The cover for Billy Corgan's new album...

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed

....is so attrocious that I thought it deserved its own thread.

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0009G018Q.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 26 May 2005 23:54 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm loving the songs on it (the four that I've heard). Don't dampen my enthusiasm!

However, I agree that the cover is shit. Sometimes, Billy makes it so difficult for me to like him.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:02 (eighteen years ago) link

Alex, I'm sure you noticed the Kaballah bracelet (as pointed out in another thread)...that's the small little detail that makes it all the more horrifying!

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:03 (eighteen years ago) link

Photo's actually been posted on the album thread itself. But if you want to share. ;-)

It is ugly but you know, gotta give him this much -- after he shaved his head ten years ago I just thought it was a fad, but by god if he hasn't relentlessly kept that look since. It's like his anti-Robert Smith look.

Can't wait for the album myself. :-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:04 (eighteen years ago) link

Pretty ambivalent about this. I have no expectations for it to be good.

Anthony Lombardi (CCPO), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:18 (eighteen years ago) link

Everytime I think I'll be able to stop hating Corgan, he goes and proves me wrong.

Johnny Fever (johnny fever), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:27 (eighteen years ago) link

"Hold still, Billy. I've got this great idea, but it involves getting a close-up of your winestain here..."

Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:40 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm really curious, is that what his hand actually looks like all the time, and if so, what the fuck happened to it?

Al (sitcom), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Birthmark. He's always had that massive birthmark, and it provided the name of his first band, the Marked (as the other bandmembers also had birthmarks).

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:45 (eighteen years ago) link

he looks like a precog

http://www.cinefex.com/backissues/number91.jpg

[that bastard] jaxon (jaxon), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:46 (eighteen years ago) link

after he shaved his head ten years ago I just thought it was a fad, but by god if he hasn't relentlessly kept that look since

Maybe he was just trying to get the jump on male pattern baldness.

What exactly happened between Corgan and the other folks in Zwan? He speaks with a fair amount of vitriol about them in some recent mag (RS? EW?)

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:48 (eighteen years ago) link

C'mon, Alex. There's a cover connection here, right under our noses, but I can't come up with it right now. What is it?

Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:52 (eighteen years ago) link

I like it.

Curt1s St3ph3ns, Friday, 27 May 2005 00:56 (eighteen years ago) link

it reminds me of that annie lenox album.

jonathan - stl (jonathan - stl), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:57 (eighteen years ago) link

or lennox*


bare

jonathan - stl (jonathan - stl), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:58 (eighteen years ago) link

Paste magazine interview:

http://www.pastemagazine.com/action/article?article_id=1742

In the big book of Rock Star career templates, there’s a special entry for the middle-aged artist who finds himself standing in the wreckage of the band that made his name, shading his eyes from the harsh glare of public attention, looking for a trail that bypasses the wilderness of VH1-trivia purgatory. On this page you’ll find an advisory checklist of actions said rock star should most definitely avoid, a minefield inventory of pitfalls and rock clichés proven through decades of music history to be the quickest way for an artist to slide headfirst into obsolescence. The text’s skull-and-crossbones header reads: “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here, for ye shall be playing your greatest hits at state fairs in no time.”

In the four years since Smashing Pumpkins hung up their alterna-goth jerseys and went their separate ways, Billy Corgan appears to be following this cautionary blueprint like he’s carrying a well-worn copy in his wallet. As devoted fans and casual observers watch in respective worry and scorn, Corgan has seemingly made every eye-rolling move in the book, traveling from Zwan’s rapid flame-out through a poetry collection (2004’s Blinking With Fists) and, recently, venomous Internet blogging, only to land on the inevitable solo career. To the delight of pigeonholers everywhere, it looks like he’s made the expectedly smooth segue from eccentric, prolific, megalomaniac genius to pretentious, bitter celebrity on a downward trajectory.

And yet something about this portrayal doesn’t feel right; it seems too easy. While Corgan’s post-Pumpkins activities have followed a familiar five-step program of recovery from breakup trauma, his attitude in every endeavor appears laced with a shrewd perspective on exactly what he’s doing, a confrontational spirit that undermines the potential caricature his actions threaten to draw.

“At points when I do say to myself things like ‘I’m going to do a poetry book,’ there’s a voice that crops up in my head that says ‘you’re probably going to take shit for this,’” Corgan explains, “‘but you wouldn’t be the walking cliché that you are if you ultimately cared what people think.’ Yes, the facts present these very cogent pictures of ambition, crass decisions, public pronouncements, but it’s the process that forces you into that. As a musician you just want to do what you want to do.”

The artist who deftly soundtracked countless teenagers’ tortured ’90s survival, spent approximately two years wearing a shirt proclaiming him a “ZERO,” and made perhaps the most notorious symbolic hairstyle change in alternative-rock history, now sits across from me in an absurdly incongruous setting—an old-fashioned pancake house in the bricks-and-Borders suburbia of Highland Park, Ill. He’s even more translucently pale than his MTV history suggests, but Corgan in the flesh is nowhere near the ghoul you’d expect from the footage—his floppy Cubs hat immediately unravels 15 years of Vampire King image-making.

