Tyde
Once
[Orange Sky]
Rating: 6.6
So there we were, sitting around waiting for the hallucinations to start.
"Man, this is going to be so cool!" I said to Jimmy, who was leaning on a
pine tree, looking at the fire. Neither of us had ever tripped on mushrooms
before.
"Yeah, dude," he said. "Way cooler than that time we ate raw Kool-Aid and I
puked on your sister's shoe."
"Yeah, way cooler than that," I said. "Turn the music on, man. We need a
little atmosphere if this is going to work correctly."
Jimmy put the Tyde's debut album in the stereo and hit play. "Dude, I hear
this is, like, totally psychedelic. Three of these guys are in Beachwood
Sparks."
"Aren't they a country band or something?" I asked. "I thought they were
basically a throwback to the Flying Burrito Brothers."
"Well, kinda." But it's just the drummer, the lap steel guy and the bassist.
The other half of the band is different, so it's not really the same band."
The album's first song, "All My Bastard Children," wafted out of the speakers.
Big, clean guitars arpeggiated over a leisurely drumbeat before being joined
by Darren Rademaker's baritone musings on cheating lovers and drug abuse. It
was pleasant, but I couldn't see it enhancing the mood much.
"Hey, this is pretty good," said Jimmy. "It's nice and mellow. This song,
'New Confessions,' is close to Beachwood Sparks, with all the swelling steel
guitars."
"The melody sounds like it came from a Blue Oyster Cult song, though," I
said. "Either way, these guys are stuck in 1972." "Strangers Again" began
to play. "Whoa! If I didn't know better, I'd say that intro was lifted
from an early Flaming Lips song or something. Ann Do's warbly, pitch-altered
keyboards and the strained falsettos are pretty psychedelic, I guess. But
I'm still not seeing anything."
"Yeah, me neither," intoned Jimmy, reaching for the bong. He took a big, long
puff and immediately started coughing like crazy. "Ugh. I don't know if
this is working like it's supposed to. This smoke is really weird."
"It smells kind of like a French restaurant," I offered, as the "Get Around
Too," yet another ode to lovers going everywhere but to their own bed,
swooned from the stereo. "Wow, when the cymbal-heavy drums finally kick in
and those guitars start the slow, raking strums, it's pretty cool. I think
this is my favorite part so far. It's pretty psychedelic, but man, I'm
still not seeing anything."
"You know what I don't like about this stuff?" Jimmy asked, suddenly looking
more focused than usual. "Every song uses the same types of scales. It's
all this pentatonic stuff over and over again."
"You can't really fault them for that, though, dude. Every other psychedelic
song ever recorded is pentatonic, be it British, American, or... I don't
know... Italian. It just sounds spacy. Which makes this music kind of weird.
The Tyde sound like a country band from space. They should all go live on a
space ranch or something."
"Whoa. Space ranch! That'd be so cool!" Jimmy sat back and gazed at the
stars for a second. "Damn! I'm fucking still not seeing anything.
What about you, spaceboy?"
"Well, I made that stupid space ranch remark a little easier than I'd like to
admit, but, no, I don't think I'm seeing anything. You'd think with all the
phaser on that organ in 'The Dawn' we'd be seeing all kinds of crazy stuff by
now."
"Phasers are cool," mused Jimmy, throwing a stick onto the fire. "We should
have brought marshmallows, you know that?"
"The Dawn" petered out in a wash of phasers, harmonies and buzzy organs. A
slightly chill breeze blew through the woods. You could hear the highway in
the distance. The sky was so clear. You could see the band of the Milky Way
stretching out in both directions, 100,000 light years thick. If I was going
to have my first trip, this was the place to do it. Of course, the trip was
refusing to materialize.
"Are you sure we're doing this right?" I asked. "Is the bong set up properly?
Are you even supposed to smoke mushrooms? I heard you're supposed to eat
them."
"This is how my friend Al said to do it!" defended Jimmy. "I don't know why
it's not working. Maybe the music's not psychedelic enough. I should have
brought Disraeli Gears."
"The music's plenty psychedelic, Jimmy. I think we're doing it wrong. You
kind of have a point about the music, now that I think about it, though.
It's psychedelic in a very American way, with those California steel guitars
and the loose, jammy vibe. It's the kind of music that'd probably be enhanced
by hallucinations, but it's not the kind of stuff that'd ever produce them.
'Improper' even sounds a bit like Crooked Rain-era Pavement, only more
produced."
"Hey, I think I'm starting to see stuff!" said Jimmy, getting excited. "Oh,
wait, that's just a smudge on my glasses."
I took another puff from the bong. "Dude, nothing's happening. What kind
of mushrooms are these, anyway?"
"They're Portuguese. I think they're called 'portabello.'"
"What?! You idiot! You can't trip on fuckin' portabello mushrooms! My mom
serves these when we have important company over!"
There was an awkward silence between the two of us as "Your Tattoos" played
in the background. It was a pleasant little mid-tempo number just like most
of the rest of the record, filled out with subtle steel guitar flourishes and
some understated two-part harmonies.
"Well, I guess that explains the French restaurant smell," said Jimmy
dejectedly. He pulled the collar of his flannel shirt up a bit to ward off
the breeze. "Damn, we should have brought marshmallows."
"Shit. Well, man, it's no big deal. There'll be other times for this.
Let's just listen to the last song and go home."
"Yeah, okay," said Jimmy. "I suppose it wasn't a totally wasted evening."
"Silver's Okay Michelle" opened with quiet strumming and delayed guitars
echoing in the background. Rademaker entered sounding a lot like Seven
Percent Solution's Reese Beeman-- appropriate given how much the music sounded
like modern Texas psych with a steel guitar. It was good. A regular chip
off the chocolate fireball. As the body of the song gave way to an extended
coda, full of rumbling drums, freaked-out guitars and swirling keyboards, I
swear I had a little, four-second hallucination-- a sunset in the middle of
the forest. The Tyde's pastoral psych had finally hit me where it wanted to,
and with no drugs at all.
"Hey, let's go," said Jimmy as the laser slid back across its track in the
player. "Make sure we've got everything."
"Yeah, it's all here," I said. I threw the remaining mushrooms into the
woods and stamped out the fire. "Next time, we'll bring marshmallows."
-Joe Tangari