Ride 'Nowhere' Poll

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As I said, the original album - vinyl / cassette - was "Seagull" through to "Vapour trail", and the original CD had the 3 extra tracks tagged on the end so really they aren't on the album. It's just that over time nobody remembers the vinyl / cassette editions and the CD has become the dominant music carrier so I don't blame you for the questions.

Maybe I'm just being purist and anal by ignoring them in this poll - certainly when I play "Nowhere" I don't switch the CD off after "Vapour trail", I let it play and love the 3 extra songs, but for me they are of a piece as part of the "Fall" EP - that's how I heard them first, that's how I feel they belong. "Dreams burn down" works in both places - on the EP and the LP.

I'm thinking too much about this now, aren't I?

Rob M v2, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 15:46 (fifteen years ago) link

Hmmm, I guess this question could be its own thread, but I feel that extra songs included on the CD edition are not bonus if they were there on the original edition (ie. not added for some re-release), esp. at a time when CD was already clearly the dominant format. Same goes for, say, the Cure's 'Disintegration'.

baaderonixx, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 15:52 (fifteen years ago) link

Agree it comes down to 'Vapour Trail' or 'Dreams Burn Down'. I'll go with 'Dreams...' as that chiming guitar riff gets me everytime.

Peteski, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 16:48 (fifteen years ago) link

bah, this is some CD reissue, Taste was ne'er on that album.

The Real Dirty Vicar, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 16:54 (fifteen years ago) link

First, to clarify: Going Blank Again is a stone cold classic from start to finish.

So is Nowhere, of course, and this is partiularly hard for me because I've listened to it so regularly for such a long time, that my "favorite" track has alternated variously among "Seagull," "Kaleidoscope," "Polar Bear," "Dreams Burn Down" & "Taste." "Vapor Trail" is nice as well, but I never understood why people thought it towered so highly over the rest of the album. In the end, I'm going to cheat a bit and vote "Seagull" just for how fucking tremendous it was when played live.

It's a shame Britpop had to come along and quash Ride's aesthetic. It was nice while it lasted.

Pillbox, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:34 (fifteen years ago) link

I heard Mark and Andy on the radio a couple of years back doing some reminiscing. They were asked what the best thing they'd done was, and they said 'Dreams Burn Down' without a moment's hesitation. I'd never paid that much attention to it before, but I put it on and it was immediately obvious that they were right.

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 17:49 (fifteen years ago) link

"Dreams burn down" is one of those songs where I can remember precisely where I was when I heard it for the first time - sat at my old PC in my bedroom at my parents, Peel on in the background - I was completely blown away by it. I'd loved the first two EPs and was anticipating something good for the third single but not THAT good. I remember noting in my diary that night that it sounded like "slow motion Felt with distortion pedals set to stun".

Rob M v2, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 18:06 (fifteen years ago) link

can you recommend any Felt that sounds a bit like that?

baaderonixx, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 19:55 (fifteen years ago) link

not really into ride, but the trespasser's william cover of "vapour trail" is amazing.

jeremy waters, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 20:14 (fifteen years ago) link

Electricsound OTM - I don't feel like those last three "bonus" tracks belong on the album proper because they were from the earlier "Fall" EP.

I'd love to choose Seagull but almost any live version of that song shits all over the album version, so "Vapour Trail" is the clear choice.

Bimble, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 20:47 (fifteen years ago) link

though it's not a part of the album, really... "Nowhere" wins for me

stephen, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 23:46 (fifteen years ago) link

GBA is a piece of piss, because the opening track is the best thing Ride have ever done, the second song is OK, and the rest of it is shite.

Pretty damn well OTM, Nick.

Bimble, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 02:55 (fifteen years ago) link

this whole debate about what is and isn't on this album is a no brainier for me. i bought this on release date on CD in the US, poll is right it has all 11 of these songs on that CD.

i don't think i could love an album more than i did with this one at that time. i was so obsessed with this album that my friends and i sat there one night and tried to figure out the lyrics. that ended up being an impossible task and very unrewarding. we couldn't finish but ended up getting the lyrics at a British type of club in Los Angeles some nine months later.

"Polar Bear" fwiw, but can go in about seven different directions.