Befitting the sleepy charm of the fairly ritzy northern Chicago burg where we chat, Corgan comes off as a man at peace with his surroundings, even when bristling at public suppositions that have nagged him for years and presumptuous interviewers who misinterpret the musical focus of his upcoming solo debut, TheFutureEmbrace. “When I was 25 I felt I had nothing to lose and I made some pretty good art. Now I think I’m back to that point, but it’s a different kind of nothing to lose. Back then it was nothing to lose because I was a piece of shit and nobody cared about me, so what did it matter if I died in a bloody heap of pedals and cords and wires. Now I have nothing to lose because my life does matter, I’m not going to go with the program any more, it’s not interesting to me.”

Though Corgan is still prone to launch a trademark flurry of verbal punches at his favorite targets—former bandmates, uncooperative record labels and the marketing machines of contemporary music—each rant is delivered in an even tone, with a slight grin belying his awareness that he’s giving the tape recorder what it craves. “You have to understand that literally everything I’ve done publicly has caused some sort of lightning-rod reaction,” he confides, and though he repeatedly denies worrying about the public perception of his actions, he doesn’t shy away from opportunities to set the record straight. It’s clear that if the mid-career checklist is indeed buried in his pocket, he’s not just unwittingly checking boxes but actively subverting expectations.

1. Hastily form a post-breakup band.
From the moment the last distorted note of the Smashing Pumpkins’ career trailed off at the end of the band’s marathon 2003 farewell show at the Cabaret Metro in Chicago, the countdown clock began ticking toward what everyone thought would be a fast start to the Billy Corgan solo career. After all, Corgan had long been regarded a solo artist in band’s clothing, reportedly tracking the lion’s share of guitar and bass parts himself while handling 99 percent of songwriting duties. To lock himself in a studio and begin work on The Billy Corgan Experience seemed the next logical step.

Instead, Corgan juked everyone by recruiting a new set of collaborators: “I’ve never really wanted to make a solo record,” he says now, impending releases aside. “I never felt it was necessary. I liked playing in a band; I think that was shown by the fact that I formed another band right after the Pumpkins.” Debuting almost exactly a year after the Pumpkins split, Zwan hit the scene as a supergroup for members of the Sub Pop Singles Club, featuring indie-rock Hall of Famers Matt Sweeney (Chavez) and David Pajo (Slint, Tortoise, Papa M) alongside Corgan’s loyal drummer Jimmy Chamberlin.

While the alternative all-star lineup was reminiscent of certain classic-rock predecessors’ attempts to delay going solo—Clapton & Blind Faith, Crosby & CSN, et al—Corgan insists it wasn’t a conscious effort to draft musicians with history, describing it as more of a domino process of indie-rock networking. Ultimately, however, it was the underground loyalties of Zwan’s component parts that broke up the band, according to an obviously still-miffed Corgan.

“They proved me right, which is that the whole indie thing is just a pose. I can’t say that about everybody, but our general feeling in the Pumpkins always was that people took the indie route because deep down they knew they didn’t have the talent to make it on the mainstream level. And those people proved to me, that deep down they know they don’t have the talent, or the focus, or the true love of people to want to really get out there and try and connect with people. It’s really about them. And fundamentally Jimmy and I disagreed with them.

“If you’re going to play music at a high level to a large audience, it can’t really be about you. You have to make it seem like it’s about you, but it has to really be about others, it’s really about sharing. And their indie-cred mentality really is about, ‘What’s it got to do with me?’ and ‘Can I find people who agree with me, who think like me, who dress like me, smoke pot like me?’ They’re just assholes. It’s simple. I could go on with a thousand stories, but you can put that in big capital letters: THEY’RE JUST ASSHOLES. They really didn’t care. They didn’t really care about the music, they didn’t really care about the fans … They really just want to live like pieces of shit and live their little weird creepy lives. End of story.”

Then again, Corgan’s fanbase was hardly clamoring for Zwan to have a run as lengthy as the Pumpkins’. Zwan’s Mary, Star of the Sea sold disappointingly despite a strong MTV and rock-radio push, and critically it was considered less than a complete return to form. With a three-guitar attack and a sunnier tone to Corgan’s songwriting, Zwan seemed less a fresh new project than a reaction to the popularity-shedding latter days of Smashing Pumpkins, which found the band exploring increasingly dark territory and Corgan incorporating more and more electronic textures.

Today Corgan admits regretting the Zwan era. “I’m glad that people got something out of it, but it was a total waste of my time. But maybe it was something I needed to do, to figure out there were things I cared about, or to appreciate the band that I was in.” Over in less than a year, Zwan dissolved when bassist Paz Lenchantin left with Pajo to return to his Papa M projects. Once again, Billy Corgan had lost his band.

