Tiergarten

PREMIERE: Tiergarten - Magnificent Desolation

Kelly Kirwan

Design, as a concept, plays heavily into Brooklyn’s post-hardcore outfit Tiergarten. Fresh on the scene with a new EP, we see the first reference to a greater blueprint in their title, Magnificent Desolation—a nod to astronaut Buzz Aldrin’s description of space as he stood on the moon. Then we move into their tracks, whose influences flutter between the angst of '90s-era, plaid-clad alternative musicians, early-2000s space-age pop, and resurgent punk rock.

“Architect” is an obvious opener title for a band who, down to their very name, pay close attention to our concrete surroundings and play with the negative space that surrounds them. But it’s a track with a more specific story than that would imply, indulging Tiergarten’s darker inclinations by focusing on the infamous Robert Durst (whose surname is stamped on various New York skyscrapers, and whose full name has caught public attention for a slew of suspicious murders and disappearances). "Architect" is marked by deep, ominous drumming and different intervals of quick-climbing guitar riffs, and frontman Alex von Klemper’s vocals are throaty and jaded throughout. “Decimation calls … Intrusion becomes a game,” he sings, slyly referencing the irony, perhaps, in how an architect can cause the lives around him to crumble.

"Paradigm" follows "Architect"’s lead with its foreboding tone. Guitars seem to stretch towards the precipice of our atmosphere, as the band crafts a full and potentially explosive sound. “I’m just always going to be this way,” von Klemper lightly delivers, and in brief moments, he even breaks from his trademark indifferent keel. The song ends in a flatline, as if Tiergarten’s members simultaneously unplugged, prolonging the high pitch of an unfinished note. They certainly have a punk vibe, but one that lingers beneath the surface, never reaching that familiar realm of expletives and confrontational shrieking.

Magnificent Desolation may have darker shades, but it’s not all doom and gloom. It’s enticing, a new structure of post-punk-psych (etc., etc.) for us to interact with—a mecca, if you will, just like the band’s namesake.

REVIEW: Tiergarten - Aeons (Infinity Glow)

Kelly Kirwan

Tiergarten is the latest Brooklyn-based band to step forth from the ether, their sound riddled with nods to '90s alternative rock, post-punk, and early 2000s influences like Autolux—along with their own present-day quirk, of course. With their debut album on the brink of release, Tiergarten has dropped a single that crinkles with reverb and is driven by a frantic (but controlled) drum and bass line: "Aeons (Infinity Glow)".

It's a song crafted from a dark palette, with brooding and twisted instrumentals juxtaposed against even-keeled, shoe-gaze-inspired vocals. The lyrics are delivered in a drawn-out lull, "Sugar crash / Coming down now / I can’t save you," alluding some kind of chemical high and self-destructive path to which a friend can no longer bear witness. As the band said to New Noise magazine, "Aeons (Infinity Glow)" grapples with "finding the light at the end of the tunnel, even if it takes Aeons."

It's a theme that persists throughout their entire album, Magnificent Desolation—a title also imbued with a subtle astronomical reference (it's the phrase used by Buzz Aldrin to describe the moon). It's a nice fit for Tiergarten, whose first single teeters on the edge of chaos but never quite succumbs to the black hole. The moderate dose of distortion that lines their tracks is like a satellite gone momentarily haywire on the fringes of our atmosphere, and their propensity for the ethereal is enough to prick your ears and pique your interest. Where Tiergarten goes, we're inclined to follow.