Tyvek

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Tyvek album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 34:40

eMusic Features

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Label Profile: M’Lady’s Records

By Lindsay Zoladz, eMusic Contributor

File under: Spirited, scrappy back-to-basics punk and indie rock Flagship acts: Coasting, The Golden Awesome, Talk Normal, Tyvek, Hysterics Based in: Portland, Oregon In a moment when the word "indie" is little more than a glorified marketing term, a conversation with M'Lady's Records founder Brett Lyman returns to the phrase a welcome subversive spirit. Inspired equally by the '80s underground, the riot grrrl movement and anarchic post-punk impresario Tony Wilson ("We basically function like an impoverished version of… more »

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2011: Garage Rock Grows Up

By Mike McGonigal, eMusic Contributor

Four years ago, I flew from Portland to New York to see my favorite band, New Zealand's garage-pop trio the Clean, play three shows at a glorious pit called Cake Shop. The openers were Crystal Stilts, a Brooklyn group with no records out whose moody and noisy music pushed all the right buttons. I quickly befriended the group, especially guitarist JB Townsend and his then-girlfriend Frankie Rose, whose own band Vivian Girls were soon-to-be favorites.… more »

They Say All Music Guide

After putting out a series of 7”s, EPs, CD-Rs, and cassettes, Tyvek took full advantage of the room to roam for their debut full-length. Their self-titled CD for Siltbreeze is more sprawling than any of their other outings, as vocalist Kevin Boyer and the gang bounce from punky rockers in the loose spirit of the Mr. T Experience and the Dead Milkmen to shambling half-assed instrumentals. “Sonora,” “Tecate,” “El Centro,” and “Mexicali” are disposable interludes pieced apart from a freewheeling two-chord jam session, but dig past these rough spots and the treats outweigh the filler tenfold. Like slacker-based, left-of-the-dial college rock of the ’80s, stream-of-consciousness lyrics are executed in an offhanded singing style that complements the winding, ramshackle melodies perfectly. “Stop Start” captures the quick-to-the-punch disjoint of Wire, “Frustration Rock” grinds and noodles away as Boyer hyperventilates through a tongue twister, and “Stand and Fight” is a fist-raising romp in the style of early SST singles. Of course, everything’s captured in Tyvek’s usual poorly lit, fly-on-the-wall technique of four-tracking. With everything immediate, and with flaws galore, there’s not much to differentiate the sound from a live show, which is a good thing. Lo-fi fans wouldn’t want it any less raw. – Jason Lymangrover

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