Sung Tongs

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (19 ratings)
Sung Tongs album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 53:20

eMusic Features

0

Who Are…Gauntlet Hair

By Arye Dworken, eMusic Contributor

Walk into any barbershop and ask for the Gauntlet Hair, and there's a good chance they'll have no idea what you're talking about. That's because Andy R. and Craig Nice coined the term as teenagers — it comes from a private joke inspired by an old picture of the guitar legend Johnny Winter. (By the way, if your barber does accept the challenge, the duo insists that the outcome should look a lot like a… more »

0

Six Degrees of The Band’s Music From Big Pink

By Andy Beta, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

0

eMusic Yearbook: 2005

By Chuck Eddy, eMusic Contributor

Indie-rock in the '00s was hardly the same animal as indie-rock two decades before, and much of the blame should probably go to Nirvana. In the '80s, labels like SST and Touch & Go were built on testosterone. But when grunge went multiplatinum in the '90s, rock bands brandishing palpable physicality suddenly qualified as mainstream again, and the bigger indies started adopting a more effete and introverted aesthetic. So if you skim down a list… more »

0

eMusic User Poll: Favorite Albums of 2009

By eMusic Members, eMusic Contributor

This was an eventful and turbulent year. One thing you can always count on, though, is a glut of amazing music, and 2009 was no exception. Everyone has their favorites from the year past — now is your chance to weigh in. Did you find yourself reaching, again and again, for the Raveonettes? Or did Animal Collective soundtrack your year? This is your opportunity to let us know your musical mainstays. Use the poll below… more »

0

Gas, Grass Or Balkan Brass

By Richard Gehr, eMusic Contributor

The best dancers in the house when the Boban i Marko Markovic Orkestar played Lincoln Center's Midsummer Night Swing series in Manhattan this summer were a handsome couple, probably in their 60s, who whirled and dipped with the intuitive ease of longtime lovers immersed in their favorite music. I stood nearby and imagined them reveling in the sound of their Serbian homeland, lost in an ecstatic sea of nostalgia as they danced away the decades… more »

They Say All Music Guide

On Sung Tongs, their first record distributed by FatCat, the two-man Animal Collective come on like sun-scorched acid eaters gathered around the campfire, strumming and grinning while they weave their material out of cyclical singalongs and tight harmonies. Surprisingly, both for fans as well as new additions, that marks a much more accessible sound for a group that had previously probed the outer limits of prog and psychedelia. (Still, back to basics is the right place for a collective that released three albums in 2003.) Immediately called to mind here are the Holy Modal Rounders and, to a lesser extent, the Incredible String Band. While Animal Collective certainly don’t share the intimate knowledge of folk music or the expert musicianship of the Holy Modals or the ISB, they do understand the importance of repetition in reaching altered states, and they indulge in many naturalistic post-production enhancements to get there. “Leaf House” and “Who Could Win a Rabbit” open the record with a cozy atmosphere created from soaring harmonies and Beach Boys-type bungalow percussion. From there, with only a few exceptions, Sung Tongs devolves into the loosest of jam sessions, a midsummer night’s dream of pixilated picking in similar company with the lengthy mid-album interlude (“Green Typewriters”) during the Olivia Tremor Control’s Dusk at Cubist Castle. Although the duo didn’t record nearly enough material to justify checking out quite so soon, Sung Tongs is a striking record, a breath of fresh air within experimentalist indie rock. – John Bush

more »