Falling Down A Mountain

Tindersticks
Constellation Records
General | Jan 2010

Reviews

Adam Pearson
Reviewed 2010-02-02
Melancholy, lush orchestral chamber pop. If you are unfamiliar with Tindersticks, they are a lounge-rock, chamber pop ensemble who incorporate restrained gloominess within the unusual intersection of barroom jazz, smoky lounge music, pop, rock, and maybe classical and soul. (Hipster alert: The Tindersticks were a major influence on The National.) Stuart Staples’ voice is a wholly unique smooth baritone. This album is the second in their vague comeback-but-not-really-a-comeback period. It is not heavy enough to really hold a candle to their early stuff (which everyone should be familiar with), but is more interesting than most ‘indie’ these days. For fans of all early Waits, Nick Cave, and Lambchop.

*1. A loose, jazzy, 15/8 groove that is positively swirling with trumpet warbling, driving upright bass, layered, floating vocals. Arty as hell, interesting, atmospheric, and moody. (6:32)
2. Stripped back, delicate Tindersticks ballad, gentle, has a weird, gauzy 70s soul vibe kind of going, too. (3:22)
3. Handclaps, joyful major key xylophones, full piano, chant-y backing vocals, a capella section, warm; really is a nice pop song. (5:04)
4. Simplistic, minimalistic jingly piano chords, duet with Mary Margaret O’Hara, harmonica, mellow laid back. Not that great, though. (4:35)
5. Spanish-tinged stomp, like something off one of their self-titled albums, atmospheric, great trumpet part and fluttering flute. (3:17)
6. Ominous organ boardwalk instrumental that bobs along. Oddball piece that would fit in on any ‘organgasm.’ (3:03)
*7. More of a straightforward song, vocals seem a little distorted and jagged, catchy, bizarre blend of snarly, western rock and soul; hazy, bumbly horns. Definitely surreal. (3:41)
8. Strummy, tambourines, blaring organs, delayed guitars, trebly, poppy. (3:10)
*9. Slow, piano ballad, haunting, melodic, sweet, picks up in intensity to a jazzy storm of keys, delicate, beautiful. (5:53)
10. Instrumental. Descending, lush, dramatic strings underscored by steady, understated rhythm and light guitar work; sounds like a soundtrack piece. Very nice. (5:46)

Recent airplay

Falling Down A Mountain
Pseudo-Brownian MotionJan 25, 2012
Harmony Around My Table
e hele aku a ho'i maiApr 28, 2011
Falling Down A Mountain
Factory Girls
Beatnik BourgeoisieApr 07, 2010
Falling Down A Mountain
Lyric Ballads/Spider RaveApr 06, 2010
Black Smoke
A2ZApr 02, 2010

Charting

2010-02-14 — 2010-04-18
Week EndingAirplays
Apr 11 2
Apr 4 3
Mar 28 3
Mar 21 2
Mar 14 1
Mar 7 4
Feb 28 3
Feb 21 3

Track listing

1. Falling Down A Mountain
2. Keep You Beautiful
3. Harmony Around My Table
4. Peanuts
5. She Rode Me Down
6. Hubbards Hills
7. Black Smoke
8. No Place So Alone
9. Factory Girls
10. Piano Music