You lot are going to hate me for this but: can you explain me the appeal of the Velvet Underground?

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er, "Heroin" was one of the tunes that sucked me into the whole thing. What's so bad about it? I thought the drums and guitars not being in sync was part of the point!

southern lights (southern lights), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:42 (twenty-one years ago)

This is one of the things that I miss about not having the box set any more, is all the extra tracks from around the same period, all in once place.

DAMMIT!!! Discs 2 through 5 were nicked while I was on tour! I still have the box, the cases, the book, and the early demos (some joker stuck my Strokes demo in there as well) but I'm just missing the discs! Can anyone copy them for me? Please? I'll be your best friend, carry your books home from school?

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:46 (twenty-one years ago)

it seemed dull to me, aged 14. too long a wait for the payoff, i wanted *instant gratification* (which might be why it was a good idea i wasn't having sex during that age)

Kate - I can burn you them. I misplaced the Loaded disk for ages, though I have the 2CD Loaded too, so I wasn't too worried.

stevie (stevie), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:47 (twenty-one years ago)

"it must also be said that the dear friends of mine who've been Velvets obsessives over the years are fascinated by the 'seedy underbelly' but wouldn't ever do drugs themselves. "

i have a lot of friends into hardcore rap but they dont want to shoot or get shot by anyone either.

thesplooge (thesplooge), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:48 (twenty-one years ago)

Discs 2 through 5 were nicked while I was on tour!

haha at least you've still got those '65 demos!

CeCe Peniston (Anthony Miccio), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:49 (twenty-one years ago)

Stevie, I would be eternally grateful to you if you could burn me those missing discs! And the two-disc Loaded... I very nearly bought that the other day!

I *always* hated Loaded when I was younger. Maybe I just wasn't old enough to understand it at the time or something, I don't know. It just sounded like coked-up disco-boogie with that bad 70s production, I wanted the noise and the feedback and all that! So I didn't listen to it for years. And then I gave it a chance when I got the box set (perhaps it was the alternate mixes that did it) and I utterly loved it.

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:51 (twenty-one years ago)

The appeal of the VU?

1) Attitude

A song like Venus in Furs just oozes druggy decadence. They really hated the peace/love/LSD west coast bands and provided a counter-balance to their over-optimistic heralding of the age of aquarius. The obvious contradictions in their lyrics, music and interviews are intriguing and make them more human than they appear at first listen. Their attitude somehow epitomises my idea of New York - no bullshit, loud, cynical, sexy, laconic, energetic, ambiguous, chaotic, uptight.

2) Melody

Lou Reed had an obvious gift for melody and anyone who appreciates a good tune should appreciate the VU.

3) Lyrics

See attitude. Sterling once said in an interview that they deliberately didn't print the lyrics to their songs and made them difficult to discern when listening as a way of saying "fuck you, if you want reading matter, buy the new york times" or words to that effect. And yet at the same time their lyrics could be simply fantastic - "dark", brutual and cynical at times, or tender, joyful and life-affirming at others. They wanted rock-n-roll to be a visceral rather than an intellectual experience, but they just happened to able to write brilliant lyrics.

4) They are the coolest looking band ever.

5) The fact that they were a bit rough around the edges. The guitar solo to "I'm Set Free" is so amateurish it's almost embarrassing. That they wrote such brilliant songs using the most basic chord progressions is a source of inspiration to any musician more concerned with expression/communication than impressing the audience with technical ability.

Right - now everyone is welcome to tear into my arguments and tell me what a numpty I am.

metalmickey, Friday, 23 July 2004 11:52 (twenty-one years ago)

(Now if only I could find someone to copy "Appetite For Destruction" and "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" for me... not bothered about the Datsuns CD that went missing about the same time, tho. The thieves can keep that!)

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:53 (twenty-one years ago)

I certainly think Velvet Underground & Nico is overrated. I wonder if something about appreciating VU depends on having internalized rock history, especially the indie side of things. In the Spin records guide someone noted that entire indie subgenres can be traced to specific VU songs and it's almost true.

Mark (MarkR), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:54 (twenty-one years ago)

Argh, I just tried to look up the track listing for Loaded on Allmusic and suddenly realised what you'd all been complaining about.

Aside to Mark, no, I'm sorry, it has nothing to do with internalising indie rock history. I started listening to the VU in my mid teens, when I had very little knowledge of indierock, in fact, large sections of indierock hadn't even been invented yet. If the VU had a large amount of influence, it's because they made a very difficult balancing act look incredibly *easy*.

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 11:58 (twenty-one years ago)

Yeah, I got into the VU in middle school. REM talked about 'em and I got hooked fast.

