The Tyde may share three bandmembers --
Chris Gunst,
Dave Scher, and
Brent Rademaker -- with modern L.A. canyon rock band
Beachwood Sparks, but where the latter sounds like what a cryogenically frozen
Buffalo Springfield circa 1967 might sound like if they were thawed out today,
the Tyde have drawn comparisons to a wider range of bands, many of them British in origin, including '80s and early-'90s bands like
Felt and
Lloyd Cole and the Commotions (lead vocalist/guitarist
Darren Rademaker's dusky, laconic vocals do sound a bit like
Cole's romantically throaty warble).
The Tyde formed in 1998, a year after the breakup of
Darren and
Brent Rademaker's previous band,
Further, a formidable L.A.-based outfit that was influenced by U.K. shoegaze acts (especially those on the Creation label) as well as fellow indie rockers like
Dinosaur Jr.,
Pavement,
Sebadoh, and
Guided by Voices. Filling out the lineup is guitarist
Ben Knight and
Ann Do, whose tottering
Olivia Tremor Control-meets-"Interstellar Overdrive" organ riffs coalesce with
Farmer Dave Scherr's lap steel to create a sound that, while derivative, was at the foreground of a burgeoning new movement simultaneously based in both L.A. and London. Their debut,
Once, was released in March 2001. A sophomore effort,
Twice, appeared two years later, followed by
Three's Co. in June 2006. ~ Bryan Thomas, All Music Guide