Tartufi

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Fear of Tall Giraffes, Fear of Some Birds 00:00 Tools
Dot Dash 00:00 Tools
Jailbird 00:00 Tools
Church of Hanging Leaders 00:00 Tools
Engineering 00:00 Tools
System Folds 00:00 Tools
Slow Man 00:00 Tools
Mourning's Wake 00:00 Tools
Hole Or Space 00:00 Tools
If We Had Daggers They Would Fly 00:00 Tools
My Loathsome Hero 00:00 Tools
Distractions 00:00 Tools
It's Not The Wind Chime That's Broken, It's The Wind 00:00 Tools
Ebenezer You Are Rotten 00:00 Tools
Boat Of Armor 00:00 Tools
Midnight Tracks 00:00 Tools
Until The Ocean Swallows Stars 00:00 Tools
Nurses 00:00 Tools
Ashes 00:00 Tools
Terremoto 00:00 Tools
Windmill 00:00 Tools
Underwater 00:00 Tools
Eaves 00:00 Tools
Choo Choo 00:00 Tools
Firestorm 00:00 Tools
Why I Am Late 00:00 Tools
Black Out 00:00 Tools
Poor Lovers 00:00 Tools
Window Machine 00:00 Tools
Seldom 00:00 Tools
Edgar Lovelace 00:00 Tools
Fleet Week (The Corruption of Incredible Inventions) 00:00 Tools
Glass Eyes 00:00 Tools
Furnace Of Fortune 00:00 Tools
8:1 00:00 Tools
Fear of Tall Giraffes Fear of Some Birds 00:00 Tools
It's Not The Windchime That's Broken, It's The Wind 00:00 Tools
Why Am I Late 00:00 Tools
The Butterless Man 00:00 Tools
Fleet Week 00:00 Tools
los lomos 00:00 Tools
The Want 00:00 Tools
Letter Not The Question 00:00 Tools
Jack Puree 00:00 Tools
Daggers They Would Fly 00:00 Tools
R.I.P. M.O.O.N. 00:00 Tools
Furnace of Fortune - Eaves (Live) 00:00 Tools
2. Ashes 00:00 Tools
1. Midnight tracks 00:00 Tools
It's Not The Wind Chime That's Broken It's The Wind 00:00 Tools
3. Slow man 00:00 Tools
Dot Dash (Live) 00:00 Tools
Fear of Tall Giraffes, Fear of Some Birds (Live) 00:00 Tools
Fleet Week (The Corruption of Incredible Inv????) 00:00 Tools
Until The Ocean Swallors 00:00 Tools
Glass Eyes (Live) 00:00 Tools
4. Nurses 00:00 Tools
If I'm Not There (Live) 00:00 Tools
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Formed in 2001, San Francisco's Tartufi released three albums as a power-pop trio, Westward Onward, So We Are Alive, and Trouble, and garnered heaps of press and "Best of"'s before members Lynne Angel and Brian Gorman decided to switch gears and head in a new direction. In 2006, having just played a South by Southwest showcase and with an album at #75 on CMJ charts, the duo had much to prove and an eager desire to fulfill their like-minded sonic vision. Ditching their previous material and hitting the studio armed with bigger amplifiers and modified loop stations; Angel and Gorman began developing their new sound. In three months time, the reinvented band had written and recorded Us Upon Buildings Upon Us with the help of Tim Green (Joanna Newsom, Melvins, Monotonix) in the engineer's seat. Tartufi Having shed many of the band's previous pop sensibilities, "Us Upon..." rich, epic and complex sound surprised many critics and fans alike. The album propelled Tartufi farther onto the national stage. Tartufi made three laps around the U.S. in support of "Us Upon...". Audiences nationwide were left awestruck as the duo was able to reproduce the complexities of the album using live looping as opposed to with the aid of a laptop or Midi time clocks. Critics around the country picked "Us Upon..." as one of the best albums of the year. In 2007, after more than 120 shows, Tartufi was voted Best Indie Band In The Bay by The San Francisco Bay Guardian. Known for their commitment to their local music scene and strong work ethic, Tartufi has created a rock and roll school for kids called Saturday Morning Rock Out, a program designed to assist children aged 4-7 in the fundamentals of music theory, creative exploration through sound, lyric writing, and group performance. Tartufi has also formed Thread Productions, a record label and production collective aimed at generating a larger sense of community among San Francisco musicians and artists. Thread has been dubbed "The Bay Area's Best Music Collective" by The East Bay Express, and to date has released three local music compilations, Dragon Slayers Volumes I-III, organised numerous Bay Area concerts, helped other bands with tour resources and industry information, organised the hugely successful Rock Make Street Festival, and has become a source of support for many bands in the Bay Area and beyond. In the spring of 2008 Tartufi returned to the studio (again with the help of Tim Green) and began working on their next album, Nests of Waves and Wire. After months of recording, overdubs and mixing, Angel and Gorman left the studio with an album that they are extremely proud of and that is, without a doubt, their most mature work to date. Further exploring the boundaries of vocal and instrumental layering, polyrhythmic deconstruction and song arrangement, "Nests Of" is a lush and weighty mix of the band's compositional sensibilities and sonic daydreams. At eight in the morning the following day, five hours after they finished the album, Tartufi received a call from Southern Records offering to sign the band and release the new album. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.