I think of In the Aeroplane as more of a selection from...ugh I forget the name of the bar, on 5th ave, same owner as Boat but older?
Boat had a few mix CD-rs of mine in the jukebox thanks to bartender Tony. So if you ever heard Sparks or Klein + MBO in there that was me.
― dan selzer, Thursday, 16 December 2021 14:00 (four years ago)
I've never seen Irma Vep but HBO Max has it. Maybe I'll check it out this weekend.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 16 December 2021 14:06 (four years ago)
Criterion too. I saw Maggie Cheung and Olivier Assayas walking around New York once or twice. Maybe once at the Film Forum for this film and another time outside the Noho Star #OldWeirdNYC
― Santa’s Got a Brand New Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 16 December 2021 14:11 (four years ago)
"Superstar" might have its own undercurrent in addition to the lyric, what with Rita Coolidge being denied a writing credit à la "Layla," her relationship with Jim Gordon along with his later actions, and her sister Priscilla, the ex-Mrs. Booker T. Jones being the victim of a murder-suicide perpetrated by her last husband, although he wasn't famous so maybe this is a stretch.
― Santa’s Got a Brand New Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 16 December 2021 14:16 (four years ago)
Now I want to rewatch The Heroic Trio, which seems to be only available on Alamo on Demand #onemoresubscription
― Santa’s Got a Brand New Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 16 December 2021 16:40 (four years ago)
Sund4r I used to think the lyrics were trite and trivialising until I realised they came from deep empathy, an acknowledgment of the undertow women feel when they hear her story. It’s the banality of self destruction.
― assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 16 December 2021 20:04 (four years ago)
Kim's lyrics are often kind of defiantly dumb, in a smart way.
― o. nate, Thursday, 16 December 2021 20:34 (four years ago)
so are thurstons
― a (waterface), Thursday, 16 December 2021 20:51 (four years ago)
case in point:
A sieg heil-in'squirtYou're an impotent jerkYeah, a fascist twerp
[Chorus]It's the song I hate, it's the song I hate
one of my favorite Moore lyris.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 16 December 2021 20:55 (four years ago)
Feel like in "Tunic" there is some kind of unvarnished truth banality of evil thing going on.
― Santa’s Got a Brand New Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 16 December 2021 20:56 (four years ago)
Yeah Thurston does it too, but not sure he's ever penned anything like: "Goo Goo Goo/ My friend Goo / Goo Goo Goo / Talkin bout Goo"
― o. nate, Thursday, 16 December 2021 22:24 (four years ago)
Because of this board I downloaded every album after Washing Machine I had never heard and spent today listening. I started chronologically with A Thousand Leaves. 'Hoarfrost' has to be one of more beautiful songs I've heard by them. 'Karen Koltrane' and 'Snare, Girl' were the other highlights. I listened to the whole album twice. Really different tone and sound from what I remember of the DCG records. I was surprised by 'Hits Of Sunshine (For Allen Ginsberg)' they actually got funky? Next was NYC Ghosts & Flowers and it was just ok, aside from the opening song I think it's the weakest album I've heard so far, I'll have to listen again. I think these days I prefer mellow Sonic Youth. Tomorrow is Murray Street, Sonic Nurse and Rather Ripped. I have a long drive out to a remote site for work and I'm excited to soundtrack the south Texas desert with Sonic Youth.
― JacobSanders, Friday, 17 December 2021 00:12 (four years ago)
If you like mellow SY you are going to love Murray St and Nurse, is my guess. Late period masterpieces for me.
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 17 December 2021 00:15 (four years ago)
Yep. Hoarfrost + Murray St + (most of) Nurse are where it's at.Murray St is so linked to a time and place for me. Must have listened only to that for 6 months. Didn't hit as hard when I recently put it on for the first time since
― licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Friday, 17 December 2021 10:05 (four years ago)
"Hoarfrost" persuaded me to give the rest of SY's catalog a go way back in '98 on hearing it on my college radio station.
Still my favorite Ranaldo jam.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 17 December 2021 10:28 (four years ago)
ATL has, over the years, slowly made its way into my personal pantheon of great SY albums.
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 17 December 2021 11:01 (four years ago)
I did love them live in Dublin in 98 which was the last time i saw them. Tracks from A thousand Leaves sounding like Melody laughter VU and all like that.