2. Commence solo career!
There’s one thing Billy Corgan and I agree on regarding TheFutureEmbrace; namely that it returns to a set of formative influences mostly lacking in the Pumpkins’ sound. “I was very into ’80s New Wave and all that. … Certain things come back around, and that feeling has just come back around. In some ways the Pumpkins’ wall of guitars was a betrayal of what we originally were—the sort of more Cure-ish, gothy thing. We went with the rock and it worked out fine, but this is really closer to the sound that I like.”

That sound was occasionally hinted at in the Smashing Pumpkins catalog: “1979,” the self-described “total rip-off of New Order,” and Adore’s keyboard and programming dalliances. But never has Corgan engulfed his music so deeply in the sound of his high-school years, emulating bands that defined the intersection of New Wave and synth-pop like Joy Division, Echo & the Bunnymen and Depeche Mode. Listening to the album, it struck me as his least guitar-oriented work to date.

BILLY: “I totally disagree.”
ME: “Well, certainly you’re taking a different approach to guitar with this record …”
BILLY: “Well, yeah, there’s only one guitar. I’m trying to make one guitar sound as good as one guitar needs to sound. … I think the guitar is the centerpiece of the album.”
ME: “Okay then, you can at least grant me that TheFutureEmbrace contains more keyboards than usual …”
BILLY: “Honestly, it’s the same amount of keyboards. There were plenty of keyboards on the Zwan album, but people wouldn’t know that because I hid them.”
ME: “So the keyboards are more of a focus on the solo record than on the Zwan album?”
BILLY: “I don’t think so.”

So don’t take my word for it, but TheFutureEmbrace sounds to me like the album Corgan wanted to make with Adore, a love letter to the groups that defined college rock in the ’80s. Whether starring guitars or keyboards, it finds Corgan relying less on the arena-rock dynamics of the Pumpkins and Zwan and concentrating more on atmospherics and a subtle melancholy—what he describes as “this cold, grey, steely thing.” For the first time, Corgan’s music even sounds close to dance-floor compatible, the lack of a live drummer pushing him toward more kinetic beats on songs like “Mina Loy (M.O.H)” and “A100.”

“I think I’ve matured to the point where I’m really not thinking about what other people are doing,” Corgan responds when asked how the album reflects his current influences. “I’m lucky enough to have enough talent to fake certain things, and there are certain times in my life when I faked my way through a feeling or a sound because it was something I wanted, but it wasn’t necessarily how I felt or who I was. This [album] is a more accurate representation of who I am, vis-a-vis the sound and the songs I’m singing.”

But, remembering LL Cool J’s timeless request, don’t call it a comeback.

“That’s kind of a rude question. … I see people ask this of other artists, and they generally have the same stock answer: ‘I never left.’ I mean, I’ve consistently put out music pretty much every two years for the last 15 years, not to mention all the extra work, b-sides and things like that. Comebacks occur because artists make great work. I could very easily look back and be pissy and say—and I did at the time—‘Oh, the fans didn’t get my Adore album; the fans didn’t embrace my arty-rock version of the band with MACHINA.’ But when you look back, the best work sold, and it sold in great quantities. I don’t feel I have anything to prove. I proved that I could do it; [then] I proved that I couldn’t handle it. Having gone through all of that, I’m just going to do my thing, and hopefully be able to do it as much as I want, and there will be room for me. And if I don’t make good enough music they’ll squeeze me out.”

3. Get crotchety about the past.
Here’s a point on which Corgan’s already got a head-start, since throughout his career he’s almost become as well-known for his venomous rants as for his music. As the above comments regarding Zwan’s less than amicable breakup illustrate—age, perspective and the chamomile tea he sipped during our conversation have done little to blunt Corgan’s serrated analysis of those who’ve wronged him along the way.

“I kind of have to ask myself what my karma is, because I see other artists that get a free pass. They don’t get the critical judgment and the questioning that I do. I’ve kind of come to enjoy it; I don’t feel the need to be confrontational. But at the same time, I’m not going to bend because someone has a weaker concept of life than me.”

This attitude fuels Corgan’s disgust with the music industry, whose capitalist machinations he seems to disdain as much as he does the money-phobic underground. “I think we need to accept that rock in and of itself has been taken over by pop thinking. If a young band is getting high rotation on MTV, chances are they’re not an underground phenomenon, they’re a marketing moment. It’s more a statement of our culture than it is about our musical culture. We’ve moved away from a substantive desire to have real things, and seem to be more interested in some sort of Reality TV version of reality. The impression of reality is more important than reality.”

Corgan is reluctant to play a role in this game, brushing aside questions about sales and promotions by saying, “I’m not a marketing vision. Look at me! No hair, crooked teeth, bad attitude—that’s not supposed to work. … You couldn’t dream me up.” But clearly the wounds from the Pumpkins’ final days at Virgin Records still haven’t completely scabbed over.

“My motivation for leaking MACHINA was that the record company had basically given up on the band for good and considered us dead and gone,” Corgan remembers about the free Internet distribution of the group’s final album. “I thought there was an opportunity, because the band was doing so well on tour, to go ahead and bring this other work out. But [Virgin] was so emotionally over the band that they didn’t even want another record that could’ve sold 500,000 copies. … It was literally punitive.”

