MELLON POLLIE AND THE INFINITE SADNESS

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"By Starlight" over "Porcelina" by a nose.

MC, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 13:14 (eighteen years ago)

It was crap then. It's crap now.

Alex in NYC, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 13:35 (eighteen years ago)

Zero's OK.

chap, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 13:46 (eighteen years ago)

here is no why.

latebloomer, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 14:14 (eighteen years ago)

Whoa, I agree with Geir too.

jon /via/ chi 2.0, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 14:22 (eighteen years ago)

This is impossible, so I'll go with their NIN impression, "Love".

NoTimeBeforeTime, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 14:48 (eighteen years ago)

I'm leaning towards "Bodies" but I should pull it out to check. I like "Love" a lot too. And "Thirty-Three".

Sundar, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 14:56 (eighteen years ago)

1979 ftw

Jordan, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 15:29 (eighteen years ago)

ha GIS for "porcelina" sort of hilarious:
http://images.elfwood.com/art/r/o/robinbean/merland.jpg

Just barely like it more than "1979", because shit is EPIC man.

nickalicious, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 16:32 (eighteen years ago)

The only SP song I like is 1979.

Bodrick III, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 16:34 (eighteen years ago)

I never quite got these guys, but Muzzle is a great song.

kornrulez6969, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 16:40 (eighteen years ago)

'here is no why'. i'll be surprised if 1979 doesn't win

6335, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 16:44 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, "Muzzle" is pretty great too. I could have voted that easily.

jon /via/ chi 2.0, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 18:55 (eighteen years ago)

I'm gonna tip my hat to disc 2 & "We Only Come Out at Night"

I used to claim I didn't like Smashing Pumpkins. Then I realized I own four of their albums and don't want to flush them. So while I despise the "guilty pleasure" concept, SP would rank high on my list.

zaxxon25, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 19:42 (eighteen years ago)

I just listened to this album for the first time in 5 years and hereby DENOUNCE and REJECT my previous vote for "Porcelina" in favor of "Jellybelly" which is my absolute favorite Punkins song and how the fuck did I forget about it!???

nickalicious, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 19:55 (eighteen years ago)

voted for Muzzle, but so many contenders. great album(s).

stephen, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 20:45 (eighteen years ago)

Through the Eyes of Ruby for me.

youcangoyourownway, Wednesday, 5 March 2008 23:23 (eighteen years ago)

I'd love to hear the vinyl version of this with the different tracklisting.

Curt1s Stephens, Thursday, 6 March 2008 01:17 (eighteen years ago)

Lots of great songs on this album. I saw them on this tour as well, they were great.

Herman G. Neuname, Thursday, 6 March 2008 01:18 (eighteen years ago)

definitely MUZZLE

69, Thursday, 6 March 2008 01:51 (eighteen years ago)

Cupid de Locke vs Love tossup

billstevejim, Thursday, 6 March 2008 02:11 (eighteen years ago)

"Muzzle" was disappointing live but when I saw them it was the guy who isn't Jimmy Chamberlain. Otherwise also a fav.

nickalicious, Thursday, 6 March 2008 03:18 (eighteen years ago)

This is actually one of the best examples of patchy double albums that could have made great single albums.

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 6 March 2008 03:19 (eighteen years ago)

people try and make that case about all double albums

Charlie Howard, Thursday, 6 March 2008 03:43 (eighteen years ago)

I think you'd be lucky to get a decent EP out of this, to be honest.

nate woolls, Thursday, 6 March 2008 08:24 (eighteen years ago)

agreed. Maybe a single in 'thirty three'

joedee, Thursday, 6 March 2008 12:20 (eighteen years ago)

No, really. There are around 10 "pop" songs here that are actually quite nice. They would only have to get rid of the noisiest and most aggressive tracks and they'd have a marvellous single album. Shame about that singing voice though - this is one of few cases where I agree it was a good idea to keep the vocals behind in the mix.

