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Tam

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Download links and information about Tam by Tam. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 47:24 minutes.

Artist: Tam
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 17
Duration: 47:24
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. No Cars Go 3:04
2. French Made Simple 2:23
3. Incest At Best 1:40
4. Alien Nation 3:41
5. You're Not Mine 4:22
6. Take What You Need 2:43
7. Artificial Love 4:19
8. Top 2:26
9. 1000 Watts 3:22
10. Petrol Bomb Houses 2:55
11. Better Off Dead 2:59
12. Deadman Brings the Luck 1:41
13. They're Free 3:03
14. Modern Man 2:25
15. Sex-Shop Job 2:09
16. No to Yes 2:16
17. Stop 1:56

Details

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In the best possible way, Tam's self-titled debut feels like a throwback to a certain kind of '90s indie rock, with female vocals that are sometimes shouty, sometimes charmingly off-key; simple-but-effective drumming and guitars, and the odd keyboard here and there; and production that's raw but not quite lo-fi. Tam ends up sounding a bit like Guv'ner — an especially apt comparison since they were also signed to Ecstatic Peace! back in the day — and a bit like Marmoset, if they'd had a female singer. The retro vibe of her music isn't all that surprising, considering that Tam has been writing songs since the mid-'90s even though this is her first official release. Most of Tam falls into this off-kilter but catchy territory, as exemplified by her cover of the Arcade Fire's "No Cars Go," "Take What U Need," and the strummy, bittersweet "You're Not Mine." However, the album takes some interesting detours over the course of its 17 tracks, ranging from the cute synth pop of "Top" and "Alien Nation" (in which Tam pronounces "sunshine" as "soon-she-yine" à la Oasis' Liam Gallagher) to the surprisingly dark undercurrents on "Better Off Dead" and "Incest at Best," on which she snarls, "we're so much less than friends." Sometimes the songs are a little too shambling and her vocals are a little too artless. Still, when many indie rock bands are trying to reinvent post-punk for the umpteenth time or are "collectives" full of glockenspiel and flugelhorn players, there's something oddly refreshing about the strange simplicity of Tam's music.