A thrilling, revelatory debut, Tindersticks is a chamber pop masterpiece
of romantic elegance and gutter debauchery. Within the framework of a
remarkably consistent and mesmerizingly dank atmosphere, the group covers
a stunning amount of ground -- "Her" is a crashing flamenco
number, "The Walt Blues" is a tipsy organ instrumental, and
"Paco de Renaldo's Dream" is an impenetrable cinematic monologue
punctuated by subdued guitars, pianos, and strings. Stuart Staples' bacchanalian
songs are obsessed with fluids, both bodily ("Blood," "Jism")
and otherwise ("Nectar," "Whiskey and Water," "Raindrops");
no topic is too personal or too disturbing -- "Piano Song" is
frightening in its callousness, while "City Sickness" is an
unflinching examination of emotional and physical desperation. Fascinatingly
constructed and strikingly ambitious, Tindersticks is insidiously labyrinthine:
the music speaks softly but carries tremendous weight, and its hold grows
more and more unbreakable with each listen.
(by Jason Ankeny, All
Music Guide)
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