Sunday, 1 June 2008

Tapes 'n Tapes, Walk It Off Album Review

Tapes 'n Tapes

Walk It Off

Rough Trade

Album Review




Tapes 'n Tapes became instant US indie darlings with their debut The Loon, a spectacularly off-beat amalgam of rock's take on folk. The follow-up finds the band with a fuzzbox and a Deep Purple vibe on top of their still left-leaning eclectic taste. In so doing, they notch up the interest levels significantly. Talking Heads never made a disc so interesting, so multi-layered, so full of life. Tapes 'n Tapes seemingly start with no preset idea of what makes a song, but then find themselves surrounded by instantly-addictive hooks.



If this were their first, they could find themselves lumped in with British Sea Power, or even Arcade Fire at a push, but there is more melody than either. The fantastic thrash throughout is early-REM/ Only Ones compelling, but when it comes down the band pull off a trick they managed only occasionally on the debut - the slow songs are full of interest too, and aren't just a counterpoint to the faster material. Genuinely intelligent and enjoyable, Tapes 'n Tapes deserve a massive stage.



Rating 9/10



Mike Rea




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