smashing pumpkins -- pisces iscariot: classic or dud?

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But maybe you exaggerate a bit here. Mellon Collie was something like the Exile on Main Street of the 90s

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 28 September 2006 20:40 (nineteen years ago)

Now who's trashing sacred ducks?

I love the Pumpkins but MCIS comes nowhere near anything remotely considered classic. I mean where do the Pumpkins approach Soul Survivor, or Let it Loose, or Tumbling Dice or Torn and Frayed? Nowhere; Billy could not do it, he didn't have the verve.

As far as Soma vs. Mayonnaise, Soma has Billy's best guitar solo anywhere except for Starla (ambition was not good for Billy, but excess....) and the melody's pretty but too blunt. Ditto with the lyrics. Mayonnaise is lighter and the melody is more playful, and to steal from M. Prindle, that squawk that comes in in the middle of the chorus absolutely rules. i'd say Soma was the 2nd best track on SD but shares a little in that sort of ambitious blandness that the whole album suffers from.

You're right about Obscured though. Absolutely angelic track.

George Lochinski (Destroy A. Monsters), Thursday, 28 September 2006 20:53 (nineteen years ago)

Let me get back to everyone on this.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 28 September 2006 21:13 (nineteen years ago)

I don't know what I was on about, considering I've never heard Pet Sounds. Probably still like the album, although the original "Landslide" is better (Pumpkins' > Dixie Chicks' though).

Sundar (sundar), Thursday, 28 September 2006 22:51 (nineteen years ago)

Please do, Ned. Pisces Iscariot is without a doubt classic. Practically this whole album is angelic. Not only brings back good, heartfelt memories but still has a dozen standout tracks. Wonderful.

Gerard (Gerard), Thursday, 28 September 2006 22:59 (nineteen years ago)

Best song on Pisces is "Obscured."

nailed it. i also recal blissfully drifting to sleep everynight for weeks to the "landslide" / "starla" section of the album. i gotta go dig this up.

just a personal, unrelated factoid: my older sister was hanging out with corgan daily, roughly at this time. He signed a copy of 'Pisces..' for me, which is somewhere around here...lucky me.

J. Grizzle (trainsmoke), Thursday, 28 September 2006 23:22 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.sonex-online.com/Stash/Jesus%20Fish.jpg
http://whitestones.org/inkisdra2/betray.jpg

SaladinBiscuits (Proselytitties), Thursday, 28 September 2006 23:31 (nineteen years ago)

my boredom has outshined the sun

Fetchboy (Felcher), Friday, 29 September 2006 00:06 (nineteen years ago)

one year passes...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XPOv3iyy1qo

Curt1s Stephens, Sunday, 23 March 2008 01:15 (eighteen years ago)

sundar has NEVER HEARD pet sounds??????

akm, Sunday, 23 March 2008 02:35 (eighteen years ago)

jesus, gish is alright, sort of catchy in parts, but pretty limited

siamese dream is obviously the most accomplished, lush, captivating thing they ever put out. adore is also pretty moving in parts, and their second best record, i think.

listened to this pisces thing a few times back in the day. sort of alright

Charlie Howard, Monday, 24 March 2008 08:16 (eighteen years ago)

seven months pass...

is this album the good pumpkins (quiet, melancholy, sentimental) or the bad pumpkins (mindless guitar rawk with heavy, forgettable riffs that go nowhere)?

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 01:49 (seventeen years ago)

good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good good

ban or astroban? (Curt1s Stephens), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:01 (seventeen years ago)

yeah this is the only one i've played since like 1996. pretty much classic.

flyover statesman (will), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:19 (seventeen years ago)

which songs would you compare the sound to?

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:20 (seventeen years ago)

it's kind of in its own little world, really - it's all Gish and Siamese era material but it's more varied sonically than either of those albums. If you like the dreamy side of the pumpkins you need this album ("Obscured" is their dreamiest & best song with great sighs from the Corgz, and the heavy rockers are full of psyched-out goodness)

ban or astroban? (Curt1s Stephens), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:24 (seventeen years ago)

the dreamy stuff ("33", "1979", "Mayonnaise", "Tonight, Tonight") is best. The worst is crap like "Jellybelly" and all that faceless pseudometal bullshit sthat littered the whole 'Melancholy' album.

