That Fucking Tank is Andy Abbott and James Islip. They have been playing music together since pre-teenhood when they met at school in 1991. Tank was formed in Leeds as a one-off performance utilising some novelty equipment - a baritone guitar tuned to play bass and guitar lines simultaneously through two amps, and a minimal drum set - which kept on going.
Live performances once relied on masks, few clothes, lots of sweat and extreme volume as a mediator for the 'minimal riff disco' pumped out by the duo. This era, captured on releases through Jealous Records (the e.p 'A Document of the First Set' and 2006's 'Day of Death by Bono Adrenalin Shock'), took Andy and James all over Europe playing established festivals like Sant Feliu, BBC Radio One Maida Vale sessions and touring and supporting peers from the UK, Europe and the USA including Hella, Oxes, Whitehouse, Foals, US Maple, The Fucking Champs, Vialka, Unsane, Lungfish, Melt Banana, and Don Caballero to name a few.
'Tanknology' is their second full-length album and brings together tracks written and performed live over the last two years. In this time That Fucking Tank's sound has developed from rawish math rock to incorporate more of the duo's influences from classic rock, to prog, to early techno whilst staying true to the minimal equipment that instigated the band. Traces of Hawkwind, ESG, and Hendrix can be picked out amongst the more cliched reference points like Oxes or The Fucking Champs, as well as the appearance of pop hooks and song structures that Andy and James only half-jokingly refer to as sounding like The Lemonheads, Foo Fighters and Reef. The album even features a homage to 'Dancing in the Dark' with 'Brucespringstonehenge'.
Years of touring has built confidence in the duo, now unafraid of knocking out something more tuneful amongst the riffs and grooves that have made their name and in the process carving out a more distinctive and unique sound that separates them their peers. Appearances at Leeds and Reading festivals in 2008 demonstrated an ability to connect with larger audiences outside of the avant-rock or underground music scene despite the 'difficult' nature of the purely instrumental music; the riffs still have a tendency to evade strict classification into any time signature, and they are often twice the volume of most other bands they play with.
Since its conception Andy and James have used That Fucking Tank as a vehicle to practice and endorse the DIY ethos; booking their own tours, and playing in nearly every conceivable city and backwater in the UK whilst holding down jobs and extra-musical commitments. Half of 'Tanknology' is recorded by the band themselves using small rehearsal spaces and bedrooms with four of the leading tracks recorded in Liverpool by long-term recording partner Rob Whiteley in a day-long session. Tanknology is, as such, a more accessible and 'colourful' record than the pair's previous output but one that embodies the integrity, self-assuredness and love of Springsteen that comes with age and has you involuntarily shouting 'Alright now!' like Reef's Gary Stringer throughout.
Credits
Tracks 2,3,8,10 recorded by Robert Whiteley.
Tracks 5,7,9 recorded by James Islip at Voltage Rehearsal space, Bradford.
Tracks 1,4,6 recorded by Andy Abbott at home, Saltaire.
Artwork by Kenn Goodall.
Pressing Information
1000 CDs in digipack sleeves.
International Distribution
Australia - Rocket
Benelux - Suburban
Canada - F.A.B.
Finland - Supersounds
France - Differ-ant
Germany - Cargo Records
Italy - Goodfellas
Spain - Popstock
New Zealand - Southbound
Scandinavia - Border
United States - Red Eye and Forced Exposure
OTHER REVIEWS
- Interview at The List
- Tanknology review at NME
- NME blog article and "Awesome Magnet" mp3 download
- Tanknology review at Clash
- Tanknology review at Whisperin and Hollerin
- Tanknology review at Norman Records
- Tanknology review at Supersweet
- Tanknology review at The Skinny
- Tanknology review at SubbaCultcha
- Tanknology review at Built on a Weakspot
- Tanknology review at Die Shellsuit Die
- Tanknology review at Penny Black Music
- Tanknology review at Echoes and Dust
- Tanknology review at The Quietus
- Tanknology review at God is in the TV
- Tanknology review at Pinpoint Music
- Tanknology review at High Voltage
- Tanknology review at MuzzArt (in French)
- Tanknology review at Next Clues (in French)
- Tanknology review at 8106 blog (in Spanish)
- Tanknology review at Rock Action (in Italian)
- Tanknology review at Progressia (in French)
- Tanknology review at Kronic (in Italian)
- Tanknology review at Tatapoum (in French)
- Tanknology review at Ilcibicida (in Italian)
- Tanknology review at Tatapoum (in French)
- Tanknology review at Hipersonica (in Spanish)
- Tanknology review at Iye Zine (in Italian)
- Tanknology review at Libero (in Italian)