Can Our Love...
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Dying Slowly
- People Keep Comin' Around
- Tricklin'
- Can Our Love
- Sweet Release
- Don't Ever Get Tired
- No Man In The World
- Chilitetime
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #22218 in Music
- Released on: 2001-05-21
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Uniquely among bands with even a tangential connection to pop, the passage of time and the number of records of theirs you may already own are pretty much irrelevant when sizing up the appeal of Can Our Love..., the fifth album from the decade-old Tindersticks. Partly, it's because this lot, who seem to have sprung fully-formed from the concentrated essence of French art house film, also appear to have spent their youths waiting for middle age to arrive. Mostly though, it's because the unswerving continuity of their work--chiefly remarkable for single-digit BPMs, a bone-dry, Eeyore-ish sense of humour (doubtless not unconnected to their fascination with donkeys) and a luxuriant air of weltschmertz, tristesse, saudade and any other foreign words which cover the black-and-white waterfront of romantic desolation where string sections, shabby-sharp suits and Gauloises are de rigueur--suggests that each Tindersticks album is merely a small corner of a canvas the size of, well, life and love and loss. Once again then you get what you came to swoon for. The dusty Hazlewood-esque intro prefacing Stuart Staples' forlorn, chocolaty mumbles ("dying slowly seems better than shooting myself"). "Don't Ever Get Tired", aching with hope and tender-heartedness. The interwoven vocal lines of "Chilitetime"; the intimate, Cohen-esque voiceover of "No Man In The World". And we get a little bit more, too: namely the suspicion, on hearing the Hammond-shivering, Bobby Womack-drifting-through-molasses seduction of "People Keep Comin' Around" and "Sweet Release", that if Tindersticks have shifted position at all, it's in a slow, elegant sidle toward the spot marked "England's greatest soul band". --Jennifer Nine
CD Description
String and brass arrangements appear throughout 'Can Our Love...' by the Nottingham indie band Tindersticks. Stuart Staples' vocals lie somewhere between Nick Cave and Lou Reed onthis album. It is their first for the Beggar's Banquet label.
Customer Reviews
Tindersticks looking in both directions
Once again, Britain's most undervalued band produce a piece of work that leaves everyone else in the shade. The songwriting is of the high standard Tinderfans have come to expect, the playing is effortless, the arrangements are sublime (no one knows when to bring strings and brass in like Tindersticks), Staple's voice reaches new heights (literally, in the track PEOPLE KEEP COMIN' AROUND), and Hinchliffe's violin is more achingly yearningly beautiful than ever before. For all the talk about how this latest release sees Tindersticks venturing further into the world of classic soul, what struck me on first listen was how it managed to combine that with material and arrangements sounding more like their first album than any work since. This is a great album by a great band. Here's to the next ten years.
Music To Boil Water To
Tindersticks are not for everybody. The music they swirl is most certainly melancholy, but not at all depressing. Lead singer, Stuart Staples has the most quivering, fragile, mumbling, vibrating baritone you are ever likely to hear. His voice sounds like it is about to crack at any moment and that sound, even though it will be beautiful, will break your heart. And it will sink right into the music, which sounds a lot like something Burt Bacharach might come up with, if he were less distant.
I remember getting into the Tindersticks years ago, back in 1994, when there was a lull in Nick Cave releases, and Stuart Staples was a common antidote for such occasions (back before we had a more subdued Nick Cave). And I remember liking them, but eventually getting tired of them. This album, Can Our Love... changes those determinations. It is clear that both the Tindersticks and myself have matured enough over the resulting seven years.
I think it's really a perfect album. It's the kind you can play on a rainy day, and cook pasta so that the windows steam up, and let it play over and over. Every now and then, repeat songs #4 and #8 (Can Our Love... and Chilitetime) because they are worth repeating.
Can our love be as perfect as this music!
To me this brilliant masterly production surpasses that of the previous release 'Simple pleasure' and takes one back to their second album masterpiece 'Tindersticks 2'. While the mood and ambience remains distinctly Tindersticks, there is more passion here, and even moments that tend to explore different territory.
Its similarity to 'Simple pleasure' is in its relatively short length (just over 45 minutes), and the substance of its mood and lyric. Both are compositions of carefully arranged gems that tell the story of relationships and dilemmas of everyday life.
'Can our love...' be as perfect as this music? Almost worth buying for the cover alone. An absolute must for any Tinderenthusiast!


![1st Tindersticks Album [Includes Bonus Disc]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51zhvjzUHtL._SL75_.jpg)

![2nd Tindersticks Album [Includes Bonus Disc]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51xGK-bryBL._SL75_.jpg)