- Millions Now Living Will Never Die · 1996
- TNT · 1998
- TNT · 1998
- TNT · 1998
- TNT · 1998
- TNT · 1998
- Millions Now Living Will Never Die · 1996
- Millions Now Living Will Never Die · 1996
- TNT · 1998
- Millions Now Living Will Never Die · 1996
- TNT · 1998
Essential Albums
- With their second album, Chicago post-rock trailblazers Tortoise made an enormous leap. While the band's debut wasn't lacking in innovations, the follow-up takes things to a new level, radically expanding Tortoise's structural sensibilities, stylistic palette, and production approach. Where its predecessor sported a relatively bare-bones sound, Millions Now Living adds all sorts of tricks to Tortoise's bag, from an expanded use of electronics to sections featuring prominent guitar and a bigger role for the vibraphone. Instead of minimalist pieces focused on bass and drums, this time around Tortoise created extended compositions (like the epic "Djed") that feature multiple melodic, dynamic, and textural shifts. Conceptually, the album broadened Tortoise's universe to include the influences of electronica, prog rock, contemporary composers like Steve Reich, the spaghetti western soundtracks of Ennio Morricone, and more. Along the way, Millions became a watershed record not only for Tortoise and post-rock but for the entire '90s indie rock scene as well.
Albums
Music Videos
Artist Playlists
- Chicago post-rock pioneers who defy categorization.
- Incredible layering and meticulous communication.
- The source material for one of indie rock's most innovative bands.
Compilations
About Tortoise
Among the most stylistically prescient indie bands to emerge in the ’90s, Tortoise exert an influence far beyond the sphere of impressionistic instrumental rock that they helped invent. Their genre-agnostic sensibility has affected the sound of jazz, electronic music, hip-hop, crossover classical music, and more—all styles that helped inspire the group’s sound initially. The band developed in Chicago in the early ’90s out of the partnership between bassist Doug McCombs and drummer John Herndon. The ensemble expanded to include another bassist and two other drummers for their iconoclastic debut album (1993’s Tortoise) and drew increasingly from influences outside of rock—dub and electronic music, primarily—on 1996’s Millions Now Living Will Never Die. On 1998’s elaborate studio collage TNT, they added guitarist Jeff Parker, cementing their trademark “post-rock” sound, inflected by marimbas and vibraphones. The 2000s saw the band experiment with unconventional production techniques and branch out into collaborating with other artists (The Ex, Bonnie “Prince” Billy); they incorporated vocalists for the first time on 2016’s The Catastrophist. Since the release of that album, the members of the ensemble have made rich contributions to a variety of styles, as seen in Parker’s work as a jazz bandleader, drummer John McEntire’s extensive résumé as an indie-rock sideman, and elsewhere.
- FROM
- Chicago, IL, United States
- FORMED
- 1990
- GENRE
- Alternative