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Tusk

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Download links and information about Tusk by The Dead C. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, World Music, Alternative genres. It contains 6 tracks with total duration of 49:40 minutes.

Artist: The Dead C
Release date: 1997
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, World Music, Alternative
Tracks: 6
Duration: 49:40
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Plane 11:22
2. Head 11:12
3. Tuba 1:34
4. Half 5:30
5. Imaginary 7:56
6. Tusk 12:06

Details

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It may be named after the Fleetwood Mac album — at least allegedly — but anyone expecting crystalline late-'70s AOR harmonies and the like will be sorely disappointed. Then again, the strange line drawing of beast and person on the front cover might suggest that much. Again straddling the line between shorter numbers and extended experimentation, and definitely favoring the latter here, Tusk finds the Dead C again exploring new and strange territory even for them. While the general concept of what the band is supposed to be about had long been established, the trio steers even further away from the dark, crumbling guitar sounds of its past at points. "Plane," the opening number, is one of the Dead C's least "typical" tracks ever, opening with a persistent shift back and forth between two loops of what could be anything from broken bells to tinkling, heavily treated guitar. It's an almost Main-like level of minimal ambient creepout, a mood only broken halfway through by a sudden cut to a more familiar lo-fi fuzz of the full band doing a slow jam. Elsewhere, the band builds on the sense of anthemic lift and roar showcased on The White House, to often stunning effect. "Head" is just simply marvelous, slowly but surely building up and up to a grand conclusion; when Morley's vocals suddenly appear, it's the perfect way to send things over the top. The final two numbers are the real winners, though. Both "Imaginary" and the title track are full-on Dead C to the max noise numbers achieving transcendence through volume and feedback. The latter is especially fine, breaking into a electronic beep-touched climax halfway through, then further shifting in a series of rhythmic guitar screams and whines. It's a fitting end to a strong album, showing that the Dead C seem to keep getting better with age.