But despite all the lingering angst and sore feelings, Corgan seems only mildly perturbed as he airs these fervent opinions. Rather than sounding like a scorned artist lashing out at the compulsory business end of his chosen profession, Corgan’s complaints appear to be less the result of personal injury, and more the blunt viewpoint of someone who’s sold enough records to afford the luxury of staying above the fray. The notion that his outspokenness is coming from a place of honesty, rather than bitterness, is supported by an endearing tendency to shine an equally harsh light on himself.

“I’ve completely wiped out and been brave enough to admit I wiped out, where most people would sort of airbrush themselves, sail through it, and pretend they don’t know what you’re talking about.”

4. Start writing poetry.
As part of the confessional process, Corgan has made one of the most dreaded rock-star moves: the crossover to the written word. Ever since Bob Dylan scored a book contract and threw together the unreadable Tarantula, musicians have accepted the flattering overtures of eager publishers with dollar signs in their eyes, attempting to expand their lyric sheets into hardcover material. Awaiting such releases is an almost knee-jerk critical assault, as self-appointed literary protectors histrionically attempt to guard their turf against the presumptuous invader.

Corgan’s poetry book, Blinking with Fists, was greeted with just such a reaction after its release last fall. Reviewing Corgan’s live reading at the Chicago Poetry Center, Chicagopoetry.com editor C.J. Laity called the work “forced, sophomoric attempts at creating what he must have thought poetry is supposed to sound like.” But other observers disagreed, such as Jeff Vrabel of the Chicago Sun-Times praising the poems as being “full of the regretful melancholy of his music and the rhythmic, angular wordplay of his best Pumpkins lyrics.”

Certainly, Corgan’s fans responded to his jump across media boundaries, pushing Blinking with Fists to a high debut on the New York Times bestseller list. For his own part, Corgan has let the snipes and tomatoes roll off his back, and seems more determined than ever to moonlight in typing. Now serializing on an Internet near you: The Billy Corgan Autobiography.

“I’ve never really told my own story,” Corgan says of the project. “I’ve told a lot of stories, but I’ve never told The Story. And I’m sure I’ll leave things out, and forget things, but for the most part you’re going to get The Story, what I actually think happened to me.”

Already underway on his website (www.billycorgan.com), the first entries are somewhat scattershot, non-linear remembrances jump-cutting from playing shows with his first band, The Marked, to the troubled circumstances recording Adore, to his earliest memory of playing with a children’s record player while his parents fought. In talking about the crooked timelines, Corgan makes the project sound both meticulously planned and without-a-net spontaneous.

“It’ll all make sense in the end,” he promises. “I know where the destination point is, but I’m not sure how I’ll get there. I’m literally writing these, editing them and putting them on the Internet immediately, so I’m winging it.”

I ask if it scares him.

“Yeah, it totally scares me. I’m in new territory here.”

What’s definitely known is that toes will be stepped on, as Corgan has previously used his website to blame the Pumpkins’ demise on guitarist James Iha and called his former bassist D’arcy Wretzky a “mean-spirited drug addict who refused to get help.” But when asked about the project’s potential fallout, Corgan assures, “The intention is not to be malicious or cause harm at all. I’m constantly making sure that it strikes me as true. [Sometimes] I’d really rather tell another story, and I’d like you to believe that I’m the genius behind everything that ever happened, but it’s not true. I have to give credit where credit is due.”

Corgan’s literary aspirations don’t stop at poetry and non-fiction, either. Following up the tantalizing book-flap tidbit from Blinking with Fists, Corgan also has a “spacey” novel on the (distant) horizon. “Writing’s the same as music—you have to find your own voice,” he says. “I feel like I’m halfway there. It’s one thing to write poetry—you can ‘miss’ a poem. You can have a poem B-side. But as far as a novel, it can’t be a B-side. It has to be an A-side, and it has to be an A-side for like 300 pages.”

5. Get born-again.
First of all, for the record, Billy says, “I was raised a Christian, but I wouldn’t call myself a Christian now.” But there’s no denying that the tone of Corgan’s Biblical imagery has shifted from the tormented music of Smashing Pumpkins to the considerably more optimistic tenor of Zwan and TheFutureEmbrace. It’s a long way from “God is empty / Just like me” to covering the hymn “Jesus, I My Cross Have Taken,” and from declaring, “The world is a vampire” to promising, “We can change the world,” but Corgan sees it all as a logical continuum.

“I think when I was younger it was easier to focus on the negative, nihilist vision,” Corgan says, “Zeroes and black death. This is sort of picking up on the other half of the body, which is God and white light. I saw somebody wrote online that ‘he’s found Jesus,’ but no, I didn’t find Jesus. He’s been there the whole time.”

But Corgan’s faith doesn’t ?t easily into the mold of the Christian rocker or the caricature of the celebrity grasping at a shortcut to spiritualism. “My version, of course, is not this flag-waving, let’s all get on the Jesus train and ride out of Hell. I’m not that kind of guy. It’s an embrace that life is good, worth living and yeah, it’s not easy, but there are more pluses than minuses.”