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:27 (seventeen years ago)

i'm awful with song titles, but it's got a bit of the quiet melancholia and guitar rawk -- but I rate the three or four rockers on here above a lot of the ones on SD and what I remember from MC&TIS (Frail & Bedazzled, Pissant, Sandoz)

xxpost

flyover statesman (will), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:30 (seventeen years ago)

(but i know what yr talking about wrt forgettable riffs going nowhere)

flyover statesman (will), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:32 (seventeen years ago)

this shit couldn't even keep my attention when i was super-into this band, and that was like 13 years ago

Whiney G. Torture Garden (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:33 (seventeen years ago)

To me SP is a very good singles band (maybe a couple non-singles like "Mayonnaise"), but everything else is completely disposable. But then I haven't heard this AMAZING ALBUM THAT'S GOING TO CHANGE MY LIFE FOREVER

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:37 (seventeen years ago)

it's probably not going to change your life forever, but it's the best smashing pumpkins album

ban or astroban? (Curt1s Stephens), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:45 (seventeen years ago)

interesting. I remember middling reviews at the time, which is why i never bothered buying it.

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 02:46 (seventeen years ago)

Did "Eye" ever show up on an album?

rubisco (Abbott), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 03:27 (seventeen years ago)

Nope, just the hits album.

I say classic, if only for "Starla", "Obscured", "Frail and Bedazzled" and "La Dolly Vita".

jon /via/ chi 2.0, Tuesday, 4 November 2008 03:44 (seventeen years ago)

hey, the 1st thread I ever posted to...:)

absolute classic...pumpkins at their most lo-fi & hookah-woozy. even the RAWKers sound dreamy...Frail & Bedazzled and Hello Kitty Kat are absolute classics...as well as Obscured, Plume, Whir, Starla, La Dolly Vita, Spaced...

After having given it some thought, I kind of see where sundar was going with his initial post. Pet Sounds is a concept album about the innocence of childhood is it not? and the struggle to preserve it. A lot of these songs are about the same thing but updates the context for the grunge era (=world not just perplexing but also hostile). Example: Frail and Bedazzled sounds to my ears like it tells the story of a young boy going through a painful divorce. I don't know if this makes PI peculiar in the Pumpkins' catalogue; preserving one's innocence in a hostile world is pretty much a trademark theme for Corgan's songs.

Whatever. Best Pumpkins album, fer sure.

^ban with extreme prejudice (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 03:57 (seventeen years ago)

...a young boy getting divorced from his child bride. now that is some hard-hitting material, bro.

Pantheism F. Mohair (res), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 04:11 (seventeen years ago)

LOL yeah, i'm a moron...the divorce is his parents' obv.

^ban with extreme prejudice (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 04:12 (seventeen years ago)

hey abbott: they're using 'eye' for the watchmen (?? i think?? i was watching a whole bunch of previews on hulu).

also: curtis' description of PI otm

undiscovered cuntry (Rubyredd), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 04:40 (seventeen years ago)

Not "Eye" -- the slow version of "The End is the Beginning" etc.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 4 November 2008 05:42 (seventeen years ago)

duh i'm an idiot - for some reason i always get those two songs mixed up

i think 'eye' is on rotten apples?

undiscovered cuntry (Rubyredd), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 06:03 (seventeen years ago)

eye is on the lost highway sdtrk, i think

^ban with extreme prejudice (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 4 November 2008 18:46 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

this is on my top 15 alltime albums list...PI's only flaw = no drown or glynis

Hipster Loser-Loser (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 7 December 2008 21:52 (seventeen years ago)

eleven months pass...

I really can't believe I've only now actually sat down and listened to this album - good lord is it great. Starla! Pissant! Everything else! Great great great, and a huge treat. I love getting around to good albums by beloved bands fairly late, it's like this surprise treasure trove.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 14:54 (sixteen years ago)

I had forgotten this even existed. Will definitely give it a try.

kingkongvsgodzilla, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 15:01 (sixteen years ago)

yea this album is a comforting thing for me. i put it on sundays sometimes when you need that caress followed by asskicking to shake off the saturday [soothe frailandbedazzled]

slowcoreenactsfrustrationdoubtandevenfearofneverbeingfulfilled (jdchurchill), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 19:40 (sixteen years ago)

one year passes...

listening to this jam atm

captayn cronch (crüt), Thursday, 2 December 2010 09:38 (fifteen years ago)

got me a raygun, got me an altitude

captayn cronch (crüt), Thursday, 2 December 2010 09:54 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

this was either fourth I think on my all-time metal ballot

some hills are never seen (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 16 January 2011 05:31 (fifteen years ago)

either

some hills are never seen (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 16 January 2011 05:31 (fifteen years ago)

I was full of shit five years ago btw...Soma is a classic song; there's quite a few of those on SD (other ones: Quiet, Rocket, Today, Hummer). I still don't like Cherub Rock or Disarm or Spaceboy/Silverfuck, but that still leaves enough on SD to make up a pretty decent album...

some hills are never seen (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 16 January 2011 06:04 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

has anyone heard the bonus disc? is it worth checking out?

billstevejim, Thursday, 19 July 2012 18:44 (thirteen years ago)

