Home » Music » Music Features
RSS XML

Indie darlings Tapes 'N Tapes perform at Club Café with Br'er Fox


BY MIKE SHANLEY

Walk It Off, the sophomore release of Tapes 'N Tapes, may conjure thoughts of bands past and present. But these qualities make up a compelling whole and show how the Minneapolis band has utilized its influences to move the music ahead, pulling you into what is ultimately a unique maelstrom of sounds.

Guitarist Josh Grier has a tense, somewhat agitated voice that recalls the Arcade Fire's Win Butler or, to take it back a generation, Echo & the Bunnymen's Ian McCulloch. A song like "Demon Apple" has a moment where all four members play a staccato riff in parallel motion, in the same manner as umpteen '90s indie-rock bands, going for that "Bolero" type of intensity. With Matt Kretzmann's various keyboards, including electric piano, stirring up the mix, Tapes 'N Tapes sounds melodic and at times pretty, even as Grier bangs trebly and brittle noises out of his guitar.

Debuting in 2006 with the well-received The Loon, this time the band went into the studio with Dave Fridmann, who has recorded Sleater-Kinney and the Flaming Lips. His production gives Walk It Off a big sound that often sounds overdriven and ready to test the limits of the speakers; it straddles a lo-fi distinction while keeping everything in high relief. The band chose the title in reference to a thematic thread in all of the songs: the need to keep walking as a way to persevere of challenging times.

 

Tapes 'N Tapes with Br'er Fox. 10:30 p.m. Fri., Aug. 8. Club Café, 56-58 S. 12th St., South Side. $13. 412-431-3950 or www.clubcafelive.com.


-- E-mail us about this story.



Advertisement



Share this article:
Del.icio.us  digg  facebook  Google Bookmarks  Technorati 

COMMENTS
There are no comments yet for this story. You can be the first.

Post a comment




MORE BY MIKE SHANLEY
Aviation Blondes release power-poppy Edge of Forever on Get Hip
After meeting Steve Morrison in the 2005 Tribute to WXXP at the Rex Theatre, singers Lexi Rebert and Jen Fisher began helping the guitarist with a solo CD that he was trying to finish. [November 12, 2009]
Seminal Brazilian psychedelic band Os Mutantes brings the '60s vibes to Mr. Small's
"I think it's important for a band who comes back to put out new music. We never played it safe and I don't think we're going to start this now." [October 8, 2009]
Reunited art-punks Mission of Burma play Club Café
The band once labeled "too ahead of their time" decided to keep going. [September 3, 2009]
My Profile | My Settings
Promo E-mail Sign up  |  Win Free Stuff  |  Advertising Info  |  Contact Us  |  Freelance/Intern Guide
Powered by Gyrosite © Copyright 2009, Pittsburgh City Paper   RSS