Milk Teeth Tyson Motsenbocker

Album info

Album-Release:
2022

HRA-Release:
23.09.2022

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 44.1 $ 9.00
  • 1 Oh, No (Regarding Panic Attacks, 2016-2021) 03:38
  • 2 Wendy Darling 04:05
  • 3 Carlo Rossi (Love in the Face of Great Danger) 04:30
  • 4 Give Up 04:32
  • 5 Hide from the World 03:03
  • 6 Uc Santa Cruz 03:27
  • 7 Make Me Feel It, Come On 02:32
  • 8 All the Old Bars (Whose Names Have Changed) 04:08
  • 9 North Shore Party 03:21
  • 10 Buyer Confidence 06:21
  • 11 Time is a One Way Mirror 05:59
  • Total Runtime 45:36

Info for Milk Teeth



“‘Carlo Rossi (Love in the Face of Great Danger)’ is about a riot in Mexico,” explains Motsenbocker. “In John Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat, the working-class Mexicans (called “Paisanos”) spend their evenings looking for gallon bottles of wine, which they drink by placing one finger through the glass loop in the bottle and resting the weight in the crook of their elbows to drink from it using only one hand. The act of drinking from the bottle turns the drinker into a kind of Roman statue, with their elbows pointed up toward the stars. Even the Paisanos with the hardest luck can find joy and rest in a bottle and a conversation. ‘Carlo Rossi’ is about the love, the joy, and the warm friendship that exists even, maybe especially even, against the backdrop of chaos.”

In North Central Washington State, Tyson Motsenbocker grew up in the apple orchards and pine forests at the foothills of the Cascade Mountains. It’s the pastoral sound of his childhood that has defined the sound of his music, even among the freeways and fast pace of his new Southern California home. After the release of two EP’s Until it Lands and Rivers and Roads Motsenbocker defined himself as a mature lyricist and accomplished songwriter, sharing the stage with the likes of David Bazan, Vance Joy and James Bay.

In 2013, after the death of his mother and hero, Motsenbocker walked the six hundred mile stretch of coastline to San Francisco in memory of her. In the contrast of loud cars on a dirty highway with the serene beauty of the Pacific Ocean Motsenbocker contracted a new view of life beyond loss, a renegotiated relationship with God and peace inside the turmoil.

Tyson Motsenbocker



Tyson Motsenbocker
preserves his youthful memories in his music, etching them into the fabric of the songs. The Washington-born and California-based singer and songwriter encases them in lithe melodies, upbeat soundscapes, and ponderous lyrics. After generating tens of millions of streams and cultivating a devout fan base, he examines the jump from childhood to adulthood — or maybe just the space between the two — on his third full-length offering, Milk Teeth [Tooth & Nail].”I tried to make this album about the fear of adulthood,” he states. “I spent my twenties in a house by the beach in San Diego. All we did was make music and surf, all of the time. I arrived at this endless summer, but it was the emptiest place I could imagine. I felt like my life hadn’t started. During the months before this record, I realized I was actually living though. A big part of growing up is the realization you spend your whole childhood dreaming, but when you get ‘there,’ it’s nothing like you hoped it would be. It was time to embrace adulthood by embodying it entirely, embracing the miracle of surviving your childhood, even with disappointment that accompanies it.”

The artist has consistently tuned into such emotions with relatability and vulnerability. Following his 2016 debut LP Letters to Lost Loves, he spent as much time as possible on the road, performing countless shows and captivaing audiences across America and beyond. However, he connected deeply on 2020’s Someday I’ll Make It All Up To You. CCM Magazine awarded it a perfect score of 5-out-of-5 stars and proclaimed, “The result is an album perfectly imperfect, perhaps best exposing Motsenbocker’s sincerest agenda to tell the truth.” Meanwhile, “Autumn Love” was generating two-and-a-half-million Spotfy streams. The followup single “Sunday Morning” followed close behind with nearly two million Spotify streams.

Just a handful of shows into what was booked to be a two year touring schedule, COVID-19 shut all touring down. Motsenbocker and his band headed home, where a period of reflected on ensued, settingng the foundation for what would become Milk Teeth.

“When the world shut down, I thought about what it meant to be an adult a lot,” he reveals. “I think adulthood finally dug me out of the sand when I met my wife — a Canadian, who was locked on the other side of the border. But it was such a beautiful thing to take responsibility. Responsibility for her, for myself, for the future I wanted to have not only in my own life, but in the world around me.”

Motsenbocker hit the studio in Orange County, California with producer Nathan Cimino, drummer James McCalister, bassist Patrick Dodd, and keyboardist Mabhew Wright. Thematically reflected in the title (another name for “baby teeth”), the music struck a sweet spot akin to the “summer after you graduate from high school where you’re walking the line between the confusion and excitement of childhood and the gravity of being an adult.”

This album contains no booklet.

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