Bee OK, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 03:23 (fifteen years ago) link

baaderonixx, i imagine Rob was thinking of earlier, cherry red era felt, perhaps specifically primitive painters, which could be seen as their proto gaze moment, the guitar lines on dreams burn down do recall Maurice Deebank's a bit. Felt really aren't about getting trapped under collapsing walls of molten feedback though.

cw, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 10:54 (fifteen years ago) link

Just to weigh in to a couple of the debates rather late in the day: GBA = mostly poor, but LTAB is really good & yes, I only think of Nowhere as consisting of the eight tracks that were on the vinyl record because that's what I bought. Was CD really the dominant format in 1990? I didn't get a CD player till Xmas 92.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 11:01 (fifteen years ago) link

I meant to follow that up with my vote, but work suddenly banned ILM for 'violence' (whatever that means).

'Seagull' is absolutely excellent, probably my favourite Ride track. As 1990 had progressed and Ride moved through the Ride EP, then Play EP, then Fall EP, they seemed to be phasing out the wah-wah assaults and just going for a kind of reverb & distortion type of sound, which I was a bit disappointed at. I bought the album the day it came out and when I heard the opening track I just thought 'great - the wah-wah's back'. They usually closed with this or played it as an encore and it was just made to jump around like a madman to.

'Kaleidoscope' is a great pop song (in the loosest sense of the word 'pop', because it didn't sound remotely like anything in the charts at that time) that has been largely overlooked and never got played live that I know of. I was going to go through track by track, but I loved this album at the time and it's difficult to find a weak spot. Maybe 'Dreams Burn Down' hasn't aged so well (perhaps because that whole quiet-noise-quiet thing got overdone by Nirvana in the years to follow) and the singing/lyrics on Vapour Trail lack a certain something.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:18 (fifteen years ago) link

Those first couple of bars of 'Dreams Burn Down' though ... it's shoegazing's 'When The Levee Breaks'

Ismael Klata, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:32 (fifteen years ago) link

i love this album to bits, and i'm actually going to vote for a song that shouldn't actually be listed: 'here and now'. such a gem that one.

major props to all the other tracks though, particularly 'seagull', 'dreams burn down' and 'paralysed'.

Charlie Howard, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:42 (fifteen years ago) link

Argh. Those last three tracks are gonna skew things no matter what we do!

Bimble, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:48 (fifteen years ago) link

'polar bear' was my favourite song in the entire world for a very long timen.

^^^this.

CharlieNo4, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 16:54 (fifteen years ago) link

So a Disintegration poll shouldn't include "Homesick"?

baaderonixx, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 17:13 (fifteen years ago) link

Ride really owned the world for a few months back then, didn't they?

my fave Ride track (and, in fact, the only one I still listen to semi-regularly) is "Drive Blind"...but I'll take "Dreams Burn Down" here, it's the only song listed above that I can still hum...

henry s, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 17:34 (fifteen years ago) link

Jumping back into the 8 tracks v 11 tracks debate, I can remember a review of 'Nowhere' (in either Sounds or MM or NME) bemoaning the fact that it had an already-released E.P. track on it (i.e. 'Dreams Burn Down'). If CDs had been seen as the dominant format (in the Indie market) at that time then that review would have bemoaned the fact that the *whole* Fall EP had been tacked onto the album.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 17:50 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah, it's kindof a testament to how common EP releases were in the indie world at the time, too. They weren't seen as just "singles" from an album with b-sides, but respectable in their own right.

Bimble, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:06 (fifteen years ago) link

The Disintegration comparison, although interesting, isn't quite apt simply because to my knowledge, Homesick wasn't previously released at the time the album came out. I think it would be fine to include Homesick in such a poll, but perhaps someone who bought the vinyl would feel differently. *shrugs*

Bimble, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:09 (fifteen years ago) link

SEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULLSEAGULL

(Also, those last three tracks aren't technically Nowhere songs)

Mackro Mackro, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 18:57 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm relistening to the album now and it's pretty surprising how LOUD the drums are.

baaderonixx, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 19:10 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah, I don't necessarily have the best ears for that sort of thing, but it seems like the mix is sorta wacked-out. Drums and vocals are too far up front. Where are the guitars hiding-- this is "shoegaze", etc.?