If anything, I think people who have internalized indie rock history are more apt to have a kneejerk dismissal of the band. My assumption of "god-like genius" is why I didn't find anything enjoyable about Bob Dylan for ages.

CeCe Peniston (Anthony Miccio), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:03 (twenty-one years ago)

What I dislike about Dylan is his nasty voice and boring music. :o)

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:05 (twenty-one years ago)

their appeal to me: they couldn't sing harmonies, and cales organ was always a bit flat, but gloriously so!

dave amos, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:10 (twenty-one years ago)

also nico was by far the most talented member.

damien street, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:11 (twenty-one years ago)

kate - mail me and i'll try and sort it out next week! x

stevie (stevie), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:15 (twenty-one years ago)

Which email? This new hotmail one, or your other older lippy one?

(I will love you forever, and we'll never row again, if you can sort it out for me!)

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:17 (twenty-one years ago)

"Well, not really. I wouldn't say Lou Reed was "street". But he was, quite literally, Tin Pan Alley, Brill Building Bubblegum POP!"

How right. VU were Shadow Morton/King-Goffin pop genius + avant-garde + early rock n roll crudeness. I love their first two albums, but growing older I tend to prefer their mellower side. And how can you resist to those endless live versions of _What goes on_?

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:18 (twenty-one years ago)

Nick: Dylan's voice nasty, Danny McNamara's voice is ... ?

Enrique (Enrique), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:20 (twenty-one years ago)

Well, not really. I wouldn't say Lou Reed was "street". But he was, quite literally, Tin Pan Alley, Brill Building Bubblegum POP! The appeal is that they mixed the weird, fucked up avant-guarde noise with an accessible pop aesthetic. (again, see that third album.)

Don't think I agree with that - yes, Lou used to work in da Brill Building, but I don't think that aesthetic influenced VU much...they're melodic, sure, but if there's anything Pop about them it's a lot closer to Simon & Garfunkel than The Shirelles, tho I'm sure Lou Reed would spit in my face for suggesting this.

Sick, are you subbing for Hongro or something?

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:21 (twenty-one years ago)

any of my many hotmails! this one works too!

Lou used to work in da Brill Building, but I don't think that aesthetic influenced VU much...

*splutters* 'Sunday Morning'??? Hello??????

stevie (stevie), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:22 (twenty-one years ago)

maybe i don't like them for the same reason i like all pavement's stuff except for slanted and enchanted and westing. i don't think i understand lo-fi.

dog latin (dog latin), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:22 (twenty-one years ago)

i think drone as an aesthetic is one of the more important components of modern music, and i can think of few better entres to drone than the velvet underground. i mean, that aside, i agree with everything everyone else said about how good their albums are, how cool-looking they are, blah blah blah. but i think if one of the things that turns you off about the VU is the drone, you might be missing out on a lot of really really great music besides the VU, too.

peter smith (plsmith), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:22 (twenty-one years ago)

Their attitude somehow epitomises my idea of New York - no bullshit, loud, cynical, sexy, laconic, energetic, ambiguous, chaotic, uptight.

This is why I haven't actually listened to my VU LPs since I left college/The Strokes appeared on the horizon.

Enrique (Enrique), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:23 (twenty-one years ago)

Oh no, oh no, they have SO MUCH FAKE MOTOWN in them! I mean, check out "Temptation Inside Your Heart" or the backing track for "The Gift" or that sort of stuff. Lou Reed loves the bubblegum, oh how he does.

Oh, and What Goes On... it's been too long since I heard that song. Someday I shall use my music editing techniques to produce a 60-minute uber-version by editing all the live versions together, and then I shall die happy and have that played at my funeral.

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:24 (twenty-one years ago)

Jonathan Richman saw VU live 100 times -- here are his thoughts:

They were wild like the USA
A mystery band in a New York way
Rock and roll, but not like the rest
And to me, America at it's best
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

A spooky tone on a Fender bass
Played less notes and left more space
Stayed kind of still, looked kinda shy
Kinda far away, kinda dignified.
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

Now you can look at that band and wonder where
All that sound was coming from
With just 4 people there.

Twangy sounds of the cheapest types,
Sounds as stark as black and white stripes,
Bold and brash, sharp and rude,
Like the heats turned off
And you're low on food.
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.
Like this...

Wild wild parties when they start to unwind
A close encounter of the thirdest kind
On the bandstand playing, everybody's saying
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

Well you could look at that band
And at first sight
Say that certain rules about modern music
Wouldn't apply tonight.