Geir Hongro, Thursday, 6 March 2008 13:00 (eighteen years ago)

Impossible to choose between "Muzzle," "Porcelina," "Thru The Eyes Of Ruby," "Galapagos," and "Where Boys Fear To Tread," but I think I'll give it to the latter since it hasn't been getting upped yet on this thread...

Doctor Casino, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:42 (eighteen years ago)

As for the "make it one disc" thing, I raised that question on this thread and got some responses, for anybody into that kind of thing...

Doctor Casino, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:46 (eighteen years ago)

who gonna be the kook that votes 4 tales of a scorched earth

ralph, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:47 (eighteen years ago)

Fuck's sake - the whole point of Mellon Collie is that it's an overblown indulgence-fest; one of the last ones in mainstream rock - and that's why it's a great album. All this trimming-down talk, fffff!

the next grozart, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:50 (eighteen years ago)

haha, Alex in NYC makes the same exact diss in both this thread and mine.

Doctor Casino, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:51 (eighteen years ago)

it's definitely 1979 for me

winston, Friday, 7 March 2008 00:53 (eighteen years ago)

very tough choice between "Tonight Tonight" and "In the Arms of Sleep"

Mr. Snrub, Friday, 7 March 2008 03:47 (eighteen years ago)

TRULY TRAGIC THIS

teresa, Friday, 7 March 2008 03:47 (eighteen years ago)

I don't think I ever listened to anything but the singles, and of those "1979" is the only one that still rates.

milo z, Friday, 7 March 2008 03:54 (eighteen years ago)

Kinda feels like this is the 'last album of the '90s.'

milo z, Friday, 7 March 2008 03:55 (eighteen years ago)

I actually think an Adore poll might be more interesting. Although maybe "Perfect" is the obvious winner there.

Simon H., Friday, 7 March 2008 03:56 (eighteen years ago)

this album is the sound of me at 14

latebloomer, Friday, 7 March 2008 03:59 (eighteen years ago)

vinyl tracklist:

Side one: Dawn

1. "Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness" – 2:52
2. "Tonight, Tonight" – 4:14
3. "Thirty-Three" – 4:10
4. "In the Arms of Sleep" – 4:12
5. "Take Me Down" (Iha) – 2:52

Side two: Tea Time
1. "Jellybelly" – 3:01
2. "Bodies" – 4:12
3. "To Forgive" – 4:17
4. "Here Is No Why" – 3:45
5. "Porcelina of the Vast Oceans" – 9:21

Side three: Dusk

1. "Bullet with Butterfly Wings" – 4:18
2. "Thru the Eyes of Ruby" – 7:38
3. "Muzzle" – 3:44
4. "Galapogos" – 4:47
5. "Tales of a Scorched Earth" – 3:46

Side four: Twilight

1. "1979" – 4:25
2. "Beautiful" – 4:18
3. "Cupid de Locke" – 2:50
4. "By Starlight" – 4:48
5. "We Only Come Out at Night" – 4:05

Side five: Midnight

1. "Where Boys Fear to Tread" – 4:22
2. "Zero" – 2:41
3. "Fuck You (An Ode to No One)" – 4:51
4. "Love" – 4:21
5. "X.Y.U." – 7:07

Side six: Starlight

1. "Stumbleine" – 2:54
2. "Lily (My One and Only)" – 3:31
3. "Tonite Reprise" – 2:40
4. "Farewell and Goodnight" (Corgan/Iha) – 4:22
5. "Infinite Sadness" – 4:02

^^^^ would much rather listen to it this way. This makes it seem more like a 6-EP box set s.t. you can put on a different side for different moods. Which I think brings the whole album to a perfect level of pretense and pomposity.

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 7 March 2008 04:02 (eighteen years ago)

xxpost "Appels + Oranjes" is far and away the best thing on that album. And there are a lot of great songs on that album.

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 7 March 2008 04:03 (eighteen years ago)

That vinyl tracklist is WILD! Wow. What's "Tonite Reprise"?