Also, I feel like this record has not dated as well as it might have; possibly b/c those guys were too young at the time to craft a "classic" record? But, with that statement I'm verging into rockist territory, perhaps, as well as risking instigating a whole debate about how being in yr early 20's in the 60's or 70's was a different thing from being that age now or back in '91 or so.

That being said, my kneejerk vote is for "Vapour Trail"; although re-visiting "Polar Bear" definitely gave me some goosebumps today. THing is, it's one of those records that I have trouble listening to without an overload of sentimental associations coming up

dell, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 20:28 (fifteen years ago) link

baaderonixx, i imagine Rob was thinking of earlier, cherry red era felt, perhaps specifically primitive painters, which could be seen as their proto gaze moment, the guitar lines on dreams burn down do recall Maurice Deebank's a bit. Felt really aren't about getting trapped under collapsing walls of molten feedback though.

-- cw, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 11:54 (Yesterday) Bookmark Link

Thanks - that was exactly what 19 yr old Rob was thinking at the time. Your last line made me laugh for about five minutes today.

Regarding "Dreams burn down" again, I keep finding the intro drum popping up in odd places - I always heard "In my place" by Coldplay as being in awe of "DBD" and then the last song on the recent Trembling Blue Stars album had the exact same drum pattern as well. As someone else said, it's the indie "When the Levee Breaks".

Regarding the 8 to 11 track debate - all the reviews at the time in the UK press considered "Vapour trail" to be the closing track, and certainly the MM review (can't remember if it was Reynolds or Chris Roberts) went nuts over it as a closer.

No more 'regardings' from me.

Rob M v2, Thursday, 29 May 2008 13:02 (fifteen years ago) link

Hmm, my copy of this also contains tracks 12-15. Where are they from?

I've voted for Vapour Trail too.

JimD, Thursday, 29 May 2008 13:11 (fifteen years ago) link

12-15 are from 'today forever'

electricsound, Thursday, 29 May 2008 13:15 (fifteen years ago) link

Pound for pound, the 'Today Forever' EP alone is better than (the 8- or 11-track) Nowhere, easily.

CharlieNo4, Thursday, 29 May 2008 14:50 (fifteen years ago) link

The MM review was Chris Roberts, who slagged off the first side (tracks 1-4). There is something about Felt's 'Splendour of Fear' that reminds me of early Ride. Not literally obv, but a there is a definite feeling of some kind of defeated optimism in both.

flowersdie, Thursday, 29 May 2008 15:06 (fifteen years ago) link

Pound for pound, the 'Today Forever' EP alone is better than (the 8- or 11-track) Nowhere,
I think I agree with this. The singles and b-sides from Going Blank Again are also better than the lp. In my opinion, of course.

Trip Maker, Thursday, 29 May 2008 15:27 (fifteen years ago) link

Pound for pound, the 'Today Forever' EP alone is better than (the 8- or 11-track) Nowhere, easily.

Yep.

Bimble, Thursday, 29 May 2008 16:18 (fifteen years ago) link

'Taste' narrowly edging out 'Polar Bear' and 'Vapor Trail' for me - good memories from a study abroad year in Canterbury - I came back to the states and basically thought US rockist guitar bands sucked for a good couple of years.

BlackIronPrison, Thursday, 29 May 2008 16:29 (fifteen years ago) link

"Seagull" is still one of the only songs I can think of that channels The Byrds and Hawkwind so explosively at the same time.

Mackro Mackro, Thursday, 29 May 2008 17:24 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah, that's a good way to describe it, Mackro. Did you ever witness it live?

Bimble, Thursday, 29 May 2008 17:54 (fifteen years ago) link

Pound for pound, the 'Today Forever' EP alone is better than (the 8- or 11-track) Nowhere, easily

I can't agree with this at all. I found it disappointing at the time, apart from 'Unfamiliar'.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Thursday, 29 May 2008 18:01 (fifteen years ago) link

I saw Ride on the "Today Forever" tour, with Slowdive as the support band. That was March or April 91. It was like shoegazing heaven. Ride were awesome live, and it was a dream set list (except for the lack of "Here and now"). Those strobes during the noisy bits of "DBD"! The sheer sonic assault on "Seagull"! Fantastic night. Slowdive in comparison were a poorly mixed sludge of reverb and noise.

