Artist: Tindersticks: mp3 download Genre(s): Rock Indie Alternative Other ROck: Alternative Tindersticks's discography: Working for the Man: The Island Years Year: 2004 Tracks: 28 Waiting for the Moon Year: 2003 Tracks: 12 Tindersticks: II Year: 2003 Tracks: 16 Can Our Love Year: 2001 Tracks: 8 Simple Pleasure Year: 1999 Tracks: 9 Curtains Year: 1997 Tracks: 15 Bathtime Year: 1997 Tracks: 4 Nenette Et Boni: Original Soundtracks Year: 1996 Tracks: 14 Travelling Light Year: 1995 Tracks: 3 Tindersticks Year: 1995 Tracks: 21 No More Affairs Year: 1995 Tracks: 3 Amsterdam Year: 1994 Tracks: 9 Kathleen Year: 1993 Tracks: 4 Tindersticks were one of the to the highest degree original and typical British acts of the Apostles of the '90s, standing apart from both the British indie view and the rash of Brit-pop guitar combos that henpecked the U.K. charts. Where their generation were oftentimes direct and to the point, Tindersticks were purblind and gentle, crafting impenetrable, difficult songs superimposed with literary lyrics, intertwining melodies, mumbling vocals, and gently melancholy orchestrations. Essentially, the mathematical chemical group filtered the dark romanticism of Leonard Cohen, Ian Curtis, and Scott Walker as filtered through the off-the-wall pop songcraft of Lee Hazlewood and the esthetics of indie rock and roll. Though their music was far from casual hearing, Tindersticks gained a dedicated cult following in the mid-'90s, root with their eponymic 1993 debut album, which was named Album of the Year by Melody Maker. The origins of Tindersticks lay in Asphalt Ribbons, a Nottingham-based indie john Rock band that featured vocaliser Stuart Staples, keyboardist David Boulter, and fiddler Dickon Hinchcliffe. All deuce-ace members formed Tindersticks in 1992; the unexpended members included guitarist Neil Fraser, bassist Mark Colwill, and drummer Al Macaulay. In November of 1992, the circle released its first single, "Patchwork," on its possess label, Tippy Toe. "Marbles" followed early in 1993, as did "A Marriage Made in Heaven," a coaction with Huggy Bear's Niki Sin that appeared on Rough Trade's Singles Club. Following the release of the Unwired EP on Tippy Toe, the freshman This Way Up signed the band. Tindersticks' eponymous debut appeared halfway through 1993, earning rave reviews from most sections of the British press. By the final stage of the year, the group and the album had won all over most of the U.K. critics, and Tindersticks was named Album of the Year by Melody Maker. Tindersticks spent a muted class in 1994, cathartic a single of John Barry's James Bond theme "We Have All the Time in the World" (On Her Majesty's Secret Service), a live album entitled Capital of The Netherlands, and a cover of Pavement's "Hither." Also that year, Tindersticks was released on Bar/None in the U.S. In the natural spring of 1995, the grouping released its ignoble second gear album, which featured cameos from Gallon Drunk's Terry Edwards and the Walkabouts' Carla Torgerson. Like its predecessor, it received rant reviews and appeared on about every British Top Ten name of the Best of 1995. In November of 1995, the mathematical group released some other live album, Bloomsbury Theatre. Tindersticks were restrained for to the highest degree of 1996, cathartic the soundtrack to the Claire Denis flick Nénette et Boni in the fall of the year. The record album was comprised of old songs, new songs, and rearranged old material. A new interlingual rendition of "A Marriage Made in Heaven," featuring vocals from actress Isabella Rosselini, was released a few months after Nénette et Boni; the single was later appended to the American release of 1997's Curtains. Their fourth endeavour, Simple Pleasure (1999), pronounced the band's near openhearted release since their inception. A unexampled deal with Beggars Banquet surfaced at the cockcrow of the new millennium, and a replenished unity within the band was establish on 2001's Can Our Love.... Later that year, Tindersticks provided the soundtrack to another Claire Denis photographic film, Trouble Every Day. The proper follow-up to John Our Love..., Waiting for the Moon, was released in mid-2003. |