Posts Tagged ‘Doug Tuttle’

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19 cool and breezy contemporary pop psych tunes by 18 of 2018’s hottest acts … Including Mystic Braves, Allah-Las, Tony Molina, Dungen & Woods, Cloud, Send Medicine, The Love-Birds, Doug Tuttle, and ten more of your independent popular psychedelic rock favorites.

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Running Time: 1 hour, 4 seconds

TRACKLIST

  1. Under Control (3:17) — Mystic Braves | Los Angeles
  2. Soul Doctors (2:24) — Dragon Rapide | Clermont Ferrand, France
  3. Terra Ignota (3:23) — Allah-Las | Los Angeles 
  4. Smith & 9th (3:27) — The Essex Green | Brooklyn
  5. Love or Solution (3:20) — The Coral | Merseyside, UK
  6. A Message from Your Heart (3:01) — Doug Tuttle | Boston 
  7. Nothing I Can Say (1:10) — Tony Molina | California
  8. He’s Back (2:46) — The Valderamas | Rennes, France
  9. Hit My Head (2:47) — The Love-Birds | San Francisco
  10. All The Things That Happen To Me (3:45) — The Molochs | California
  11. Kieff Richards (3:02) — Kieff | Leiden, Netherlands
  12. The Sweet Lie (3:17) — Garcia Peoples | Rutherford, NJ
  13. Just for the Taste (3:47) — Dungen & Woods | Stockholm / Brooklyn
  14. Look Inside Your Mind/Losin’ Touch (2:25) — Tony Molina | California
  15. The Magician (3:51) — The Babe Rainbow | Byron Bay, Australia
  16. Happer’s Laugh (3:32) — Cloud | Los Angeles
  17. Corduroy (3:41) — Send Medicine | Los Angeles
  18. Backseat Driver (3:12) — White Denim | Austin
  19. How Psychedelic of You (3:59) — Kelley Stoltz | San Francisco

Singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist, former MMOSS guitarist/singer, designer/builder of Mid-Fi Electronics guitar effects. Massachusetts singer songwriter Doug Tuttle returns with his third solo album,
‘Peace Potato’, once again on Chicago label Trouble In Mind Records.
His 2013 solo debut (after fronting his longtime psychedelic band, MMOSS) was an insular and foggy psychedelic masterpiece punctuated by Tuttle’s stinging guitar leads, accented by flashes of bedroom Fairport /Crazy Horse brilliance, towing the line nimbly between elegance and ragged assurance. We last saw Tuttle on “It Calls On Me”, his 2015 sophomore album, which pushed his songwriting towards further clarity and melody; ‘Peace Potato’ shakes it all down with Tuttle’s strongest batch of songs yet.
‘Peace Potato’ introduces itself with the horn-laden, honeydripper,“Bait The Sun”, a classic Tuttle tune; downer pop melodies coloring a hypnagogic landscape. It is indeed that state of lucid dreaming, somewhere between the onset of sleep is where Tuttle firmly plants the seeds of “Peace Potato”. Songs like the addictive Harrison-esque acoustic strummer “Can It Be” and majestic “Only In A Dream” kick in and fade out like the lurching of the mind’s dream state, with the listener’s only guide being Tuttle’s fragmented sensory narrative. (see the undulating, utterly-effected “Life Boat” floating near the end of the first side. Songs stutter to life and grind to a halt, to calculated effect, stitched together into a patchwork of full tunes, song fragments and waves of melodic euphoria.
Throughout all, Tuttle’s guitar picking and soloing echoes the greats of decades prior, Harrison, Thompson, Clarence White, with a conscious eye to the unsung bedroom and basement weird pop genius of sung and unsung artists like Harumi, Sixth Station, The Bachs and Jim Sullivan.

Tuttle played every instrument and recorded the entirety of ‘Peace Potato’ in his Somerville bedroom studio; a ubiquitous location in these modern times, but the ease at which Tuttle’s songs fold and unfold, suggests something more than your usual home recorded musings, “Peace Potato” feels natural and comfortable in it’s skin.

http://

Singer songwriter Doug Tuttle returns with his third solo album, ‘Peace Potato’, once again on Chicago label Trouble In Mind Records.
His 2013 solo debut (after fronting his longtime psychedelic band, MMOSS) was an insular and foggy psychedelic masterpiece punctuated by Tuttle’s stinging guitar leads, accented by flashes of bedroom Fairport /Crazy Horse brilliance, towing the line nimbly between elegance and ragged assurance. We last saw Tuttle on “It Calls On Me”, his 2015 sophomore album, which pushed his songwriting towards further clarity and melody; ‘Peace Potato’ shakes it all down with Tuttle’s strongest batch of songs yet.
‘Peace Potato’ introduces itself with the horn-laden, honeydripper,“Bait The Sun”, a classic Tuttle tune; downer pop melodies coloring a hypnagogic landscape. It is indeed that state of lucid dreaming, somewhere between the onset of sleep is where Tuttle firmly plants the seeds of “Peace Potato”.

Songs like the addictive Harrison-esque acoustic strummer “Can It Be” and majestic “Only In A Dream” kick in and fade out like the lurching of the mind’s dream state, with the listener’s only guide being Tuttle’s fragmented sensory narrative. (see the undulating, utterly-effected “Life Boat” floating near the end of the first side. Songs stutter to life and grind to a halt, to calculated effect, stitched together into a patchwork of full tunes, song fragments and waves of melodic euphoria.
Throughout all, Tuttle’s guitar picking and soloing echoes the greats of decades prior, Harrison, Thompson, Clarence White, with a conscious eye to the unsung bedroom and basement weird pop genius of sung and unsung artists like Harumi, Sixth Station, The Bachs and Jim Sullivan. Tuttle played every instrument and recorded the entirety of ‘Peace Potato’ in his Somerville bedroom studio; a ubiquitous location in these modern times, but the ease at which Tuttle’s songs fold and unfold, suggests something more than your usual home recorded musings, “Peace Potato” feels natural and comfortable in it’s skin.

released May 5th, 2017

Singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist, former MMOSS guitarist/singer, designer/builder of Mid-Fi Electronics guitar effects.

http://