Sonic Youth: Classic or Dud/S&D?

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Yeah, I don't know, Al. Maybe Daydream Nation had decent distribution. I bought it in an independent shop.

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 00:30 (four years ago) link

I bought the cassette at a Sam Goodys I’m the Livingston Mall. It had serous distribution.

dan selzer, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:07 (four years ago) link

I mean, I remember buying SST albums at the Wherehouse. I don't think of it as a major label release.

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:12 (four years ago) link

I got it at a mall in Columbus, MS, first SY record I'd seen in wide release.

WmC, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:22 (four years ago) link

I.R.S. was distributed by MCA, but there was a reason why R.E.M. signed to Warner Brothers. Same thing with SY on Geffen - I don't think there was a real comparison.

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:23 (four years ago) link

Daydream Nation, if not the major label debut, was certainly the breakthrough. I learned about it via a Rolling Stone review; I doubt they reviewed anything by the band previous to that. I imagine the EMI distribution helped in that regard.

akm, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:31 (four years ago) link

Any cursory reading of the press around Goo at time of release would show that it was considered the major label debut, they must have addressed it in a dozen interviews.

sleeve, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:35 (four years ago) link

I mean yeah DN was everywhere but the politics of Goo were quite the hot topic at the time

sleeve, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:36 (four years ago) link

IIRC, Enigma screwed them out of royalties on DN, which figured into the move.

a bevy of supermodels, musicians and Lena Dunham (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 14 October 2019 02:50 (four years ago) link

Daydream Nation had huge distro but definitely wasn't considered "major label". Goo on DGC was a big deal.

dan selzer, Monday, 14 October 2019 02:52 (four years ago) link

I would happily drop “Swimsuit Issue,” “JC,” and “Purr” from Dirty.

It’s a good album!... but does feel like a bit of a monolith.

drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Monday, 14 October 2019 05:17 (four years ago) link

monoliths should be worshipped!!

j., Monday, 14 October 2019 05:39 (four years ago) link

My denomination has excised “Shop-ping at Max Fields! Power for you to wield!” from the liturgy.

drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Monday, 14 October 2019 05:46 (four years ago) link

splitters!!

j., Monday, 14 October 2019 05:49 (four years ago) link

Are you really hating on JC in public?

the cretin hits the cast (Drugs A. Money), Monday, 14 October 2019 07:27 (four years ago) link

"JC" is SY Top 5, easy. Anyway, good discussion on Dirty. I fall somewhere in the middle. I bought Goo first but Dirty is when I became a fan and yet - despite my level of teenage obsession - I never managed to absorb all of Dirty, especially the second half. At this point, if needed, I would cut most of the Kim songs (mainly "Swimsuit Issue", "Orange Rolls" and perhaps "Drunken Butterfly"), which feel kinda juvenile to 40sth me. But I think these songs could have been split into two albums

licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Monday, 14 October 2019 09:55 (four years ago) link

Daydream Nation wasn’t on a major in the UK, Blast First put it out.

Position Position, Monday, 14 October 2019 11:29 (four years ago) link

one thing that i've been puzzled by while reading this thread is that a lot of people dislike Goo, an album of theirs which i unreservedly love, but maybe this is because it's the first one i purchased? it totally blew my mind and changed my life, tbh.

i really like Dirty, but understand the feeling of it as a monolith— it's not just the songs themselves, but the production just wears me out in a way that no other SY album does. this is fine, but i find it to be one of my least-listened to "good" albums.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 14 October 2019 12:47 (four years ago) link

Dirty was recorded with Butch Vig at a studio called the Magic Shop.

iirc the new york episode of the Foo Fighters documentary series a couple of years back was filmed at Magic Shop, seemed like a funky little space

Daydream Nation wasn’t on a major in the UK, Blast First put it out.

Paul Smith, who ran Blast First, was also a big part of Enigma, I think, which might explain that. But post-Daydream is the proper Major Label era. The band were courted by lots of major labels, and even had a weird, weird meeting with Tommy Mottola, who said he had a button on his desk that would make them superstars.

SHANTY the golden fish portion (stevie), Monday, 14 October 2019 12:48 (four years ago) link

also, am i the only one on here who really likes Lee and Lee's songs? i know they can border on lame and silly sometimes because of his whole beat-worship lyrical style, but it's not like Thurston is a great lyricist either.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 14 October 2019 12:49 (four years ago) link

Lee is the weird uncle of SY and unimpeachable

an incoherent crustacean (MatthewK), Monday, 14 October 2019 12:51 (four years ago) link

Lee is great, Wish Fulfillment is a jam

SHANTY the golden fish portion (stevie), Monday, 14 October 2019 13:15 (four years ago) link

Lee's songs are the best!

