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The Tyde – Once (Orange Sky, 2001)

March 20, 2001 by A.S. Van Dorston

It’s odd that Beachwood Sparks is getting all the attention, when The Tyde (made up of three members of Beachwood Sparks) is so much better. It depends on where your tastes lie, but with Beachwood Sparks, you either like The Byrds/Buffalo Springfield/Flying Burrito Brothers or you don’t. With The Tyde, their palate includes some of the former, but is greatly expanded, encompassing The Band, The Stones, and most notably, British jangle-poppers Felt and Lloyd Cole & The Commotions. More modern comparisons can also be made to bands like Pavement, such as on “Strangers Again” and “The Dawn” where Darren Rademaker’s vocal mannerisms are similar to Stephen Malkmus. But even Malkmus has never been able to come up with such refreshingly emotionally direct lyrics and heart-wrenching melodies.

“North Country Times” is an addictive, rollicking tune that could have been big in any of the last four decades. The album’s opus is the 9:43 closing “Silver’s Okay Michelle,” about Michelle Kwan, the teenage figure skater who missed out on an Olympic gold medal. The layers of guitars peak in a gorgeous extended moment worthy of current giants Mercury Rev. Along with Beulah, Helio Sequence, Summer Hymns, Kingsbury Manx, Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci and Beachwood Sparks, The Tyde represent a sort of resurgence in pastoral psychedelia that’s more than welcome to stay awhile.

Posted in: Reviews
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