Tina Dico


Links:

Official Website

Tour Dates

Biography


Press:

Medleyville.us
Interview 3-06

1340 Mag
Interview

Straight.com
CD Review 3-06

Bullzeye.com
CD Review

Online Rock
CD Review

Billboard.com
CD Review 2-06

All Music Guide
CD Review 2-06

Tina Dico Video
"In the Red"



Download Hi-Res
Photos Here:

Color Photo #1

Color Photo #2

Color Photo #3

Color Photo #4

Color Photo #5

Color Photo #6

B&W Photo #1





All Music Guide Review
by Alex Henderson

In the Red
Tina Dico

Singers who grow up in countries that are known for long, dark, cold winters don't necessarily provide an abundance of melancholy music. ABBA, after all, came out of Sweden -- and they wrote the book on fun, frivolous, sugary Europop and became the blueprint for countless other Scandinavian (and German and Dutch) party groups. But it is safe to say that melancholy (or melancholic) is something that some Nordic artists do very well -- Denmark's Tina Dico, for example. In the Red (which was released in Denmark in 2005 and the United States and England in early 2006) is a moody, dusky, highly introspective adult alternative/folk-rock outing that has plenty of melancholy moments, although it isn't as dark or troubled a disc as, say, Fiona Apple's Tidal. Dico has been quoted as saying that her three favorite albums of all time are Joni Mitchell's Blue, Tracy Chapman's self-titled debut album, and Nirvana's Nevermind -- and while In the Red doesn't sound anything like Nevermind (Dico's work is reflective and understated, not forceful or aggressive), one can see that the Dane picked those three classics because she obviously identifies with music's deep thinkers. For all its restraint, In the Red has a lot of meat on its bones. Dico's performances are subtle but never wimpy -- and anyone who has spent a lot of time savoring the likes of Mitchell (a major influence), Sarah McLachlan, Beth Orton, or Dido would have a hard time not enjoying finely crafted gems like "Room with a View," "One," "Losing," and "Head Shop." Produced by Chris Potter (the guy who worked with the Verve, not the jazz reedman Potter), In the Red is a highly promising effort from Dico -- not to mention extremely listenable.


For Further Information, Interviews or CDs, Contact:
Vermillion Mediawww.vermillionmediagroup.com
Official Websitewww.tinadico.com