Review
Tar...Feathers
Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface

Release the Bats (2006) Tohm

Tar...Feathers – Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface cover artwork
Tar...Feathers – Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface — Release the Bats, 2006

How many Swedish bands do you listen to? Wouldn't your friends think you're way indie if you told them you're diggin' on this sick Swedish band that produced their album on a laptop? You guessed it, my obscure band-loving friends, Tar...Feathers is straight out of Göteborg, Sweden and yes, they recorded Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface on a laptop. That being said, let's get down to business.

Tar...Feathers is the nom de guerre of Marcus Nyke, the creator, songwriter, and artist of the group. Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface is a 100% DIY effort. After Nyke wrote the songs, a couple of his friends helped to write bass and drum parts. Nyke also took the task of album artwork into his own hands, as he drew all of the pictures on the CD packaging, lyrics sheet included.

"Cuckoo" opens the album with modest, yet intriguing music. After about thirty seconds, you meet Marcus Nyke - actually, you meet a few Marcus Nykes. Each track features multilayered vocals, almost all of which come from Nyke's larynx. I'm not sure how he could achieve this effect in live performances, but it definitely adds to the album's sound.

Sometimes vocals take a while to grow on me. I can remember listening to At the Drive-In for the first time and almost being turned off to Cedric Bixler-Zavala's vocal style; shortly thereafter, however, I found that his vocals match At the Drive-In's music perfectly. The exact same scenario occurred when I first experienced Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface

Tar...Feather's music is easily comparable to early Modest Mouse and Owls. Although it's a great example of lo-fi indie, the album's sound is incredibly full. Paramount tracks which highlight Tar...Feather's distinct sound are "Was it Even There?," "You are Lucky to Have Nothing," "Forever is Quite Some Time" and the album opener, "Cuckoo."

If at first Tar...Feathers leaves you skeptical, listen to the album again and give them a fair chance. Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface is a unique first effort with a slew of addictive songs. Plus, they're Swedish.

8.4 / 10Tohm • March 4, 2007

Tar...Feathers – Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface cover artwork
Tar...Feathers – Make Way for the Ocean Floor to Fall to the Surface — Release the Bats, 2006

Recently-posted album reviews

Sahan Jayasuriya

Don’t Say Please: The Oral History of Die Kreuzen
Feral House (2026)

For those of us who spent the mid-to-late 1980s navigating basement community halls, churches, and loveable, armpit-smelling dive bars, the name Die Kreuzen was a permanent fixture on the punk rock radar. They were the sound of the Midwest underground --too fast for the goths to do their spooky Bela Lugosi "shoo the bats away" interpretive dance, too technical for … Read more

Sewer Urchin

Global Urination
Independent (2025)

There’s a fine line between crossover thrash that feels dangerous and crossover thrash that just feels like a party. Global Urination doesn’t bother choosing because it does both loudly and without apology. St. Louis’ Sewer Urchin have been grinding since 2019, and on their latest full length they double down on everything that makes the genre work. They give us … Read more

Ingested

Denigration
Metal Blade (2026)

For a band that built its name on sheer brutality, Ingested have spent the last several years refining what that brutality actually means. With their newest release, Denigration, the band finds that continuing evolution. They’re still punishing, still precise, but noticeably more controlled and deliberate in how it all lands. From the outset, the record makes its intentions clear. “Dragged … Read more