SLINT

Metal Related • United States
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Slint was an American noise rock/post-rock band consisting of Brian McMahan (guitar and vocals), David Pajo (guitar), Britt Walford (drums and vocals), Todd Brashear (bass on Spiderland), and Ethan Buckler (bass on Tweez). They formed in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, in 1986. Slint's first album Tweez was recorded by engineer Steve Albini in 1987 and released in obscurity on the Jennifer Hartman Records label in 1989. It was followed two years later by the critically acclaimed Spiderland, released on the independent label Touch and Go Records. They have reunited sporadically since 1990.

The band was noted for having syncopated guitar riffs, drastically altering dynamics, and complex song structures and time signatures. McMahan's and Walford's vocals comprised hushed spoken words, singing, and strained screaming. They are widely accepted as being one of the most important influences on the 90s post-rock movement.
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SLINT Discography

SLINT albums / top albums

SLINT Tweez album cover 3.94 | 4 ratings
Tweez
Metal Related 1989
SLINT Spiderland album cover 3.67 | 7 ratings
Spiderland
Metal Related 1991

SLINT EPs & splits

SLINT Slint album cover 3.00 | 4 ratings
Slint
Metal Related 1994

SLINT live albums

SLINT demos, promos, fans club and other releases (no bootlegs)

SLINT re-issues & compilations

SLINT Bonus Tracks album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Bonus Tracks
Metal Related 2014

SLINT singles (1)

.. Album Cover
0.00 | 0 ratings
Breadcrumb Trail/Good Morning, Captain
Metal Related 2020

SLINT movies (DVD, Blu-Ray or VHS)

SLINT Reviews

SLINT Spiderland

Album · 1991 · Metal Related
Cover art Buy this album from MMA partners
siLLy puPPy
The critically acclaimed mother of all things post-rock does indeed seem to be the first successor to Talk Talk's later albums that layed down the foundation for the subgenre of rock to blossom although it was clearly heavily influenced by other dronological bands like The Velvet Underground who had already tapped into the sound in the 60s. The band's 2nd album SPIDERLAND went virtually unnoticed at the time and the band would break up soon after its release, yet for those who heard it they were truly inspired and through sheer influence alone this album has gained a steadily growing popularity in the underground world since its release.

It is interesting to hear just which parts influenced different post-rock acts that followed. The opener “Breadcrumb Trail” and its Godspeed! You Black Emperor narrations and the slower songs being heavily influential for Toby Driver's Maudlin Of The Well and Kayo Dot projects. Although I don't love this album as much as others simply because i find the vocals a bit weak in the screaming department and way too much talking instead of some kind of singing, I do recognize this as the landmark historically important album for what it is and i do kinda like the music which is mostly a punkish dissonance with a reggae kind of syncopation for a lot of the more upbeat tracks whilst the slower tracks are pure ambient riffing and atmospheric generators. Worth having alone for the mark it's made on the musical world but i can't say i enjoy listening to this on a regular basis.

SLINT Tweez

Album · 1989 · Metal Related
Cover art Buy this album from MMA partners
siLLy puPPy
Although SLINT is much more known for their second groundbreaking album “Spiderland” which paved the way for the whole plethora of post-rock acts that followed, their oft snubbed debut TWEEZ hardly gets an ounce of recognition and serves as merely a footnote in comparison with the behemoth followup that is universally recognized as the veritable intermediate that connected Talk Talk’s initial post-rock innovation with the army of followers who diversified the sound. TWEEZ is NOT a post-rock album in any way shape or form, but that does not mean it is of no interest. In fact, i exercise a reverse polarity with the majority in regards to the two SLINT albums finding the debut the more interesting of the two. True “Spiderland” is influential and all but for me that doesn’t mean it is the best at its game. I much prefer the Sigur Ros, the Mogwai, the Godspeed! You Black Emperor, well you name it. If it came after “Spiderland” i probably like it more as that album was a mere blueprint and not the be all end all that it is made out to be.

TWEEZ on the other hand is one of the most unique post-hardcore albums i’ve ever heard. It truly resonates on a musical frequency that no other album ever has. It exists on some strange bandwidth of sonic expression that i have never encountered. It is a strange little album that at times reminds me of Jane’s Addiction’s “Nothing’s Shocking” era mixed with the typical post-hardcore, noise and math rock of the early 90s sometimes bringing Sonic Youth to mind, sometimes more punk inspired bands like NoMeansNo and sometimes just a plain old alternative rock band that for some reason brings Camper Van Beethoven to mind as an example or even like a pre-grunge band well before the Nirvana 90s. The guitars are highly distorted, the bass and drums fairly regular and the band seems to find a way to walk the line between disturbing dissonance and melodic funky beats. The attitude is more of a punk band but the music reels you into a more alternative rock mode. There are times it also reminds me of Jimi Hendrix with riffs and feedback fuzz, there is also a kind of black metal filthiness to the sound and the signals are definitely set to a very mixed grab bag! My kinda weirdness!

TWEEZ is not an album i sought out. I was only marginally impressed with “Spiderland” finding it a decent listen but not something that shattered my concept of originality but TWEEZ does seem to do that. This album found me! This is a short album at only 29:31. I understand why the lover’s of the proto-post-rock “Spiderland” do not give this debut album enough love. It is nothing like that more subdued release. This album is filthy, aggressive and unapologetic. It’s a hitherto unexplored form of neo-punk that really hits me in the right way. Personally i would have loved to hear this sound develop but i can’t say that i’m sorry SLINT moved on to the post-rock territory that allowed all those wonderful bands that i love these days to follow. I probably won’t convince too many that this debut album is actually better than “Spiderland” but in my world i find myself really excited to listen to TWEEZ, much preferred to the more influential followup. All i can recommend is not to write this album off just because of the low rating. If you have any interest in raw and dirty indie rock and post-hardcore then this is an album you won’t regret checking out.

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