Rob M v2, Thursday, 29 May 2008 18:06 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah, I saw them then too. I'm pretty sure it was March. I saw them in Kilburn and they were absolutely amazing. I saw them six times in total, but that was the best one.

Nasty, Brutish & Short, Thursday, 29 May 2008 18:10 (fifteen years ago) link

I saw Ride only once in early 1991 on the Nowhere tour, when they co-headlined with Lush on their Gala tour. This was at the Roxy in West Hollywood. Lush was the headliner that night. I was there mainly for Ride, who were great, but I stuck around for Lush and thought they were better that night... Ride were great, but they pretty much had their performance style in place for the entire set. Lush was a bit more memorable and dynamic.

Anyway, yes, saw them.. awesome.. etc.

Mackro Mackro, Thursday, 29 May 2008 18:53 (fifteen years ago) link

dreams burn down. today

-- Alan, Tuesday, 27 May 2008 12:07 (2 days ago) Bookmark Link

haha, if we were counting the Today Forever EP then these would be my TWO inseparable choices! No dice, though, so DBD it is.

Just got offed, Thursday, 29 May 2008 19:55 (fifteen years ago) link

'kaleidoscope' just because the alternateen station where i grew up started off just being on at night and they would play the entire album and 'kaleidoscope' was the first song from the album i ever heard on the radio. greg st james said he liked it, i was impressionable then.

keythkeyth, Friday, 30 May 2008 00:34 (fifteen years ago) link

i sense electricsound seething over this entire thread

mookieproof, Friday, 30 May 2008 02:24 (fifteen years ago) link

by no means! actually i haven't sat down to listen to this album in a loooong time. i should dig it out of the crates

electricsound, Friday, 30 May 2008 02:33 (fifteen years ago) link

well you should be!

mookieproof, Friday, 30 May 2008 02:54 (fifteen years ago) link

I used to love Ride, but their impact on me has diminished over time, which is quite not-nice. :(

Anyway "Dreams Burn Down" for its fuckoffwallfonoise guitar.

Trayce, Friday, 30 May 2008 04:17 (fifteen years ago) link

If there was to be a Going Blank Again poll I'd also vote for LTAB, UNLESS of course the four extra tracks on the CD reissue made the cut, in which case Howard Hughes all the way. I actually think GBA is very good throughout, though, and considerably better than Nowhere. I appreciate that this makes me faintly batshit. It really helps that all four extra tracks are fucking strong.

Just got offed, Friday, 30 May 2008 08:22 (fifteen years ago) link

Its between decay & here and now for me

I have a signed copy of GBA, i bunked off school the day it was released and went down to tower records :D I was pretty disappointed with gba at the time tho

X-101, Friday, 30 May 2008 08:51 (fifteen years ago) link

Sire, I am in your debt.

Ismael Klata, Sunday, 1 June 2008 20:55 (fifteen years ago) link

Oh my god...I just heard the beginning of Polar Bear in my head.

Holy jesus. I'm playing it now.

I feel so sorry for people who never saw them live, I really really do. I hate to say that. But they were absolutely the best thing ever live. I can't erase those memories, they are a heavy part of me, those gigs.

I don't think I saw them 6 times like Nasty, Brutish & Short did, but it seems to me I probably saw them about 5 times. I can't forget what Leave Them All Behind sounded like outside at the Belgian festival. It wasn't even available for sale yet. They were poised to conquer the world and then...a fall from grace. But I've accepted this now, you know. It's history.

Bimble, Sunday, 1 June 2008 22:37 (fifteen years ago) link

DECAY = GOTH SHOEGAZE

Bimble, Sunday, 1 June 2008 22:47 (fifteen years ago) link

Bimble is still more goth than you.

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Sunday, 1 June 2008 22:48 (fifteen years ago) link

VAYPOOR TRAYLE

TASTE

HERE & NOW

NOWHERE

best sequence of Ride songs ever outside of Grasshopper/Today Forever EP.

Bimble Is Still More Goth Than You, Sunday, 1 June 2008 22:55 (fifteen years ago) link

two years pass...

Cannot wait

p4K:

Ride don't get treated with quite the same hushed reverence as their shoegaze peers My Bloody Valentine, but they sat comfortably in the top tier of late-80s/early-90s effects-pedal abusers. This year, their landmark 1990 debut album Nowhere turns 20. On December 21, Rhino will release an expanded double-disc reissue of the album.