I always felt like this thing needed to end on something a little more dramatic - probably "By Starlight."

And I'm with Curt1s, "Appels + Oranjes" is my favorite Adore track, although at the time "Tear" ranked really high with me, and to this day does a more precise job of bringing back the exact feel and smell of a certain era in time than any other song, not sure why or how that happened but it did. "Perfect" is, I'm sad to say, kind of boring! Am I right that it was a single? Not that this was an album really overflowing with obvious hits, but it seems like a weird, wimpy kind of choice.

Granted, by that point Billy had taken a 90-degree turn away from the blatant arena majesty of SD/MCIS, in favor of a kind of extended love letter to particular electro goth genre work, lush and watery on one end and aching/sparse on the other. I like a lot of songs off Adore and Machina I, but they're really different animals than Melon Collie.

Doctor Casino, Friday, 7 March 2008 05:41 (eighteen years ago)

My fave on Adore has to be "For Martha," what a stunner. That and "Blank Page" actually outdo the closing ballads on Mellon Collie.

Simon H., Friday, 7 March 2008 06:05 (eighteen years ago)

I'm half into DAWN of vinyl tracklist, it is better this way.

nickalicious, Friday, 7 March 2008 09:02 (eighteen years ago)

I mean TEA TIME.

nickalicious, Friday, 7 March 2008 09:02 (eighteen years ago)

"Tonite Reprise" is an acoustic guitar version of "Tonight, Tonight"

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 7 March 2008 10:32 (eighteen years ago)

I remember seeing this post-Siamese Dream MTV news bit about how Smashing Pumpkins were readying their new album, and it included a 4 second clip of Corgan recording the vocals of "Muzzle" in their studio, and I played that 4 seconds over and over in my head for months until the album actually came out. And the finished "Muzzle" totally lived up to it - I love how the drums roll in on that song...

Savannah Smiles, Friday, 7 March 2008 10:38 (eighteen years ago)

I think my answer would be "Thirty-Three", but i'll have to listen to this album again to work it out.

Tim F, Friday, 7 March 2008 11:13 (eighteen years ago)

I never liked "Perfect". I liked Adore at the time, but in retrospect it has a lot more cloying, embarassing moments than Mellon Collie.

Back to Mellon Collie - "Beautiful" is the perfect soundtrack to teenagers in love in 1995.

the next grozart, Friday, 7 March 2008 18:06 (eighteen years ago)

Adore more cloying than Mellon Collie? Hmmmm...

Simon H., Friday, 7 March 2008 18:44 (eighteen years ago)

Maybe I should try Adore again. Did the Lost Highway soundtrack and “Eye” come out before Adore? That’s the first I remember hearing that mode of Pumpkins and I really don’t like that song. I think it turned me against their electro-goth direction but enough fans like it that I would try again. Nothing after that though.

Cow_Art, Monday, 18 August 2025 21:30 (nine months ago)

Lost Highway was ‘97, I think. Adore was ‘98.

Clever Message Board User Name (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 18 August 2025 21:36 (nine months ago)

XP Lost Highway was early '97, so pre-Adore, as were the two Batman & Robin songs.

Lithium Just Madison (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 18 August 2025 21:37 (nine months ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OEvDqRr898

Lithium Just Madison (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 18 August 2025 21:40 (nine months ago)

ugh

Cow_Art, Monday, 18 August 2025 22:04 (nine months ago)

i like adore but it's somehow less consistent than mellon collie and the production is so much worse, it's so muddy and compressed. idk why all of flood's production work started sounding like that - pop and is this desire have the same problem but adore has it the worst. it does have some of their best work like "behold! the night mare" and "for martha"

ufo, Monday, 18 August 2025 23:54 (nine months ago)

adore isn’t that muddy ??

ivy., Tuesday, 19 August 2025 00:38 (nine months ago)

and is this desire. does not have that problem omg

ivy., Tuesday, 19 August 2025 00:38 (nine months ago)

“perfect” is basically my idea of a… uh… perfectly produced song

ivy., Tuesday, 19 August 2025 00:39 (nine months ago)

I'd never heard Eye until now. Huh...

