Title TK (CD)

The Breeders

[Cover]

Label: Elektra Released: 2002 List Price: 13.96
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For most of the '90s, the Breeders seemed resigned to being just a part of alternative rock's mythology: a lightning-in-a-bottle success story that helped define the era's sound and spawned a classic single before disappearing into substance abuse and a severe case of writer's block. By the end of the decade, hearing new material from Kim Deal and company seemed about as likely as a new My Bloody Valentine album, so the fact that Title TK, their long-awaited return, exists at all seems more than a little miraculous. In a weird way, the long, long wait for them to resurface works in their favor -- at this point, it's welcome to hear anything from them. After a nine-year (!) wait, a new Breeders album is just a nice addition to what's going on in indie rock instead of its salvation. From its very name, Title TK (journalistic shorthand for "title to come") reflects this: it's a surprisingly low-key, self-effacing return that doesn't feel like an attempt at reclaiming Last Splash's glory. Instead, it blends the stripped-down sounds of Pod and the Amps' Pacer into a collection of strangely intimate, feminine garage rock. Steve Albini's quick- and cheap-sounding production throws a spotlight on the weathered, offhand quality of Kim Deal's voice -- which is more sandpaper than sugar nowadays -- as well as every quirk in the band's playing. Even revved-up guitar rushes like "Little Fury" and "Huffer" have a little vulnerability lurking around the edges, and on the sweet "Too Alive," it sounds like you're in the garage with the band. There's a fascinating duality to Title TK, from the way that nearly every song mixes and blends Kim's and Kelley's not-quite-identical vocals to the way it switches between sweet, playfully spiky songs like "Son of Three" and "Forced to Drive" and dark, mysterious tracks. With its brooding, druggy allure, "The She" recalls Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit," and "Put On a Side" and the aptly named "Sinister Foxx" have a sexy menace that the Breeders haven't explored since Pod. "Off You," Title TK's first single, is about as far from "Cannonball" as the band can get, a dreamy, breathy ballad that sounds intimate but masks its feelings in beautifully cryptic imagery. Very much a take-it-or-leave-it work, Title TK doesn't even try to live up to fans' inflated expectations of what a Breeders album should be -- though the band may not have spent the entire nine years they were gone crafting this album, it feels like the only album they could make after such a long wait. Title TK isn't always a flattering portrait of the Breeders, but it is an admirably honest one. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Little Fury
2London Song
3Off You
4She
5Too Alive
6Son of Three
7Put on a Side
8Full on Idle
9Sinister Foxx
10Forced to Drive
11T and T
12Huffer

 

User Reviews

   Pedram Navab - Tucson, , USA
Throughout the years, The Breeders have hovered in an indistinct zone--in Pod, their dark, mysterious tracks were unsettlingly provocative; in Last Splash, the pop sensibilities were wholesomely delectable for commodity culture. Nine years later with the addition of a third installment, the categories blur further. In title TK, the long-awaited triad, the setting is uncannily a blending of all that is bleak and saccharine; Kim Deal's voice has aged and the rawness grates amidst the tracks alongside Kelley's relative euphony. The result works in the track "Sinister Foxx," recalling Tanya Donnelly's accompaniment in Pod's "Happiness is a Warm Gun" while also embodying the schizophrenic freedom through such phrases as "has anyone seen the iguana." "Forced to Drive" recalls what The Breeders are best at doing--shifting expectations in musical arrangements and infusing pop with rock angulations that are at once expected and jarring. "T and T" is a wordless excursion into a landscape that is languidly droning and epic-like and a precursor of the rocker, "Huffer." As an album, title TK is subtle: the tracks, which appear unfinished and raw, creep slowly and unexpectedly show that The Breeders are content with that which need not be assimilated into a polished product.


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