Twangy sounds of the cheapest kind,
Like "Guitar sale $29.99,"
Bold and brash, stark and still,
Like the heats turned off
And you can't pay the bill.
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

Both guitars got the fuzz tone on
The drummer's standing upright pounding along
A howl, a tone, a feedback whine
Biker boys meet the college kind
How in the world were they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

Wild wild parties when they start to unwind
A close encounter of the thirdest kind
On the bandstand grooving, everybody moving
How in the world are they making that sound?
Velvet Underground.

Mark (MarkR), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:24 (twenty-one years ago)

your funeral is gonna be confusing, dude.

peter smith (plsmith), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:25 (twenty-one years ago)

i don't mind droney stuff as long as it's warm. vu have a spikey, slightly luke warm drone feel to me.

dog latin (dog latin), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:25 (twenty-one years ago)

someday you'll have to burn a copy of that _what goes on_ edit for me.

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:25 (twenty-one years ago)

It's okay not to like them. Now I will read the thread.

Rockist Scientist, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:25 (twenty-one years ago)

i'm downloading "velvet underground" now though.

dog latin (dog latin), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:28 (twenty-one years ago)

Enrique - I've always liked 'non' singers, but Dylan turns my stomach. He sounds ill. It's horrible!

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:29 (twenty-one years ago)

I've emailed the lippy account, Stevie.

RS also OTM. It *is* OK not to like them. But make sure you don't dislike them for all the wrong reasons.

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:30 (twenty-one years ago)

Nick: again, haven't listened to Dylan since college, but feel residual attachment anyway. You're probably right.

Enrique (Enrique), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:31 (twenty-one years ago)

no he isn't.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:34 (twenty-one years ago)

I tried to like him when I was 16 because of a GURL, likewise Doors and Led Zep. Wasn't worth it.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:35 (twenty-one years ago)

but you don't like Dylan even when he tries a sweet coutry-ish voice like in _Nashville Skyline_?

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:37 (twenty-one years ago)

I don't know it, so no.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:39 (twenty-one years ago)

I was mainly thinking of the 3rd album.

Listened to "Sunday Morning"; can *sort of* imagine it as a Brill Building choon, but can imagine it as a Beatles or Francoise Hardy track much better, so I dunno. Must re-listen.

Brill Building Pop, fake Motown and Bubblegum all conjure up very diferent musical directions for me (diferent from each other, that is. Tho diferent from VU also.)

Kate, will DL that track.

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:41 (twenty-one years ago)

(why not real Motown)

Enrique (Enrique), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:42 (twenty-one years ago)

sunday morning is very different from any of the other tracks i've heard by the VU and it's my fave apart from femme fatale.

dog latin (dog latin), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:43 (twenty-one years ago)

You'll like the eponymous album, Charlie.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:43 (twenty-one years ago)

I mean, even if the drones and the noise and the early albums turn you off, go and get the third album (conveniently called "The Velvet Underground". A lot of the stuff that people find distracting - the noise, the feedback, the artschool cool - has been stripped down, and it's just the naked lyrics and the heartbreaking melody.

Before Kate said this, I was thinking, "Try The Velvet Underground." Of course, a good portion of the second side could still be a turn-off. (I don't think I would sit through the long "literary" song, the name of which eludes me.)

Rockist Scientist, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:43 (twenty-one years ago)

the murder mystery, or something like this - if memory serves well. an unfortunate experiment, to be honest.

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:45 (twenty-one years ago)

Murder Mystery. Which I actually heart. But it takes you through to After Hours which is back to the loveliness.

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:45 (twenty-one years ago)

the only real good thing about their early 90's reunion was seeing Moe Tucker sing After Hours and I'm Sticking with You.

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:48 (twenty-one years ago)

But... but... she did that solo, as well! In fact, I saw her do one of them... (I'm Sticking With You, if memory serves, curse Orbit and her tequila shots) with Doug Yule in Seattle once!

Ma$onic Boom (kate), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:49 (twenty-one years ago)

i don't think she ever toured Italy as a solo artist. I went to those VU concerts just to worship my favourite band ever. John Cale had a cool haircut, but Lou Reed was simply horrible. I hate him.

Marco Damiani (Marco D.), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:54 (twenty-one years ago)

Kate, I just want to say that I was not quoting you because you mentioned me. I totally missed that until now. (I'm just saying this because our paths don't cross much here, so it looked a little suspicious.)

I'm all twisted up into ambivalent knots about the Velvet Underground. I still like a lot of their music (probably at least half of the tracks from their main releases, and some of the recovered stuff as well), but it's pretty far removed from what I normally listen to these days. My appreciation for anything droney started to wither away about ten years or so ago. Also, I don't like most of the bands that claim the Velvet Underground as forebears. I don't think they were really such a good influence. But they still made lots of good music, and they won my affection before I drifted away from their particular aesthetic, so stuck with liking them, even if they don't sit comfortably next to many of my other favorite rock bands (let alone anything else I listen to).

