Quantcast
Dinosaur Jr. @ First Avenue
November 20, 2009 – 10:59 am | No Comment

The Amherst trio had towers of amps stacked up all over the stage, including one that was pointed directly towards front man J Mascis, in case his monitors weren’t providing him enough of his own guitar sound. And not having enough sound has never really been a problem for the group, and it certainly wasn’t on this evening as the band tore through a fiery 90 minute set that spanned the band’s entire career.

Read the full story »
Album Reviews

Unique perspectives and opinions on new and recent releases

Concert Coverage

Photos, videos and reviews from a variety of live events.

Interviews

Engaging discussions with artists from around the world.

Spotlight

Highlighting songs and bands, old and new

Video

Music videos & performance footage

Home » Other

The Tiny “Starring; Someone Like You”

Submitted by Chris DeLine on April 15, 2006 – 6:37 pmOne Comment

tiny starring someone like you.jpg

The Tiny are a collective that came about through a decisive decision to abandon a life of safety and discover the full capabilities of band members’ creativity. And that is simply what makes The Tiny such a special group, its members’ willingness to experiment. Throughout the course of “Starring; Someone Like You” there is a completely unorthodox mixture of instruments used which makes for a delightful listen. Ranging from the typical piano and violin, the band also ventures into the unconventional, using a musical saw, toy piano and wind chimes to create a wonderful musical experience.

One has to interpret the lyrical tone of the album as that of a capture and release story. There isa theme of ever-longing for something more, whether it be yourself, or those around you, but a constant message is that of being incomplete. “Kind of Like You” immediately starts this impressive venture into uneasy relationships. It brings about emotions of commonly throwing away love on whatever or whoever may be around you in the hope of finding something or someone worthy of such emotion.

“Know Your Demons” is one of my favorite song on the album, both musically and lyrically as it offers a differentiation of tone and beat, while continuing the album’s theme. “Know tour demons, they know you, wherever you go, they go too,” becomes a line that is essential when understanding the remainder of the album. The musical differentiation comes near the end of the track, where there is either a blossoming of noise or a deterioration of the song, depending how you approach it. A positive and more likely approach is taking it as a blossoming of innocence, as the song becomes a primary school sing along, with a visceral clashing of drums and variety of tones.

The remainder of the album touches on Scandinavian soul, up-tempo violin that seems to chase you and Ed Harcourt, as found with his contribution on “Sorry.” While there are a great many different musical tangents, the album generally broods, but rather than burning out at the end, to use the quote, it merely fades away. In doing so however, the album creates an environment which musters nothing less than a curiosity for more from the listener. The Tiny are experimental, but not for the sake of merely doing so, and avoiding a mainstream sound or audience. Rather, the sound and message which emanate are a product of internal factors, a need to produce art, and in a sense, take the road less traveled. In this, the band does nothing but succeed.

The Tiny “Know Your Demons”
The Tiny “Dirty Frames”

The Tiny – Official Site
The Tiny – MySpace Site

the tiny.jpg

One Comment »

  • crazyeights says:

    i am in love with this album, too. their debut is also magnificent even though it’s not as experimental/grand :)

    great review! i love ‘in reality’ song the most.

    i personally think ‘know your demons’ is 1 of the 2 haunting songs on this record! :P

    the another superhaunting one is ‘my greatest fear’

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.