The backlash against rockers daring to discuss issues of religion is well-documented—from the turned-up noses of certain indie factions against everything from the within-the-church criticism of artists like Pedro the Lion and Sufjan Stevens, to the mockery of stars like Korn guitarist Head who undergo deep conversions from rock hedonism to a pious lifestyle. As usual, Billy Corgan doesn’t care much about any potential fan aversion and doesn’t mince words in talking about it. “I’m not going to just get with the Paris Hilton program of ‘let’s pretend we’re all gonna live forever.’ If I’m accused of anything, what are you accusing me of? Thinking positively? Sorry, f---ing kill me.”

For those who still can’t reconcile a peaceful, suburban, spiritual Billy with the angst-driven poster child for Infinite Sadness, he recommends looking back at the subtext of his earlier work. “It wasn’t a demonstrable need to say, ‘I’m so miserable, look at me.’ It was, ‘look at me, I’m miserable, but I’m trying to figure out a way to get out of the hole.’ That, even in and of itself, has a positivity to it because it’s hopeful, it’s not death, it isn’t nihilism. There’s actually a light at the end of the tunnel. Maybe now, I’m just further along towards the end of the tunnel. I don’t feel lost, I never felt lost.”

So if you’re keeping score at home, Billy Corgan is not making a comeback. He didn’t form Zwan to surround himself with celebrities or to delay the inevitable solo album. TheFutureEmbrace is not a statement of independence from his former groups, but an attempt to get at a true musical representation of himself. Billy Corgan isn’t growing crotchety with age, he’s just holding steady to the same brutal honesty he’s always maintained. He’s going to write poetry, and he doesn’t care what you think. And if you can’t handle hearing him address themes of religious faith and personal optimism, he’s not interested in your backlash either.

The characteristics that have made Billy Corgan a musical luminary to many are the same features that fuel other listeners’ obsessive dislike: endless confidence and a willingness to speak his mind. At this pivotal point in his career, Corgan is relying on both of these traits to protect him from the clichéd booby traps that have claimed so many others in his position. Faced with a junction that leads one way to a career of extended vitality, and the other to the classic-rock bin, he’s just trying to turn off his second-guessing machinery and get back to the unconscious mind.

“It’s the spark you’re obsessed with, how did I create this thing that still has energy? How do I get back to the spark? How do I recreate the spark so it keeps firing? There was a point in my life where everything that came out of me was like ‘boom boom boom boom’—I didn’t even think about it. And now I look back and say, ‘how did I do that?’ I once read an interview with Bob Dylan where he said ‘I had to go back in the ’70s to relearn what I used to do without thinking,’ and that’s the point I felt I was at. I knew how to make that sound, but I didn’t know how to feel it anymore where it just came out of me. It was a conscious thing, so I had to walk away from it.”

The Brainwasher (Twilight), Friday, 27 May 2005 00:58 (eighteen years ago) link

Would it have killed them to fact check just a little bit and note that the Pumpkins broke up in 2000, not 2003?

Matthew C Perpetua (inca), Friday, 27 May 2005 01:29 (eighteen years ago) link

Minor details.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 27 May 2005 01:30 (eighteen years ago) link

They really just want to live like pieces of shit and live their little weird creepy lives.

damn, hahahaha

Amon (eman), Friday, 27 May 2005 01:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Is Corgan really in a position to be calling other people "weird" and "creepy"?

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Friday, 27 May 2005 01:44 (eighteen years ago) link

He's so fucking........ ugly.

maria b (maria b), Friday, 27 May 2005 02:10 (eighteen years ago) link

And not in a rebellious way, mind you.

maria b (maria b), Friday, 27 May 2005 02:11 (eighteen years ago) link

Would it have killed them to fact check just a little bit and note that the Pumpkins broke up in 2000, not 2003?

-- Matthew C Perpetua (perpetu...), May 27th, 2005.

further complicating the timeline: "In the four years since Smashing Pumpkins hung up their alterna-goth jerseys and went their separate ways..."

Al (sitcom), Friday, 27 May 2005 02:12 (eighteen years ago) link

What a fucking tool. I'd like to be more constructive, but I don't have the words...

paulhw (paulhw), Friday, 27 May 2005 02:23 (eighteen years ago) link

That didn't work out so well.

Aaron St. John (StJohn), Friday, 27 May 2005 03:04 (eighteen years ago) link

the scariest thing about the Corgan cover is the implication is that those hands will Embrace you in the Future.

Al (sitcom), Friday, 27 May 2005 03:14 (eighteen years ago) link

Bahahahaha

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Friday, 27 May 2005 04:00 (eighteen years ago) link

TheFutureSnugglebunnies

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 27 May 2005 04:44 (eighteen years ago) link

Strike a pose!

Jockey, Friday, 27 May 2005 12:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Who'll love Aladdin Sane?

ffirehorse (firehorse), Friday, 27 May 2005 12:51 (eighteen years ago) link

One word: eww. And I never needed to know that BC shaved his pits. Gross.