I did like The End Is The Beginning Is The End though

Now read it backwards. (dog latin), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 01:23 (nine months ago)

“Eye” is so fucking good!

brimstead, Tuesday, 19 August 2025 01:24 (nine months ago)

There are maybe a few meat'n'potatoes rockers that are great on their own but sound like they belong to the Siamese Dream era (sorry Jellybelly and Muzzle).

what's the distinction you're drawing here? I don't know Siamese Dream all that well, and I mean there are a lot of other 'qualities' to Mellon Collie that someone might latch onto. but the one I tend to fixate on is, the sound of the live band is the bedrock of Mellon Collie, and the more kitschy ornamental shit weaves around that. For all the wacky 'arrangement ideas' and songwriting and production experiments, it has a very live feel most of the time. SD sounds a lot more 'constructed'.

I just remembered Corgan wrote several Celebrity Skin songs which sound like Smashing Pumpkins songs but they sound great with Courtney on vocals both in the agressive songs and the dreamy/melancholic ones. A good female singer splitting vocal duties would have worked for me.

I'm not so sympathetic to the idea of Corgan as the auteur here, or the band and record as a vehicle for his songwriting. Great as most of the songs are, it's the other way around for once. And that is one killer band! They can all really play and they have this iconic, glamorous sound like rocket ignition.

WBFTT rocks and I love that it samples the Doom rocket launcher sound

...not a coincidence! That Hole record is really good too, but Hole are not the Smashing Pumpkins (and I know you specified it's "the songs where Jimmy Chamberlin is not as present" where you want to hear another vocalist- sure, I'm just too lazy rn to find a more relevant post to quote sorry)

smh that "Jellybelly" is anyone's idea of 'meat and potatoes' rock. Damn.

i hid your comb in the teapot (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 02:41 (nine months ago)

lol Adore and esp. Is This Desire are two of the better produced records of that era IMO

Tim F, Tuesday, 19 August 2025 04:09 (nine months ago)

I thought so too

assert (matttkkkk), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 05:39 (nine months ago)

Never seen this band live, but listening to Disc 6 (lol?) of Aeroplane and this is an amazing document of an amazing band

you have to be avant-garde and stupid at the same (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 06:20 (nine months ago)

"outright duds here:
-title track (should have been like, a minute at most)"

My one disc version, which is mostly the hard crunching songs that don't go over four mins, would begin with this nice little ditty, though I like Stumbeline and To Forgive, a couple of others..

Re listening to much of it yesterday and can hardly stomach the epics. Just do the meat and potatoes, I'm a simple person.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 19 August 2025 06:25 (nine months ago)

years back made a single disc version and i'm pretty sure it opened with the title track before going on to the punishing "tales of a scorched earth"

smh that "Jellybelly" is anyone's idea of 'meat and potatoes' rock. Damn.

― i hid your comb in the teapot (Deflatormouse), Monday, August 18, 2025 10:41 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

when i first bought the album i would always skip this song because i was a sulky teen that just wanted to get straight to "zero". now it blows my mind they never considered it for a single.

Western® with Bacon Flavor, Tuesday, 19 August 2025 12:30 (nine months ago)

and is this desire. does not have that problem omg

― ivy., Monday, August 18, 2025

Seconding this. Is This Desire sounds marvelous.

hungover beet poo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 12:48 (nine months ago)

'Beautiful' just came on. Shoulda been a single, it would have been huge

Now read it backwards. (dog latin), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 12:55 (nine months ago)

Okay, going to bump this while I run errands today. Will report back. I remember Jellybelly as being Cherub Rock but not as good.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 19 August 2025 13:27 (nine months ago)

more like ‘fast-forwarded smashing pumpkins cd’

i hid your comb in the teapot (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 14:36 (nine months ago)

If I'd known how to work my stereo fully in the 90s I could have probably just programmed those out anyway.

whoa fancy

i hid your comb in the teapot (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 14:38 (nine months ago)

this album suffers from late-90s cram-every-last-minute-of-the-CD disease. it's not that there are too many songs on it (they're all really good), but they all go on for at least a minute too long (except '17' which gets cut off early!)

