An animated music video for one of the instrumental bits from the new Timber Timbre album, Creep On Creepin' On. It's out now via Arts & Crafts. Check out review for the album right here.
creep on creepin' on
Timber Timbre- "Too Old To Die Young"
VideosComment"Too Old To Die Young" isn't my favorite from Timber Timbre's new album, Creep On Creepin' On, but this is becoming my favorite music video to come outta the project. With a series of crude pencil drawings, this animated video dishes out an array of disturbing transformations. Enjoy, and grab Timber Timbre's latest LP on Arts & Crafts. See our review of it here.
Timber Timbre- "Bad Ritual"
Videos1 CommentA music video for the track "Bad Ritual," which comes off Timber Timbre's new album, Creep On Creepin' On. The album is out now via Arts & Crafts, and check out a glowing review of the album right here.
Directed and edited by Olivier Groulx, this video captures what Timber Timbre is all about perfectly: eerie simplicity.
Timber Timbre- "Black Water"
Videos1 CommentTimber Timbre drops a video for Creep On Creepin' On's "Black Water," which just might be one of the creepiest albums of 2011.
The video as directed by "Exploding Motor Car," and I thought everything in this video was an awesome, underwater sea urchin until I realized they're all puppets. Hooray for fooling me, I guess. Still, I think seeing all these things bring this lost diver up to the light is a little spine-tingling.
Watch a review for Creep On here. Buy it on Arts & Crafts.
Timber Timbre- Creep On Creepin' On
Reviews5 CommentsTimber Timbre's latest album is a scarily obsessive look at one man's post-relationship trauma. The infatuation in the lyrics here runs deep, and it's tempting to hear the record from beginning to end just to see how bad the train wreck gets. Not that lyrics and some mild psychosis are all this album has going for it. There are plenty of fantastic arrangements, which were created with the aid of Mathieu Charbonneau. Colin Stetson lays some great horn parts down, and Mark Lawson helped take the Timber's production up another level.
The music--outside of the instrumentals--lives in a world were doo wop and rockabilly reign supreme. And it puts an innocent backdrop behind the insane musings of this character painted in the words.
It's a shadowy standout in the world of lovesick albums.
WATCH THE REVIEW