― Stevolende, Friday, 17 December 2021 11:02 (four years ago)
That tour was the last time I saw them too, I think in Philly or DC. Shoulda seen them again.
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 17 December 2021 11:31 (four years ago)
I knew somebody at the time, a long term fan, who dissed and dismissed the 98 tour but at the time I had only heard teh Dublin show which I actually went to the bother of trying to get a live tape of the next day or whenever i was in Dublin next. recordings from taht year have appeared on Dime over the last couple of months . I relistened to Dublin which the upper had said wasn't great sound., Did sound pretty good to me. & haven't listened to others that I d/lded so haven't compared it.
― Stevolende, Friday, 17 December 2021 12:03 (four years ago)
maybe i've mentioned this, but I saw this LA Thousand Leaves show (https://sonicyouth.bandcamp.com/album/live-in-los-angeles-1998) and at the time dissed and dismissed it (at least a little bit). I was 19 and it was clearly over my head. after hearing the recording many years later, it became one of my favorite SY releases ever. it's amazing.
― tylerw, Friday, 17 December 2021 15:06 (four years ago)
I saw them on the tours for ATL (in Toronto, with the exact same tracklist as that LA gig iirc), NYC G&F, and Murray Street. ATL might have been the least interesting of the three, as they mostly just played the album, but I still had a magical time, although I know several people found it disappointing. CCMC, a long-running "experimental jerk-off band" as per TM (incl John Oswald, Michael Snow, and Paul Dutton) opened and were fantastic, if lost on a portion of the crowd.
― treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Friday, 17 December 2021 15:25 (four years ago)
Tomorrow is Murray Street, Sonic Nurse and Rather Ripped. I have a long drive out to a remote site for work and I'm excited to soundtrack the south Texas desert with Sonic Youth.
Tomorrow is gonna be a good day for you.
NYCGAF is a notoriously divisive record, but I think the title track is Lee's best outing as beat-poet/noiser hybrid. The turn towards black noise right at the end is thrilling, and Lee's chronicle of New York shedding its poetic dirt and tramping the artists who made it what it is into the dirt really builds tension.
― Enjoy the brighter sounds of Analog on CD (stevie), Friday, 17 December 2021 15:30 (four years ago)
My first SY show was on the Washing Machine tour and it was just ridiculously sublime. Epid Diamond Sea! Murray Street and Nurse-era shows were excellent too. I was always less enthused if the show was more nostalgia-based.
― Enjoy the brighter sounds of Analog on CD (stevie), Friday, 17 December 2021 15:32 (four years ago)
Washing Machine tour was my first SY show too, it was insane.
CCMC, a long-running "experimental jerk-off band" as per TM (incl John Oswald, Michael Snow, and Paul Dutton) opened and were fantastic, if lost on a portion of the crowd.
opener for my ATL show was Jim O'Rourke, who played "Women of the World" for 30 minutes. It was great! I wish I could find a tape of that ...
― tylerw, Friday, 17 December 2021 15:34 (four years ago)
Somehow, the last time I saw them was on the Dirty tour, in December 1992 (that week I saw Pavement + Sonic Youth on the 1st, Black Crowes on the 2nd and Faith No More on the 7th, all in the same venue) :-)
― StanM, Friday, 17 December 2021 15:44 (four years ago)
(oh yeah, L7 opened for FNM)
― StanM, Friday, 17 December 2021 15:48 (four years ago)
(Manic Street Preachers opened for Black Crowes!? I COMPLETELY forgot about that - anyway, nevermind, this is the SY thread)
― StanM, Friday, 17 December 2021 15:49 (four years ago)
NYCGAF is to my ears their weakest between 1990 and 2000 but not at all terrible; it's vaporous where ATL had at least some grounding. I'm not sure why such an okay album proved so divisive.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 17 December 2021 15:57 (four years ago)
The last time I saw them was in 2002 at The Metro for the Murray Street tour, the night after the show they put up on bandcamp. Honestly thought the show I was at had the better setlist:
Kotton KrownBull in the HeatherThe Empty PageRain on TinSkip TracerPlastic SunRadical Adults Lick Godhead StyleKaren RevisitedSchizophreniaShadow of a DoubtWhite KrossSympathy for the Strawberry
Encore:Disconnection NoticeKool Thing
Encore 2:Tom Violence
― a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 17 December 2021 16:07 (four years ago)
Okay looking again at the previous night's setlist maybe not "better", but I had so much fun at my show.