Rockist Scientist, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:56 (twenty-one years ago)

I don't like solo Lou Reed much at all, either, but that's beside the point I guess.

Rockist Scientist, Friday, 23 July 2004 12:57 (twenty-one years ago)

John Cale had a cool haircut, but Lou Reed was simply horrible.
It's not really on topic, but the sad thing about Cale is that he looks 40 years older than he did 10 years ago.

Lou Reed is Keith Richards:The Sequel. He's looked curmudgeonly for years and he will undoubtedly outlive us all.

Barry Bruner (Barry Bruner), Friday, 23 July 2004 12:58 (twenty-one years ago)

the first 3 records are extraordinary. totally different to each other but equally ambitious, creative, entertaining... different layers of influence, new things to discover on each listen, all that.

Charlie Howard, Monday, 30 July 2007 15:50 (eighteen years ago)

I find them quite depressing and they make me sleepy. I can't imagine getting rid of them, but whenever I think I'd like to hear them I only get through a couple songs.

dean ge, Monday, 30 July 2007 15:54 (eighteen years ago)

i admit that i don't appreciate the songs when i'm not giving them their due attention. can't imagine them being anything other than annoying as background music, in truth.

Charlie Howard, Monday, 30 July 2007 15:58 (eighteen years ago)

I like the VU quite a bit but the way they're often discussed sometimes mystifies me a bit too. It seems pretty obvious to me that they weren't at all the only or the first band in the 60s to combine the avant-garde or jazz with pop/rock, work with drones, work with feedback, write simple songs, or write realistic songs about drugs and urban life. Nor does it seem to me that what the VU did in these areas was somehow more advanced than what many others did, including more well-known and successful artists like the Beatles, Stones, Dylan, Hendrix, the Byrds, the Grateful Dead, and Neil Young/Crazy Horse. I don't really see the level of songcraft (in melody, rhythm, or arrangements) that went into a lot of Brill Building or Motown music expressed in Lou Reed's tunes.

That said, they had a distinctive sound and memorable songs that really work for me, especially on the first album.

Sundar, Monday, 30 July 2007 16:30 (eighteen years ago)

It seems pretty obvious to me that they weren't at all the only or the first band in the 60s to combine the avant-garde or jazz with pop/rock, work with drones, work with feedback, write simple songs, or write realistic songs about drugs and urban life. Nor does it seem to me that what the VU did in these areas was somehow more advanced than what many others did, including more well-known and successful artists like the Beatles, Stones, Dylan, Hendrix, the Byrds, the Grateful Dead, and Neil Young/Crazy Horse.

Even though I love the Velvets, OTM. Except there's a glaring omission from yer list there (cough the Who cough "Anyway Anyhow Anywhere").

Sara Sara Sara, Monday, 30 July 2007 16:35 (eighteen years ago)

"Heroin" is astonishing and timeless and i think if you reckon you could've "made it easily" yiou are likely deluding yourself. But i don't want to rule out the possibility that you r a genius.

Frogman Henry, Monday, 30 July 2007 16:36 (eighteen years ago)

I think that using a viola as a rock instrument (and leaving out the bass) might have been the most interesting thing about the VU but they unfortunately dropped that after the 1st album.

2xpost Yes, The Who is another good example.

Sundar, Monday, 30 July 2007 16:37 (eighteen years ago)

boring contrarianism.

That one guy that hit it and quit it, Monday, 30 July 2007 16:38 (eighteen years ago)

boring contrarianism.

^

rockapads, Monday, 30 July 2007 17:16 (eighteen years ago)

It seems pretty obvious to me that they weren't at all the only or the first band in the 60s to combine the avant-garde or jazz with pop/rock, work with drones, work with feedback, write simple songs, or write realistic songs about drugs and urban life

Hmmm, nope, I would say they pretty much were the first to do all of those things together and get it down onto record. But I'd happy to be corrected. (I often am.)

Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 30 July 2007 19:36 (eighteen years ago)

five years pass...

