I suppose the most effective argument I could make to indicate that Tortoise’s self-titled album got under my skin is that I remember imagining scenes from the 1986 sci-fi thriller Aliens during the fourth track, titled “Onions Wrapped in Rubber.”
Static-ridden visions of the Marines making their way through the dark recesses of the power plant crossed my mind as the dull bass and drums ebbed and flowed in a mesmerizing pattern. A chiming beep sounds throughout the track, further bringing to mind images from Aliens : the Marines located moving foreign lifeforms on handheld scanners that would beep in a similar fashion. The decisive moment came when I glimpsed a dark shape out of the corner of my eye and nearly jumped — heart pounding for just a moment — until I realized that the shape I saw leaning toward me was my jacket.
This is not to say that Tortoise, released on June 22, 1994, was filled with “scary” music. It simply evoked a mood, and “Onions Wrapped in Rubber” happened to be just enough on the creepy side to put the spook in me. The rest of the album was generally much less sinister, preferring instead to lean toward “introspective” via slowly building instrumental tracks. (Some had vocals far in the background but they didn’t have lyrics, simply adding to the atmosphere.)
Each track took its time, as instruments gathered from silence, and often the same rhythms and motifs were simply repeated over and over until all instruments had taken their positions on the sound stage. This is the kind of music that has to find the correct place to be heard. It doesn’t demand attention necessarily, because the music fills in its own blanks, but it deserves solitude to really appreciate it. In other words, this is “stroke your goatee and say ‘hmm, yes, this is intriguing'” record-shop geek music.
Luckily, I have previously sported the required goatee and a love of wandering the aisles in record shops.
Closing track “Cornpone Brunch” opened with the same snippet of ’60s BBC radio commercial that the Who’s Sell Out does (just before crashing into the careening mayhem of “Armenia City in the Sky”), making me realize that this may have been for an effect: Tortoise is precisely not the Who. Just what that means, I don’t know exactly, but it caused to me make the comparison momentarily, even if nothing came of it.
Which is a suitable way to sum up their eponymous project: It didn’t come in and shock you with brave new statements, but Tortoise slowly creeped into your consciousness. And maybe laid an egg there, but maybe that’s just Aliens again. As indie-rock as Tortoise may be, as far as I know, they sell t-shirts.
- How David Bowie’s ‘Reality’ Stood Out For What It Was Not - September 29, 2023
- Metallica’s ‘St. Anger’ Was Always Much Better Than They Said - June 8, 2023
- How King Crimson Defined an Unsettled Post-9/11 Landscape on ‘Power to Believe’ - March 5, 2023