I'm not sure why such an okay album proved so divisive.
I think the prevailing wisdom was that Goo and Dirty copped mainstream moves, Jetset Trash & No Star (which I also love) seemed a reaction to that trend and the often thrilling and abstruse ATL confirmed that it was Goo and Dirty that were the anomalies and that SY actually weren't going to play what Royal Trux described as"music for teens on skateboards in malls".
― Enjoy the brighter sounds of Analog on CD (stevie), Friday, 17 December 2021 16:10 (four years ago)
ATL is the point where the industry and their new fans had to accept that pop SY was not going to be on the agenda anymore.
― Enjoy the brighter sounds of Analog on CD (stevie), Friday, 17 December 2021 16:11 (four years ago)
But also it arrived at a point where the press, in the UK at least, turned away from experimental stuff, still high off the fleeting profits of Britpop, etc.
In retrospect the end was clearly in sight last time I saw them in 2010. They threw everything out from the major label era. I mean, this was the setlist:
CandleThe Sprawl'Cross the BreezeCatholic BlockStereo SanctityEric's TripDeath Valley '69Shadow of a DoubtHey JoniThe WonderHyperstationShaking Hell--White Kross
― Position Position, Friday, 17 December 2021 17:07 (four years ago)
I never really got that "prevailing wisdom". Dirty was the first I heard so that may have slanted my pov but that one and Goo don't seem that much poppier than Sister and Daydream Nation (on which they fully embraced rock song structures and beats) to me. Certainly not like the mainstream pop/rock of 1990-92 (the era of "More Than Words" and "Life Is a Highway"; maybe you could argue that there are some more hard rock/metal moves, in keeping with the popularity of GnR and Metallica...?) Jet Set also doesn't any less pop to me; if anything, there are a few songs like "Waist" that seem to come even closer to being straightforward pop-punk; it seems like possibly the least ambitious to me. Not really sure what would make latter-day singles like the "Superstar" cover, single edit of "Sunday", "Empty Page", or "Incinerate" less 'pop' than "Dirty Boots" or "100%", other than the relative popularity of alternative/indie rock at different times.
Tbc, I do think the SYR series marks an obvious move towards greater interest in improv and avant-garde composition, and I get why ATL is more sprawling and thorny than Goo, but the mix of rock tunes with expanded song structures, dissonant tunings, and guitar noise actually seems pretty consistent through the DGC albums.
― treat the gelignite tenderly for me (Sund4r), Friday, 17 December 2021 17:25 (four years ago)
Am I alone in finding Dirty one of their most disappointing and boring?
― assert (MatthewK), Friday, 17 December 2021 18:36 (four years ago)
I saw them three times. The first time was at a WFMU benefit at the Ritz where the lineup was Love Child, Gumball, Dim Stars, Sonic Youth and Painkiller. I had been a Sonic Youth fan for a few years but was about to "progress" to being more into John Zorn's Painkiller. I barely remember Sonic Youth. Now of course I'd rather listen to Sonic Youth at their worst than Painkiller. The only other times I saw them were 1000 years later in the mccarren pool in brooklyn. Once with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and once with the "Slits." (I don't think it was actually the slits but Ari and friends?)
I had to email Byron Coley to get Thurston to put me on the guest list to the show with the YYYs.
― dan selzer, Friday, 17 December 2021 18:38 (four years ago)
xp I believe so, yes. I love it.
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Friday, 17 December 2021 18:42 (four years ago)
I like Sister and Daydream Nation a lot, and Murray Street and Sonic Nurse even more, but I've been catching up with the records in between and have found them all disappointing for different reasons (haven't heard A Thousand Leaves or NYC Ghosts yet). There's a couple of good songs on each but I feel there's a lot of confusion and trying to do things that don't come naturally.