Its definitely worth checking out, there's a lot of great stuff. However, if you were an obsessive back in the 90s, there isn't a whole ton of new material. It's cleaned up and much cripser than the original demos that were floating around (Real Time demos, the WZRD stuff, etc). You've got the "Cinnamn Girl", "Jackie Blue", and "Venus in Furs" covers, cleaned up "By June", "Glynis" (from No Alternative), and other pretty well shared stuff. The only real revelation to my ears was the 15 minute studio demo, "Why Am I So Tired", which sounds great.

heated debate over derpy hooves (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 19 July 2012 18:47 (thirteen years ago)

Pitchfork's review is, er, smashing.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 19 July 2012 18:52 (thirteen years ago)

lol, it is great to see people still stanning for the classic material despite the trainwreck the band is now.

heated debate over derpy hooves (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 19 July 2012 18:57 (thirteen years ago)

I totally need to get this

that one guy (loves laboured breathing), Thursday, 19 July 2012 18:57 (thirteen years ago)

"Whirl" is the one that most impressed me today.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 19 July 2012 19:09 (thirteen years ago)

It's definitely not up there with Gish, Siamese Dream or Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness, but then I wouldn't have ever expected it to be. It's definitely as far from dud as you can possibly get without reaching classic.

The Jupiter 8 (Turrican), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:35 (thirteen years ago)

Got my copy earlier in the week, will be giving it all a proper ear this weekend. The cassette demo's good fun to see.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 20 July 2012 01:42 (thirteen years ago)

bummer there isn't more siamese dream outtake material, like cleaned up versions of some of those demos that leaked a few years ago. the heavier "set the ray to jerry" for example

windjammer voyage (blank), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:45 (thirteen years ago)

there are some fantastic riffs among the pre-Gish stuff but yeah not much in the way of good entire songs... I like “under your spell” and “there is goes” though. Were those both Marked tunes?

brimstead, Tuesday, 4 June 2019 23:26 (seven years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Rr7th61VOk

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 4 June 2019 23:32 (seven years ago)

'There It Goes' isn't too bad. I think the Oceania-era line-up did a one-off performance of that one just for a select couple of people, but I might be misremembering and it may be a completely different song. Look at how young and fresh-faced they all look in that 1988 video, though - even Jimmy - although he's very restrained on the early stuff. D'arcy looks cool (and cute) as hell.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 4 June 2019 23:36 (seven years ago)

Fast forward 11 years later...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x20kajCVzTM

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Tuesday, 4 June 2019 23:37 (seven years ago)

Opened it up, the tape is pretty cool-looking... wish I still had a cassette deck

Theodor Adorno, perhaps the greatest philosopher alive today (morrisp), Wednesday, 5 June 2019 01:02 (seven years ago)

none of them are Marked songs, those can be found elsewhere... I think when Billy started SP he threw everything he had away. I've listened to some of that Marked stuff, it's pretty bad. there are some good songs among the pre-Gish material. definitely There It Goes, She, Under Your Spell, Razor, I Am My End...

flappy bird, Wednesday, 5 June 2019 01:09 (seven years ago)

Mashed Potatoes remains an extremely fun listen, imo

brimstead, Wednesday, 5 June 2019 01:20 (seven years ago)

oh, one of the best. "Cinder" is killer, I always wondered where that was recorded, why there's no other documentation of that song, and why an unrelated song was put out on the PI reissue called "Cinder Open" or something. only the Pumpkins would let something like that die as a almost never played live rarity.

flappy bird, Wednesday, 5 June 2019 01:28 (seven years ago)

'Cinder' has a great riff, if I remember. That's the one where part of it ended up in 'Silverfuck', right? There's few bands out there that inspire me to hear not just all the officially released recorded work, but the bootlegs and outtakes etc., but the Pumpkins are definitely one of 'em.

Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 5 June 2019 01:40 (seven years ago)

we’ve never seen the deeep live silverfucks 95-96 all laid out right? i saw (and recorded, and traded) a bunch of them back then and just a few months apart it changed so much, just whole new avenues into song, n ight-to-night variations on themes

alomar lines, Wednesday, 5 June 2019 04:27 (seven years ago)

sounds wanky as shit but in person? powerful

alomar lines, Wednesday, 5 June 2019 04:28 (seven years ago)

two years pass...

I’ve always had a love/hate relationship with this band, but the quality of their leftovers from the 90s is undeniable. I could do a POX just from b-sides.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Friday, 11 March 2022 06:56 (four years ago)

I’ll expand on this thought tomorrow (maybe) but Gish and the bsides from both this album and “aeroplane…” contain in retrospective my favorite moments from them.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Friday, 11 March 2022 07:07 (four years ago)

Yes! I went down a Pumpkins rabbit-hole in the last week after Bang Bang You're Dead... POLL In Your Head - ILM Artist Poll #87 - SMASHING PUMPKINS - Results was revived. In the 1990s, I had signed off from the Pumpkins in the wake of their Siamese Dream ubiquity. Just too many views of the Disarm video on MTV. When I was schooling myself for the poll though, Pisces Iscariot was a huge discovery for me and is probably my favorite after SD.

peace, man, Friday, 11 March 2022 12:42 (four years ago)

I could listen to "Whir" forever. Such a mature, vulnerable song.