The new edition includes a remastered version of the original album's U.S. edition, as well as the 1991 EP Today Forever and an unreleased 1991 live show. It'll come packaged as a hardback book, along with a 40-page booklet featuring photos and an essay by critic Jim DeRogatis. Check out the tracklist below.

Nowhere: 20th Anniversary Edition:

CD1 (Nowhere and Today Forever):

01 Seagull
02 Kaleidoscope
03 In a Different Place
04 Polar Bear
05 Dreams Burn Down
06 Decay
07 Paralysed
08 Vapour Trail
09 Taste
10 Here and Now
11 Nowhere
12 Unfamiliar
13 Sennen
14 Beneath
15 Today

CD2 (Live at the Roxy, 1991):

01 Polar Bear
02 Seagull
03 Unfamiliar
04 Dreams Burn Down
05 Like a Daydream
06 Vapour Trail
07 In a Different Place
08 Perfect Time
09 Taste
10 Nowhere
11 Chelsea Girl
12 Drive Blind

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Thursday, 11 November 2010 21:26 (thirteen years ago) link

I think I might already have that Roxy set & if it is what I am thinking of, it is one of their best live recordings. I would certainly invest in a remaster of the same show.

strangled by a necklace of mexicans (Pillbox), Thursday, 11 November 2010 21:38 (thirteen years ago) link

♡_♡

嬰ハ長調 (c sharp major), Thursday, 11 November 2010 21:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Okay, up for that. Twenty years old though - when Nowhere came out, Abbey Road was only a year older than that.

Ismael Klata, Thursday, 11 November 2010 21:53 (thirteen years ago) link

shhh..

strangled by a necklace of mexicans (Pillbox), Thursday, 11 November 2010 21:54 (thirteen years ago) link

Woahhh

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Thursday, 11 November 2010 22:41 (thirteen years ago) link

jeepers thats an amazing stat/fact.

piscesx, Friday, 12 November 2010 00:21 (thirteen years ago) link

Yeah that would definitely be the same Roxy set that's partially circulated for a while; seven songs from it were on a promo single.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 12 November 2010 00:24 (thirteen years ago) link

two months pass...

so is this out then? can't find it listed on any of the online retailers

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Friday, 4 February 2011 09:24 (thirteen years ago) link

Future ILX poll: The original 8 songs on Nowhere or the 7 bonus tracks?

Spikey, Friday, 4 February 2011 10:55 (thirteen years ago) link

three months pass...

So is this not being released in Europe??
can't imagine I'm the only one interested in this

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Tuesday, 10 May 2011 14:55 (twelve years ago) link

nine years pass...

Turned thirty years old this week. Yes you're old. Burbled this just now:

https://www.patreon.com/posts/covid-coping-42820529

Ned Raggett, Friday, 16 October 2020 16:32 (three years ago) link

CLASSIC, great driving album.

brimstead, Friday, 16 October 2020 17:06 (three years ago) link

three years pass...

Ride, along with The Charlatans are playing live tonight in Los Angeles and I'm not going. 😒

Bee OK, Saturday, 30 December 2023 03:31 (three months ago) link

I love this album to death as I have been recently proclaiming.

Voted "Polar Bear" and still comfortable with that choice but also...

Bee OK, Saturday, 30 December 2023 03:34 (three months ago) link

My brother-in-law once admiringly described them as “the best school band you ever heard”. Re-reading Dave Cavanagh’s book about Creation (recently reissued in paperback) and it all goes tits up when Twisterella isn’t a big hit like everyone is expecting. It’s a pretty sad story after that. Blows my mind how much bigger Slowdive are nowadays. I’m glad they came back and made it work, saw them in Manchester last year on the Nowhere anniversary jaunt, still great.

piscesx, Saturday, 30 December 2023 07:10 (three months ago) link

Saw them over the summer and they were great. Read an old Nitsuh review of the Field Mice that noted a surprising sonic connection between the bands.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 30 December 2023 08:28 (three months ago) link

"Seagull" really is the best opener of any shoegaze album isn't it?

Bee OK, Monday, 1 January 2024 01:37 (three months ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xy44DgD_F6g-

Bee OK, Monday, 1 January 2024 01:44 (three months ago) link


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