and drums than builds wonderfully to a close. The modest success of this CD proved to be a launching pad for several offshoot projects (several of which included founding members of this band), like {$Directions in Music}, {$Isotope 217}, {$Trans Am}, {$Rome}, and {$the Sea and Cake}. In subsequent releases, {$Tortoise} evolved to be a collective rather than a set roster of players. The ground broken apart by this solid debut would be tilled and cultivated by their outstanding follow-up {^Millions Now Living Will Never Die}. Roll the dice for either album; you can't lose. ~ Glenn Swan, All Music Guide
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