Sam Weller, Friday, 11 March 2022 13:06 (four years ago)

Yes to Whir! One of their best songs. That one and Obscured are probably my two favorite cuts from the era. I like Corgan a lot in acoustic guitar mode with James (or is it Billy himself?) in electric guitar complimenting calmly with that beautiful tone.

Absolutely love how the results from the SP poll ended out. A lot of songs I love in the higher ranks, not a big emphasis on their singles - which

✖✖✖ (Moka), Friday, 11 March 2022 14:08 (four years ago)

… I’m not a huge fan of except for a couple of them. The real juicy part of the pumpkin is not in their singles.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Friday, 11 March 2022 14:09 (four years ago)

five months pass...

"Glynis," on Disc 2 of the deluxe ed., is such a cool song.

It's funny – and endearing, I guess – how the Pumpkins can be so corny/goofy/obvious, and then suddenly a song like that pops like...

Panda bear, my gentle friend (morrisp), Monday, 22 August 2022 05:23 (three years ago)

*up

Panda bear, my gentle friend (morrisp), Monday, 22 August 2022 05:26 (three years ago)

Ah, "Glynnis"...one of the little treasures housed on the No Alternative charity comp.

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 22 August 2022 06:06 (three years ago)

Otm. I'm always moved/suprised when it comes on. I find it so evocative of the time.

Sam Weller, Monday, 22 August 2022 09:12 (three years ago)

Try to Corgan form, though, the version on the Deluxe Edition box isn't the original.

Don't have it in front of me to a/b, but I recall (besides taking all the air out if the mix) it has added, louder, seemingly current/more nasal vocalizations from Corgan, and I recall more noodly soloing?

Soundslike, Monday, 22 August 2022 12:39 (three years ago)

Oh, huh, I’ll have to check out the No Alternative version… I always saw that comp around, but never heard it / knew what was on it.

Panda bear, my gentle friend (morrisp), Monday, 22 August 2022 14:17 (three years ago)

(Is the version of “Bye June” different from the take on Lull? I’d have to dig the EP out to a/b, which feels like werk. The liner notes for both songs say “Ignoffo Sessions,” I dunno what that means…)

Panda bear, my gentle friend (morrisp), Monday, 22 August 2022 14:19 (three years ago)

Oh, "Unseen Power of the Picket Fence" was on No Alternative, right before the Pumpkins song? That's really funny.

Panda bear, my gentle friend (morrisp), Monday, 22 August 2022 15:43 (three years ago)

Is there a thread yet for "When a b-sides comp is their best album?"

billstevejim, Monday, 22 August 2022 16:25 (three years ago)

one year passes...

It's impressive how "Starla" not only remains engaging for 11 mins., but feels like it's "just ramping up" when it cuts off... not an easy trick to pull with a track of that length (all the chord changes in the final gtr-wank section help with that illusion, I think).

Chavez video on MTV, July 1995 (morrisp), Wednesday, 18 October 2023 22:24 (two years ago)

two years pass...

The existence and non-release of Glynis suggests someone had to tell BC that he'd stolen a Blues Traveler tune

145 feet up in a Jeffrey Pine (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 11 March 2026 20:35 (two months ago)

i have no idea what that means, but it was incuded on the expanded Pisces Iscariot reissue from 2012

better than ezra collective soul asylum (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 11 March 2026 20:50 (two months ago)

I like it and heard it there, but it sounds like "The Mountains Win Again" by Blues Traveler.

145 feet up in a Jeffrey Pine (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 12 March 2026 05:14 (two months ago)

Glynis was released on the No Alternative compilation in October 1993. Mountains Win Again wasn't even debuted live until after Blues Traveler released Four in September 1994. That said, the riff IS similar! But if anything, BT ganked the Pumpkins.

Pisces Iscariot was released about a month after Four. I would guess that Glynis didn't show up on Pisces Iscariot because the compilation was still relatively fresh; maybe there was some kind of a contractual non-compete clause to prevent sales from one album eating into sales of the comp.

peace, man, Thursday, 12 March 2026 11:19 (two months ago)

Good info, thank you. Our guy's ego is safe!

145 feet up in a Jeffrey Pine (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 12 March 2026 14:30 (two months ago)

Ha...geniuses of a like mind on a similar wavelength (Billy & Popper)...that's how it happened.

earlnash, Thursday, 12 March 2026 14:41 (two months ago)


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