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Creep On Creepin' On

Creep On Creepin' On in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $13.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Creep On Creepin' On

Creep On Creepin' On in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Of all the acts called indie-folk,
Timber Timbre
has some of the darkest and strangest musical roots.
Creep On Creepin' On's
title is no mistake:
Taylor Kirk
and company take inspiration for the follow-up to their Polaris Prize long-listed self-titled album from seances, witchcraft, murder ballads, swampy rockabilly slow dances, and horror movies. Yet within this black-on-black palette,
Kirk
finds fine shadings of meaning and mood that keep these songs from being too monotonous, self-serious or campy.
"Bad Ritual"
opens the album with
remembering a departed lover, though lyrics like "there is proof in boxes" and "I felt your poltergeist present" suggest she may not have left of her own accord;
"Black Water"
swirls imagery of Viking funerals and polluted lakes into murk that belies ages upon ages of weirdness. What makes
Creep On Creepin' On
really work, however, is
's commitment to its distinctive sound.
"Woman"
's blaring sax, droning organ and surf guitar undertow give a doomy shimmer to the song's '50s piano ballad bones;
"Too Old to Die Young"
gets even more literal and theatrical with B-movie screams and sound effects entwined with sawing strings. Even more so than on
,
knows how to turn this drama and mischief into something transcendent, especially on
"Lonesome Hunter,"
which captures just how scary it can be to fall in love.
is the sound of
fully coming into its own, with romance and strangeness to spare. ~ Heather Phares
Of all the acts called indie-folk,
Timber Timbre
has some of the darkest and strangest musical roots.
Creep On Creepin' On's
title is no mistake:
Taylor Kirk
and company take inspiration for the follow-up to their Polaris Prize long-listed self-titled album from seances, witchcraft, murder ballads, swampy rockabilly slow dances, and horror movies. Yet within this black-on-black palette,
Kirk
finds fine shadings of meaning and mood that keep these songs from being too monotonous, self-serious or campy.
"Bad Ritual"
opens the album with
remembering a departed lover, though lyrics like "there is proof in boxes" and "I felt your poltergeist present" suggest she may not have left of her own accord;
"Black Water"
swirls imagery of Viking funerals and polluted lakes into murk that belies ages upon ages of weirdness. What makes
Creep On Creepin' On
really work, however, is
's commitment to its distinctive sound.
"Woman"
's blaring sax, droning organ and surf guitar undertow give a doomy shimmer to the song's '50s piano ballad bones;
"Too Old to Die Young"
gets even more literal and theatrical with B-movie screams and sound effects entwined with sawing strings. Even more so than on
,
knows how to turn this drama and mischief into something transcendent, especially on
"Lonesome Hunter,"
which captures just how scary it can be to fall in love.
is the sound of
fully coming into its own, with romance and strangeness to spare. ~ Heather Phares

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