Je4nne ƒur¥ (Je4nne Fury), Friday, 27 May 2005 12:56 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.gusworld.com.au/singles/getready.htm

australian woman, Friday, 27 May 2005 13:08 (eighteen years ago) link

Has anyone heard the whole thing yet? I have been completely disappointed in the stuff I've heard so far (Title track, Minah Loy, Walking Shade, Now and Then).

On a Strict El Cholo Diet (Bent Over at the Arclight), Friday, 27 May 2005 21:32 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't think that's a kabbalah center bracelet. I thought those were all bright red.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 27 May 2005 21:38 (eighteen years ago) link

Does anyone else agree that the scariest thing about this thread is the fact that somebody actually enjoyed Powder?

PB, Friday, 27 May 2005 23:08 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't think that's a kabbalah center bracelet. I thought those were all bright red.

It looked red on the picture someone posted in the album thread....hmm...maybe it's a ruse.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Friday, 27 May 2005 23:17 (eighteen years ago) link

powder, fuck... looking at that guy is fucking nauseating

Nic de Teardrop (Nicholas), Saturday, 28 May 2005 05:51 (eighteen years ago) link

twelve years pass...

new solo album out October 13th. I really like the cover! that's his son & partner. Much better than that awful FutureEmbrace cover.

http://static.stereogum.com/uploads/2017/08/Ogilala-1503408277-640x640.jpg

Ogilala

.1 Zowie
2. Processional
3. The Spaniards
4. Aeronaut
5. The Long Goodbye
6. Half-Life of an Autodidact
7. Amarinthe
8. Antietam
9. Mandaryne
10. Shiloh
11. Archer

flappy bird, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 17:29 (six years ago) link

I really like the single, beautiful arrangement & his singing is growing on me, I like the vocal melody a lot & the piano/strings remind me a lot of some of the softer stuff on MCIS.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PdZXNET88A

flappy bird, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 17:31 (six years ago) link

Was just hanging with a friend who was convinced Corgan hadn't done a thing since Zwan, that he had just retired.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:36 (six years ago) link

Your friend wasn't that far off tbh

Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:45 (six years ago) link

I told him that Tommy Lee was even briefly in the band and he thought I was kidding.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:47 (six years ago) link

looking forward to Corgan getting shit for native american appropriation there yikes

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:49 (six years ago) link

Haha god I forgot about that.

New single is... not very good. Arrangement is ok, MCIS-y, but the lyrics and especially the delivery.. Nah. And I give this guy way more credit than most.

Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:49 (six years ago) link

didn't even spell oglala right

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 19:50 (six years ago) link

Haha god I forgot about that.

New single is... not very good. Arrangement is ok, MCIS-y, but the lyrics and especially the delivery.. Nah. And I give this guy way more credit than most.

i like it more than anything he's done since Zwan. but it's all relative 😔... his voice is horrible now, but it's a better vocal take than almost anything from SP2, probably because Rick Rubin is super vocal oriented and made him sing it until he got it.... mostly right. I really love the music though, and the production.

flappy bird, Tuesday, 22 August 2017 20:04 (six years ago) link

His vocals are definitely improved but the song is a nothing.

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Tuesday, 22 August 2017 20:16 (six years ago) link

such a great show. the new album is so, so beautiful. this is exactly the context he needs to be in at 50: by himself with a piano and a guitar (and a little bit of harmonica!).

first set was the new record + "If I Were a Carpenter" by Tim Hardin

second set:

Starla
Pale Horse
Muzzle
Of a Broken Heart
Landslide
Annie-Dog
Columbus
Soma
Wish You Were Here
Drum + Fife
Winterlong
Gossamer
Stand Inside Your Love
Tonight, Tonight
---
Spaceboy
Age of Innocence
Farewell and Goodnight

flappy bird, Thursday, 19 October 2017 04:10 (six years ago) link

Oceania was the last gasp, IMO.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 06:50 (six years ago) link

Pale Horse on piano was great

flappy bird, Thursday, 19 October 2017 06:54 (six years ago) link

Oceania was the last gasp, IMO.

― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Wednesday, October 18, 2017 11:50 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

that last gasp sure was recent

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 19 October 2017 07:05 (six years ago) link

I fucking love this new album by William Patrick Corgan :-/

you are juror number 144 and we will excuse you (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 19 October 2017 14:07 (six years ago) link

it's great :\

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 19 October 2017 16:08 (six years ago) link

that last gasp sure was recent

― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, October 19, 2017 7:05 AM (nine hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Indeed, but it came after a near-decade of not particularly great music, and was followed by a half-decade of not particularly great music. Including this. So that's... what? One excellent album in nearly 15 years? Yeah. Cool.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 16:47 (six years ago) link

this record is much better than oceania but ok dude

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 19 October 2017 16:50 (six years ago) link

yeah no contest this is by far the best thing he's done in many, many years. this is a record i'll be listening to more than a week after release.