Save for Ava Adore and Once Upon A Time, I can take-or-leave the opening half. Things really kick into gear on Appels + Oranjes, then it's through-and-through a pretty great listen. Behold The Night Mare is a real standout

Now read it backwards. (dog latin), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 15:39 (nine months ago)

oh whoops, that was meant to be on the adore thread.

Now read it backwards. (dog latin), Tuesday, 19 August 2025 15:39 (nine months ago)

I'm not so sympathetic to the idea of Corgan as the auteur here, or the band and record as a vehicle for his songwriting. Great as most of the songs are, it's the other way around for once. And that is one killer band! They can all really play and they have this iconic, glamorous sound like rocket ignition.

Not in every song he co-wrote and obviously Eric and Courtney’s fingerprints can be traced all over these songs. But a song like “Malibu” has a very similar DNA to “1979”, “Perfect” or “Stand Inside Your Love”.

The first time hearing the album without knowing BC had co-written some of it “Hit so Hard”, “Petals” and “Malibu” immediately made me think they had a massive SP influence. Little did I know.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Wednesday, 20 August 2025 00:35 (nine months ago)

One of the great things about Celebrity Skin is that both of these things can be true. You can hear Corgan's impact but you can also hear that he wouldn't have been able to do these songs himself (and a lot of the best songs didn't involve him).

It's collaboration resulting in something greater than the sum of its parts in the best possible sense.

I'm reminded of how Bjork's work on her first four albums clearly bore the imprints of her collaborators (the tricky songs sounded a bit like tricky etc.) but never in a way that indicated or suggested she wasn't the predominant driver of the sound(s) of her work.

Tim F, Wednesday, 20 August 2025 00:59 (nine months ago)

i was talking about Mellon Collie there, not Celebrity Skin. i see how that was very unclear. sorry Moka!
just saying that i hear the songwriting as mostly subordinate to the Smashing Pumkins’ gargantuan live band sound on Mellon Collie. as great as the songs are, i usually put that album on to be pulverized and dazzled by the sound of the band. your proposal of subbing in Darcy as the singer (on specifically some songs where this is not the case) is tantalizing the more i think about it, but i shouldn’t have quoted you since it wasn’t really in response to your posts.

i think the last time i actually listened to Celebrity Skin was more than 20 years ago, and i mostly remember the first 3 songs (it’s easy enough to imagine the Pumpkins doing Hit so Hard)

i hid your comb in the teapot (Deflatormouse), Wednesday, 20 August 2025 02:21 (nine months ago)

the bigger thing that makes me love this album is the treasure trove of material left off. i love "set the ray to jerry" but it feels undercooked for this album and a relic of the SD/PI era. "Meladori Magpie" would've fit snugly into the back half of disc 2.

Western® with Bacon Flavor, Wednesday, 20 August 2025 04:09 (nine months ago)

set the ray to jerry doesn’t sound like anything else on earth

ivy., Wednesday, 20 August 2025 05:50 (nine months ago)

there's a bunch of bloc party songs that it sounds like

ufo, Wednesday, 20 August 2025 06:15 (nine months ago)

“Set the ray to Jerry” is one of my favorite songs from this era! Melon Collie is filled with guitar bombast so I like the variation of the bass and drums leading the song.

I kind of relate that sort of sound to a certain U2 sound where the bass and drums provide the backbone to the whole thing and the guitars are there as a more subtle, texture sound.

✖✖✖ (Moka), Wednesday, 20 August 2025 16:01 (nine months ago)


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