The Mantles

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Don't Lie 03:48 Tools
Disappearing Act 02:22 Tools
What We Do Matters 02:47 Tools
Burden 03:14 Tools
Look Away 04:13 Tools
James 02:04 Tools
Samantha 02:23 Tools
Bury Me Dead 03:34 Tools
Yesterday's Gone 02:51 Tools
Thin Reminder 04:20 Tools
trust 04:03 Tools
Raspberry Thighs 02:49 Tools
Island 02:04 Tools
Marbled Birds 01:30 Tools
Cascades 02:04 Tools
Hello 01:30 Tools
Brown Balloon 01:30 Tools
Lily Never Married 04:43 Tools
Bad Design 02:40 Tools
Reason's Run 02:21 Tools
Long Enough To Leave 02:21 Tools
Situations 02:46 Tools
Shadow of Your Step 01:30 Tools
Hate to See You Go 02:14 Tools
Don't Cross Town 01:30 Tools
More That I Pay 01:30 Tools
Summer Read 02:14 Tools
Waiting Out The Storm 06:07 Tools
Lay It Down 06:07 Tools
Police My Love 06:07 Tools
Undelivered 06:07 Tools
Doorframe 06:07 Tools
Lately 06:07 Tools
Time to Come Away 02:18 Tools
Best Sides 02:18 Tools
Bad Movies 02:18 Tools
Stay 02:18 Tools
Rasberry Thighs 02:49 Tools
A Million Miles Away 03:42 Tools
Memory 03:42 Tools
Roman Hat 02:49 Tools
Secret Heart 02:27 Tools
Trouble in the Streets 02:45 Tools
Rachel 03:09 Tools
Walk With Me 02:52 Tools
The Mantles - Reason's Run 02:21 Tools
Drone 04:38 Tools
Door Frame 03:47 Tools
Don't Lie. 03:47 Tools
Dancing (with a hole in my heart) 03:47 Tools
Turn Your Love Around 03:47 Tools
Icy Eyes 03:47 Tools
Kaya Crew - Iron Dub 03:47 Tools
Blalock's Indie/Rock Playlist: November (2009) - 21/113 - Don't Lie 03:47 Tools
/ / ÿþDon't LieT 00:00 Tools
/ / #ÿþDisappearing ActT 00:00 Tools
The Mantles, Don't Lie 00:00 Tools
Thin Reminder 00:00 Tools
Islands 00:00 Tools
Last Song 00:00 Tools
Don’t Lie 00:00 Tools
Kaya Crew - Dubbing the Iron 00:00 Tools
"Brown Balloon" 00:00 Tools
Happy Island 00:00 Tools
The Night Is A Black Ice Storm 02:50 Tools
The Mantles - Don't Lie 00:00 Tools
The Mantles, Don't Lie. 00:00 Tools
Yesterdays Gone 02:50 Tools
Untitled I 02:50 Tools
...Again In The West, Night Lies Sleeping, Dreaming Of Angels 02:50 Tools
Intro 02:50 Tools
Spacestation Candelabrum 02:50 Tools
Untitled II 02:50 Tools
Brown Ballroom 03:34 Tools
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San Francisco/Oakland’s The Mantles have been charting a unique path through the Bay Area’s storied garage/pop scene since 2007. The early shows were loose & loud Velvets/Nuggets-bashing, always with weirdly catchy songs & oddball chord changes. Their first singles saw them honing their sound, building towards their excellent 2009 self-titled debut album (on Siltbreeze) and follow-up EP on Mexican Summer. Loosely aligning with artists like White Fence and Ty Segall, The Mantles thoroughly modernize and personalize the folk-rock tradition. Now on Long Enough To Leave, The Mantles still color outside the lines but dial a cleaner, more infectious sound. SF’s Kelley Stoltz (Sub Pop) recorded the new album with enough savvy to make it pop while keeping the performances idiosyncratic & affecting. Sharp ears may spot bits of early Love, New Zealand’s Flying Nun label and LA’s Paisley Underground, but The Mantles are very far from revivalists and have more song-writing and arranging skill at their disposal than many bands could hope to have. Long Enough To Leave is both impressionistic and psychedelic – guitar melodies evoke lyrical themes in equal measure to the plaintive words of vocalist Michael Olivares, whose frank and poetic take on ordinary reality strips familiar themes of their clichés. The band plays with a musical synchronicity and clarity that enlivens tunes like album opener “Marbled Birds” and the rocking “Reason’s Run.” “Hello” is a tough, garagey stomp that contrasts nicely with the contemplative “Long Enough To Leave” which follows it. “Raspberry Thighs,” originally released on a scarce French 7″ single, is reprised and re-recorded with dreamy clarity. “Bad Design” is a great take on a long-time live favorite, while “Brown Balloon” joins “Don’t Lie” and “Lily Never Married” in a long line of Mantles garage-pop classics. By foregoing the theater of retro psychedelia, The Mantles end up innovating in an area of guitar music where many bands get lost fawning over fashions, styles and trends. Long Enough To Leave instead stakes their claim as writers and players of distinction, building a sturdy catalog of excellent songs and increasingly accomplished records. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.