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Sung Tongs

 
Album Review: Sung Tongs

Review

On Sung Tongs, their first record distributed by FatCat, the two-man Animal Collective come on like sun-scorched acid eaters gathered around the campfire, strumming and grinning while they weave their material out of cyclical singalongs and tight harmonies. Surprisingly, both for fans as well as new additions, that marks a much more accessible sound for a group that had previously probed the outer limits of prog and psychedelia. (Still, back to basics is the right place for a collective that released three albums in 2003.) Immediately called to mind here are the Holy Modal Rounders and, to a lesser extent, the Incredible String Band. While Animal Collective certainly don't share the intimate knowledge of folk music or the expert musicianship of the Holy Modals or the ISB, they do understand the importance of repetition in reaching altered states, and they indulge in many naturalistic post-production enhancements to get there. "Leaf House" and "Who Could Win a Rabbit" open the record with a cozy atmosphere created from soaring harmonies and Beach Boys-type bungalow percussion. From there, with only a few exceptions, Sung Tongs devolves into the loosest of jam sessions, a midsummer night's dream of pixilated picking in similar company with the lengthy mid-album interlude ("Green Typewriters") during the Olivia Tremor Control's Dusk at Cubist Castle. Although the duo didn't record nearly enough material to justify checking out quite so soon, Sung Tongs is a striking record, a breath of fresh air within experimentalist indie rock. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Leaf House Animal Collective (2:42)
Who Could Win a Rabbit Animal Collective (2:18)
The Softest Voice Animal Collective (6:46)
Winters Love Animal Collective (4:55)
Kids on Holiday Animal Collective (5:47)
Sweet Road Animal Collective (1:15)
Visiting Friends Animal Collective (12:36)
College Animal Collective (0:53)
We Tigers Animal Collective (2:43)
Mouth Wooed Her Animal Collective (4:24)
Good Lovin Outside Animal Collective (4:26)
Whaddit I Done Animal Collective (4:05)

Credits

Alan Douches (Mastering), Animal Collective (Main Performer), Panda Bear (Mixing), Abby Portner (Artwork), Rusty "Saphire" Santos (Engineer), Rusty "Saphire" Santos (Mixing), Avey Tare (Mixing)
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Wikipedia: Sung Tongs
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Sung Tongs
Studio album by Animal Collective
Released June 1, 2004
Recorded September 2003
Genre Freak folk
Length 52:50
Label Fat Cat Records
Producer Rusty Santos
Professional reviews
Animal Collective chronology
Here Comes the Indian
(2003)
Sung Tongs
(2004)
Feels
(2005)

Sung Tongs is the fifth album by Baltimore-based band Animal Collective, released on May 3, 2004 by Fat Cat Records.

Despite the name 'Animal Collective' attached to this album, only two of the band's four members play on it: Avey Tare (David Portner) and Panda Bear (Noah Lennox). As a result, Sung Tongs is a more stripped-down affair than other Animal Collective releases. On the album, Avey and Panda both utilize acoustic guitars and tribal-like drums; the electric guitar, an important element in the Collective's previous album, Here Comes the Indian, is nowhere to be found. This sound brought the band closer to the psych folk and freak folk genres that critics tended to group them in around this period.

Sung Tongs is generally considered to be Animal Collective's breakthrough release; it generated much praise from critics upon its release and was frequently featured in best-of lists at the end of 2004.

Contents

Recording

On the Collected Animals message board, Avey Tare explained the process of recording Sung Tongs [1]:

"Yeah, we recorded it on the same tascam 48 (half inch 8 track) that I recorded Spirit on and the drums guitars and early electronics for Danse Manatee. That is we recorded the acoustic guitars and the vocals on 8 tracks. Then we mixed it down on Rusty's laptop and recorded many vocal and percussion over dubs. He's been using that for years. We mixed it from that onto....something..(i cant remember) at Noah's mom's place in Baltimore. It was very cold so we had to wear jackets the whole time. We added in all those samples and electronics there. We mixed for awhile so its sweet you like the mixing. Oh and we used AKGs and an old ribbon mike to record with. Though we had a pzm and some sm57s that we might have used as well. I remember using the pzm to record me slamming the door of the house which is what that distorted rhythm track in kids on holiday is. The person talking at the beginning of Who Could Win A Rabbit is someone in a deli in my neighborhood."

Track listing

  1. "Leaf House" – 2:42
  2. "Who Could Win a Rabbit" – 2:18
  3. "The Softest Voice" – 6:46
  4. "Winters Love" – 4:55
  5. "Kids on Holiday" – 5:47
  6. "Sweet Road" – 1:15
  7. "Visiting Friends" – 12:36
  8. "College" – 0:53
  9. "We Tigers" – 2:43
  10. "Mouth Wooed Her" – 4:24
  11. "Good Lovin Outside" – 4:26
  12. "Whaddit I Done" – 4:05

Personnel

Awards

  • #9 in Pitchfork's Top 100 Albums of the Decade's First Half (2000-2004) [2]

 
 
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Feels (2005 Album by Animal Collective)
Young Prayer (2004 Album by Panda Bear)

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