T. Cole Rachel

  • Home
  • Dossier
  • Departures
    • The Many LIves of Sharon Stone
    • Hello, Dolly!
    • Dragged Around The World
    • Albert Goldbarth, Space Cadet
    • Liz Rosenberg, Bon Appétit
    • Diane Warren
    • Susanna Hoffs
    • Calilo
    • Easter Island
    • Nayara Hangaroa
    • Something Wild
    • Ada Limón
    • Under the Covers with Cat Power
    • Leiomy Maldonado
    • Carla Hall
    • Christy Turlington
    • Edmund White on Books
    • The Write Stuff
    • Singapore Sling
    • Seduced by the Sea
    • Green Getaway in Costa Rica
    • A Sustainable Future
    • The Ideal Bag
  • DINNER DATE
    • A Dinner Date with Idina Menzel
    • A Dinner Date with Michael Stipe
    • A Dinner Date with Judy Collins
  • Noteworthy
    • Q Lazzarus
    • Nighttime Kingdom
    • An Evening with Gossip
    • The Creative Independent
    • NUL
    • Tinsel and Gore
    • Madonna
    • B-52s
    • How to write a poem
    • Rosie Tompkins for Interview
    • Trip Advisor
    • Cosmic Thing
    • Ten Cities
    • David Byrne
    • Larry Kramer
    • Artful Cats
  • Archive
  • BEST
  • Books
  • Poetry & Photography
  • About
  • Contact
  • Search
photo by Andew Painter

photo by Andew Painter

Tortoise On The Catastrophist & The Process Of Making Music Without Limitations

January 12, 2016 by T. Cole Rachel in Music, Stereogum, Interviews

For those of us who came of age in the early ’90s, Tortoise — Chicago’s iconic post-rock granddaddies — were a kind of gateway drug for what could be ostensibly deemed “experimental” music. The band’s landmark 1996 release, Millions Now Living Will Never Die, provided, for me at least, essential first contact with what was essentially genre-less instrumental music — a discovery that would eventually lead me to seeking out things like Can, Neu!, and Sonny Sharrock. And even though Tortoise have always been generally slotted under the vague banner of “post-rock” their back catalog — now seven albums deep — is pretty singular. Jazz-inflected and imbued with elements of rock, dub, and ambient electronica, their music has, for the better part of 25 years, remained wonderfully inscrutable. The same is true of the band’s forthcoming full-length, The Catastrophist, which might actually be their most weirdly adventurous to date. The LP includes funk-appropriate basslines, feather-light interplaying guitars, and a variety of otherworldly synthed-out instrumentals. Perhaps weirdest of all, the album includes a cover of David Essex’s 1973 pop hit “Rock On,” which the band manages to make sound oddly ominous. Elsewhere, Yo La Tengo’s Georgia Hubley shows up to add vocals to “Yonder Blue,” which is perhaps one of the loveliest songs the band has ever recorded. In other hands, so many disparate elements and influences might sound like a crazy mess, but The Catastrophist has the same kind of measured, sanguine quality that has been the hallmark of almost every Tortoise album. None of this should make sense, but for some reason all of it does. I talked to Tortoise drummer John McEntire and guitarist Jeff Parker about The Catastrophist and how they got here. And before you get to that, you can listen to “Rock On.”

Read More


January 12, 2016 /T. Cole Rachel
Music, Stereogum, Interviews
  • Newer
  • Older

© All Rights Reserved - T. Cole Rachel