also, seeing him play a lot of "lesser" later songs last night on piano/acoustic guitar showed that his ability to write great songs & melodies hasn't diminished as much as he's lost his ear for production & going too far in the studio. he made me like Drum + Fife last night on the piano. Pale Horse was another highlight. thank god for rick rubin

flappy bird, Thursday, 19 October 2017 16:55 (six years ago) link

'Pale Horse' is always a highlight.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 19 October 2017 17:08 (six years ago) link

WPC's voice has so much weird vibrato that it sounds insane when he harmonizes the longer notes in Amarinthe

you are juror number 144 and we will excuse you (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 19 October 2017 21:19 (six years ago) link

Turrican -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeKGVw4-CN0

flappy bird, Thursday, 26 October 2017 01:30 (six years ago) link

I'm suddenly wanting to listen to Oceania again ... 'Panopticon' fucking rules.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Thursday, 26 October 2017 17:39 (six years ago) link

lol this video rules

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36_4dx_0Qdk

flappy bird, Friday, 3 November 2017 16:53 (six years ago) link

the second set in LA last night was pretty nuts. he's doing four nights at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, first two nights were the same as the rest of the tour, last night after Ogilala he played:

Jesus is the Sun
Crush
Snail
Purr Snickety
Mayonaise
Rocket
Porcelina of the Vast Oceans
In the Arms of Sleep
Galapagos
Shame
Tear
Perfect
Wound
With Every Light
Glass and the Ghost Children
---
The End of the World [Skeeter Davis]
Let Me Give the World To You

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 01:22 (six years ago) link

wow that’s a fucking setlist

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 13 November 2017 02:12 (six years ago) link

damn

crüt, Monday, 13 November 2017 02:14 (six years ago) link

Purr Snickety!

Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 13 November 2017 08:58 (six years ago) link

night 4:

I Fall
Space Oddity [David Bowie]
Riverview
Once in a While
Lyric
Eye
Tonight, Tonight
Pinwheels
Soothe
To Sheila
Box of Rain [Grateful Dead]
Friends as Lovers, Lovers as Friends
Spaceboy
Landslide [Fleetwood Mac]
Burnt Orange-Black
---
Stand Inside Your Love
Muzzle

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 18:30 (six years ago) link

Please tell me you are a witness at all these nights, Flapp

Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 13 November 2017 18:34 (six years ago) link

I wish, I'm on the opposite coast. I was really happy with the show I saw in Delaware, I posted the setlist from the second set of that show upthread. Pretty remarkable that he played Soothe and Once in a While, the latter of which hasn't been played since that infamous Cat's Cradle show in early 2000 when Jimmy was out with a "jellyfish sting" and Billy & James played by themselves.

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 18:42 (six years ago) link

yo flappy i hate to say these words all in one post but: have you listened to billy's recent interview with joe rogan, it's pretty fantastic

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 13 November 2017 18:43 (six years ago) link

yeah it was great! i watched it on friday without reading any of the comments anywhere beforehand because i knew it could go in a lot of different directions. it went as well as it could've gone imo. Billy very humble & interesting & making an effort to get on an even keel with Joe, who clearly had a peripheral knowledge of the Pumpkins at best. it was a good contrast to Billy's appearances on Howard (massive SP fan) where they usually talk mostly about childhood neglect, abuse, trauma. I enjoyed the conversation with Joe about fame, celebrity, and the 'behind the curtain' machinations of show business. fwiw I think Joe gets a bad rap, he's had some shit guests but he's a pretty open-minded and even-keeled and positive guy. I watch/listen to his podcast fairly regularly depending on the guest.

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 18:51 (six years ago) link

problem seems to be that he is so open-minded that he can convince himself of anything

you are juror number 144 and we will excuse you (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 13 November 2017 19:26 (six years ago) link

sure, depending on the guest. he knows very little about a lot. he gets stoned and interviews comedians, rockstars, scientists, academics, his friends, pundits, crazy people. it's fun

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 19:33 (six years ago) link

stoned guy asking scientist about extrapolations of quantum physics is a state every aged fraternity brother seems to occupy for at least a little while.

you are juror number 144 and we will excuse you (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 13 November 2017 19:45 (six years ago) link

hell yeah brother

flappy bird, Monday, 13 November 2017 19:48 (six years ago) link

lol

you are juror number 144 and we will excuse you (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 13 November 2017 19:50 (six years ago) link

Great interview!

how's life, Tuesday, 14 November 2017 00:12 (six years ago) link

Billy Corgan - Hollywood Forever Cemetery - November 11, 2017

Set 1, running time 43:06

1. Zowie
2. Processional
3. The Spaniards
4. Aeronaut
5. The Long Goodbye
6. Half-Life of an Autodidact
7. Amarinthe
8. Antietam
9. Mandarynne
10. Shiloh
11. Archer
12. If I Were a Carpenter [ Hardin ]