Hard to tell what the most basic VU thread is...I just watched Under Review. Nothing startling, and only Tucker and Yule are interviewed, but pretty good. For a band I'd count as one of my three or four favourite, and was really interested in a few years before I ever managed to get my hands on a record (thanks to Lillian Roxon), I have to admit I didn't know that Doug Yule sings "Candy Says" (I'd never even thought about it--it was like the vocal didn't have an actual person attached to it), or--this is embarrassing--that Tucker doesn't play on Loaded. Yule's a great interviewee, and the two main critics, Clinton Heylin and some guy I didn't know, are fine. (Christgau's in there a bit.) Some other guy foolishly calls "Sunday Morning" a poppy, feel-good song or something like that. First time I've ever seen the skull on the White Light cover.

clemenza, Monday, 27 August 2012 02:42 (thirteen years ago)

dog latin thread

buzza, Monday, 27 August 2012 02:52 (thirteen years ago)

Just noticed an ambiguous parenthetical in my post. Lillian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia is what first got me interested in the Velvet Underground--she had nothing to do with me acquiring my first VU album, what with her being on the other side of the world and all.

clemenza, Monday, 27 August 2012 02:56 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

One thread that didn't get revived. Hope it doesn't need to be really, since liking them should be obligatry and all.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 12 November 2013 23:37 (twelve years ago)

It's my dirty secret that I don't really like the Velvets except for the Nico-sung songs. I'm a huge fan of Cale but I could never enjoy Reed's vocals.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Tuesday, 12 November 2013 23:44 (twelve years ago)

liking them should be obligatry

It sort of is. They have this sheen of unimpeachable cool. Yet even if I feel like saying they are overrated I'd still be first in line to overrate them.

Cue a million bands saying they are influenced by the Velvet Underground, none of which sounds anything remotely like the Velvet Underground.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 November 2013 23:57 (twelve years ago)

10,000 critics pretended that everyone who bought the first VU album formed a band

Master of Treacle, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 00:02 (twelve years ago)

The VU were shit

nostormo, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 00:40 (twelve years ago)

Does Mr Raggett like the VU?

nostormo, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 00:48 (twelve years ago)

these kinds of questions are usually so fruitless, since the person asking the question is really saying, "i bet nothing you can say will make me like this band." which is probably true.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 13 November 2013 00:51 (twelve years ago)

It's one thing if people need to learn the historical/cultural context of a piece of music. Any demands for explanation beyond that... seems to be in opposition to much of the thrill of music entails.

brimstead, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 00:58 (twelve years ago)

dog laton comvinced me.
I lived in mistake.Fuck You VU.

nostormo, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 01:01 (twelve years ago)

It's one thing if people need to learn the historical/cultural context of a piece of music. Any demands for explanation beyond that... seems to be in opposition to much of the thrill of music entails.

Yeah. I liked the velvet underground from the first listen (VU & Nico when I was 16) and it was just: sound-wave into my ears and everything blew up. I knew little about them apart from the name and a bit about Andy Warhol at the time.

If I hadn't had that instant hit reaction, I don't think I'd like them at all. If a music is only interesting in theory, or only after analysis, that puts it down one level for me.

It's the same for Erik Satie for me.

But, none of this holds up if someone doesn't get the rush from the sound.

cardamon, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 02:44 (twelve years ago)

I dislike the basic idea of 'Bands you HAVE to listen to!' also and these often get promoted in that way

cardamon, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 02:48 (twelve years ago)

yeah, especially since that sort of attitude often comes with lots of ethnocentric assumptions, namely that rock music is at the center of the musical universe.

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 13 November 2013 02:55 (twelve years ago)

ethnocentric and just plain narrow-minded

flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Wednesday, 13 November 2013 02:55 (twelve years ago)

Yup.

VU also pushed me away from rockist ideas and into popism, I think having listened to them and then looked into the story of how the records were produced, one can't seriously use the adjective 'manufactured' as a negative. (Personally, Nico made me like Blondie which made like Madonna)

cardamon, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 03:04 (twelve years ago)

White Light/White Heat sounds great on my car speakers.

Tip from Tae Kwon Do: (crüt), Wednesday, 13 November 2013 03:14 (twelve years ago)

cardamon socl

buzza, Wednesday, 13 November 2013 08:04 (twelve years ago)

VU's magic for me lies in the atmosphere their songs evoke: strange times, strange places, strange frames of mind...but always accompanied with very down-to-earth human feeling. It's like you're getting transported somewhere and sinking into your heart at the same time.

There's nothing unusual about the fact that they don't charm everyone, because that "atmosphere" is a fragile, tenuous thing, and depends as much on what the listener brings by way of projection and expectation as on the sound the stylus picks up. That expectation in turn is also shaped by what else you've listened to. When I first heard VU, my diet consisted mostly of hard 70s rock and punk. I had just never heard anything like them before, so the impact was forceful, and those first impressions have a way of lingering.

never have i been a blue calm sea (collardio gelatinous), Wednesday, 13 November 2013 17:29 (twelve years ago)


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