― Halfway there but for you, Friday, 17 December 2021 19:13 (four years ago)
Today was fun listening! Murray didn't really stand out too much until the last three songs, 'Plastic Sun' to 'Sympathy For The Strawberry' to 'Street Sauce' was reminded me of what I loved about seeing SY live and maybe the best of Kim's songs I've heard on these later records, until I heard 'I Love You Golden Blue' from Sonic Nurse. There's something bright about the sound of Murray St and even Sonic Nurse, almost a California feel, esp. 'Peace Attack.' Wasn't Jim O'Rourke a member/producing them? I'm not sure if I can hear his influence, maybe that's the sunshine I heard? Then I listened to Rather Ripped which I think next to ATL is my favorite of these albums, On 'Incinerate' I hear everything I loved about Daydream Nation and even Sister distilled into almost pop. I think I've listened to enough SY for awhile. I finished the drive home listening to Bad Moon Rising, which was my first album to buy. and I still get lost in it.
― JacobSanders, Friday, 17 December 2021 23:55 (four years ago)
After spending two days with these albums I had sort of dismissed, I think they are one of the greatest bands of my generation. The guitar tones on Rather Ripped, ATL and Sonic Nurse still recall the same sounds I first fell in love with the band for but are refined but more austere, no one does it in a rock song like this. There's beautiful moments on these records I wasn't expecting.
― JacobSanders, Saturday, 18 December 2021 00:10 (four years ago)
i saw them on the EVOL tour with My Bloody Valentine supporting.
setlist -
Marilyn Moore The World Looks Red Star Power Death to Our Friends Shadow of a Doubt Tom Violence White Kross Shaking Hell Expressway to Yr Skull The Burning Spear
And then twice on the Sister tour with Firehose supporting.
Schizophrenia(I Got a) Catholic BlockTuff GnarlPipeline/Kill TimeExpressway to Yr SkullPacific Coast HighwayKotton KrownStereo SanctityBeauty Lies in the EyeTom ViolenceWhite KrossHotwire My HeartBrother JamesI Wanna Be Your Dog
And then twice on the Daydream Nation tour with Mudhoney supporting.
Brother JamesThe WonderHyperstationEric's TripCandleKissabilityThe Sprawl'Cross the BreezeTeen Age RiotHey JoniWhite KrossEliminator Jr.Silver RocketExpressway to Yr Skull
and then one more time when they did the Don't Look Back: Daydream Nation tour which is the show Lance Bangs filmed.
i still kick myself that i didn't get it together to travel to London to see them on the Bad Moon Rising tour.
― stirmonster, Saturday, 18 December 2021 02:12 (four years ago)
Dirty was my first SY but these days I can’t listen to it really. It’s just …. too long, too much. It could use a trim.
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 18 December 2021 02:43 (four years ago)
I saw them:
1. Lollapalooza ‘95/ early August, West Virginia2. October ‘95/ something ballroom, NYC3. Late summer ‘98, somewhere in DC or Philly
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 18 December 2021 02:45 (four years ago)
If I was editing Dirty down, the cuts would need to be near the middle. Wouldn’t cut a single Kim lead song.
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 18 December 2021 03:17 (four years ago)
Scratch that “Orange Rolls …” could go.
“Theresa’s Sound World” could go, too.
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 18 December 2021 03:19 (four years ago)
xps yeah O’Rourke was a member for Nurse. I saw them at the Enmore in Sydney on that tour, the single best sounding concert I’ve been to. Absolutely beautiful record too.
― assert (matttkkkk), Saturday, 18 December 2021 03:26 (four years ago)
1. Lollapalooza ‘95/ early August, West Virginia2. October ‘95/ something ballroom, NYC
I also saw them at Lolla and then (I thought) the Washing Machine tour... but checking this website, it was technically the next tour, in April '96 (apparently it was their Last known performance of "No Queen Blues," whatever that song is)
― katebishopfan616 (morrisp), Saturday, 18 December 2021 03:43 (four years ago)
I saw them only once, in Seattle in a stadium opening for Neil Young in 91(?) Wish I had clearer memories of the show
― covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 18 December 2021 04:30 (four years ago)
I saw them in 1986, Evol tour, Firehose opening
Marilyn MooreTom ViolenceWhite KrossShadow of a DoubtDeath to Our FriendsSecret GirlGreen LightBrother JamesExpressway to Yr SkullStar PowerThe Red & the Black
(the last an encore jam with Firehose)
Still what I'd consider one of the best shows I've ever seen. I may have been on psychedelic drugs, but still. I saw them again in 1995 in their peak mallrat days and it was fine but not nearly the same.
― Josefa, Saturday, 18 December 2021 05:17 (four years ago)