Set 2 and encore, running time 1:14:07

1. Jesus is the Sun
2. Crush
3. Snail
4. Purr Snickety
5. Mayonaise
6. Rocket
7. Porcelina of the Vast Oceans
8. In The Arms of Sleep
9. Galapogos
10. Shame
11. Tear
12. Perfect
13. Wound (abandoned)
14. Wound
15. With Every Light
16. Glass and the Ghost Children
17. [encore break]
18. The End of the World [ Davis ]
19. Let Me Give The World To You

flappy bird, Tuesday, 14 November 2017 19:44 (six years ago) link

I gotta be honest I've never understood the appeal of "glass and the ghost children", otherwise very cool

Simon H., Tuesday, 14 November 2017 19:47 (six years ago) link

Just listened to the interview with Joe Rogan. Not sure if Rogan actually knows anything about SP, as he didn't name any song or album and they didn't talk about the music that much. I was cheered to hear that Billy is self-aware enough to acknowledge that many fans don't want to hear anything about his wrestling ventures -- count me in. Aside from Billy's requisite rant about "the left," he seemed like he was in a good mood. He confirmed he's on good terms with everyone and they're aiming for a full-band reunion next year. It warms the heart!

And funny stories about Rodman and the '90s Bulls.

Sam Weller, Wednesday, 15 November 2017 12:18 (six years ago) link

Okay, so I've actually convinced myself to check out the new album and shit, 'Processional' is a really beautiful song that was totally worth hearing! In fact, I've got no problem with the songwriting or production on this album at all, really... if this record has any flaw, it's that the arrangements expose the flaws in Corgan's voice more than usual (I lost count of the amount of times the autotune kicked in) - I never really got that problem with Adore so much. Anyway, this is a much warmer record than Adore and one I'm glad he made.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Sunday, 26 November 2017 20:38 (six years ago) link

So yeah, make that 2 good albums in 17 years.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Sunday, 26 November 2017 20:39 (six years ago) link

i told you!!!

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Sunday, 26 November 2017 21:30 (six years ago) link

hearing reports that the full title was (I Am The Last Person in the World to Find Out About) Hollywood Forever Cemetery

she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 26 November 2017 22:04 (six years ago) link

lmao

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Sunday, 26 November 2017 22:29 (six years ago) link

:D

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 26 November 2017 22:33 (six years ago) link

Processional is beautiful, these lines & their melody hit me hard:

And stake your heart on mine
to places, other times
It's a long way, it's a long way
to get back home

flappy bird, Sunday, 26 November 2017 22:56 (six years ago) link

i told you!!!

― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Sunday, November 26, 2017 9:30 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Yes, but you have a tendency to like everything and flappy is a massive superfan Corgan apologist, so it was pretty hard to gauge whether this albun was going to be any good based on the fact that the pair of you liked it, fwiw. I'm glad I could summon up enough enthusiasm to check it out myself.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Monday, 27 November 2017 03:31 (six years ago) link

*album

This will probably lead me to binge listen to the discography again.

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Monday, 27 November 2017 03:32 (six years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hs9GSGR1XHA

flappy bird, Monday, 27 November 2017 03:35 (six years ago) link

ok then enjoy music on your own shithead!

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 27 November 2017 05:46 (six years ago) link

Processional is beautiful, these lines & their melody hit me hard:

And stake your heart on mine
to places, other times
It's a long way, it's a long way
to get back home

― flappy bird, Sunday, November 26, 2017 10:56 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Yeah, I completely agree! After a couple more listens, it's a late-period Corgan classic for me now.

Of course, I'm mow on a Pumpkins B-sides kick, of all things...

Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Monday, 27 November 2017 06:53 (six years ago) link

two weeks pass...

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

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 16 December 2017 00:32 (six years ago) link

only watched a few songs from that, p good so far

not optimistic about the odds of this ever coming out (at least as a double album:

https://www.instagram.com/p/BcqDsVZAk_E/

flappy bird, Saturday, 16 December 2017 02:29 (six years ago) link

caption reads:

I just finished a few weeks recording in Nashville for the follow-up to Ogilala. So far (the new album) is more stark and tangled. Also looks like it will be a double (16 songs at least)

flappy bird, Saturday, 16 December 2017 02:30 (six years ago) link

lol i really hope he puts it out

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 16 December 2017 02:31 (six years ago) link

me too. i will say i was p sure what became Ogilala was shelved before it was announced in August (he recorded it in the summer of 2016... Linda Strawberry posted a picture of him doing vocals and said the album was called The Land of Maybe). i still have reservations about this new one though mostly because he's working with Howard Willing and presumably self-producing again, so there goes the quality control of Rick Rubin. i don't think Ogilala sounds drastically better than any of the post-2000 records, but Billy needs to have someone listen to all of his demos and pick out the gems that he's been throwing away for years now. i don't know what happened to his quality control compass. if not for Rubin "Aeronaut" not only wouldn't have been on the album it probably never would've been recorded. anyway he's still got some good momentum atm and seems like he's in a good place, hope "Cardinal Rule" is on it.

flappy bird, Saturday, 16 December 2017 02:42 (six years ago) link

ten months pass...

this is approaching Chrysanthemum levels of post-SP songwriting for me lately

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AAtElcmYic

flappy bird, Thursday, 1 November 2018 06:37 (five years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.