
Like many budding bands, All the Tired Horses started in Maโs backyard shed and pilfered its moniker from a Bob Dylan song. But never ye mind. Jeremiah Wingerden and his cronies have produced a half-hour EP thatโs a modern pastiche of the past two decades of music. Take โT-Shirt,โ for example: a moody ode with simplistic lyrics, a dirgelike tempo, and the swirling ambience of jangling guitarsโMojave 3 meets the Cocteau Twins with a dude up front. โTelevision Lightโ backs upbeat guitar and percussion with nebulous, wavelike landscapes, while the title track is more straightforward alt-rock that will appeal to fans of Radiohead, REM, or The Sundays. Wingerdenโs vocals are warm and emotive throughout, which works well with atmospheric tones. The record picks up midway but quickly slows again to molasses mode. Eventually they throw in a harmonica andโoh, lordy!โwrap it all up with a church hymn. Some listeners might find college crybaby music hellishly boring, but Iโm an old fart and I find the quasi-comatose quite satisfying. A Coastline and a Forest is filled with back-to-back bliss thatโs perfect if I want to hang off my bed. Which I do. So Iโm keepinโ it. www.myspace.com/allthetiredhorses.
This article appears in May 2007.