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 14 October 2019 13:21 (four years ago) link

“JC” is considered top-five SY? Weird, it sounds like filler to me.

drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Monday, 14 October 2019 14:17 (four years ago) link

another huge Lee fan over here but I'm still not sure "Genetic" would have worked on the album

sleeve, Monday, 14 October 2019 15:23 (four years ago) link

"i actually like the lee songs the best" is a long-running SY challop (doesn't mean it isn't true)

na (NA), Monday, 14 October 2019 15:42 (four years ago) link

^^

heh, i was just talking to a friend about goo yesterday (heavily influenced by it popping up on this thread recently) and found myself basically saying that. i smdh at myself

It is my great honor to post on this messageboard! (Karl Malone), Monday, 14 October 2019 15:50 (four years ago) link

i don't like the Lee songs the best, but i did write an entire sequence of poems based on Lee's tracks, so i have a deep appreciation for them.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 14 October 2019 16:08 (four years ago) link

i will say that i think anyone who doesn't pick "Mote" as the best track on Goo is cloth-eared. maybe a tie with "Disappearer" if i'm feeling generous.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 14 October 2019 16:10 (four years ago) link

I made a nice Lee only mix. I love his songs. Not better or worse just different like a dave Davies or George Harrison.

dan selzer, Monday, 14 October 2019 16:23 (four years ago) link

Lee's vocals remind me of a male Grace Slick, and I mean that in a good way.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 14 October 2019 16:26 (four years ago) link

"mote" is the best song on goo and my favorite sy song

american bradass (BradNelson), Monday, 14 October 2019 16:28 (four years ago) link

"Dirty Boots" is easily my favourite song on Goo fwiw. That classic intro, the groove, the wailing solo, the beautiful ending section, their best video. I do like "Mote" a lot, though.

All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Monday, 14 October 2019 16:52 (four years ago) link

I only just now noticed that the superb acoustic version of "Purr" is missing from the deluxe reissue of Dirty! wtf, that version is gorgeous:

https://www.discogs.com/Sonic-Youth-Sugar-Kane/release/2802844

sleeve, Monday, 14 October 2019 17:05 (four years ago) link

Disappearer > Mote

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 17:15 (four years ago) link

Tunic tho....

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Monday, 14 October 2019 17:17 (four years ago) link

The melodicism of “Disappearer” is really serene.

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 17:26 (four years ago) link

xp. i read your post up to the end but i must admit that i didn't really get that remark about dirty being a political record. concerning dirty i had always assumed the most political part of it was that it was their debut on a major. and "youth against fascism" of course. but i do not see what would be so bad about it. to my shame i must admit that i don't really think about an album being political or not. that is not a criterion for me to evaluate music. only when the political is too obvious, it usually turns me off. like certain protest singers.

something else. the best german translation of sprawl i could find referred to the open land being cluttered by new buildings, that is not exactly what you mean, is it?


Sorry for the belated reply. Basically the relentlessness of Dirty exhausts me, and it's exhausting like, say, a gathering of miserable grad students trying to agree on what they want from their faculty/admin overlords is. I mean, it's more pleasurable and varied than that, and I like "Youth Against Fascism" well enough as a sneery tossed-off punk rock rant. I think someone could perfectly well see what I dislike about the album as a virtue. Trouser Press wrote this about the album in their '90s guide (available here:
Dirty loses the wise-ass attitude [of Goo] in favor of shorter songs and more direct, charged lyrics that push Sonic Youth dangerously close to punk-rock convention. A cynic might interpret this shift as Sonic Youth's attempt to woo the Lollapalooza Nation, right down to the hiring of producer Butch Vig and mixer Andy Wallace, the Nevermind tag team. Whatever the intent, the disc is shot through with urgency. Shelley's drums send the songs hurtling like a dirt racer with bad shocks, while the guitars splatter the windshield with roadkill. Righteous indignation, political and otherwise, is the primary mood: Gordon mines withering, post-feminist sarcasm on "Swimsuit Issue," while "Chapel Hill" imagines a mosh pit atop senator Jesse Helms' head and "Youth Against Fascism" gets surprisingly topical with an endorsement of Clarence Thomas accuser Anita Hill.

And it's actually this urgency that I find kind of off-putting, though I wouldn't necessarily in another band (say, The Clash). I prefer a Sonic Youth that's more lived-in. When Washing Machine came out, it was their first '90s album that felt like it was really "for me." I like Goo quite a lot these days, though.
Daydream Nation wasn’t on a major in the UK, Blast First put it out.

It was, incidentally, out of print in the States when Dirty came out and I was just getting into the band — I think Enigma had gone under? I bought the Blast First import and it was expensive ($22 or something like that).

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Monday, 14 October 2019 20:50 (four years ago) link

thanks for the post. i love relentlessness and especially urgency in music. funny that you mention the clash. i cannot relate to their stuff at all and find it conventional, predictable and tedious. urgent is about the adjective which seems furthest away of any song i have ever heard by the clash. i like goo too but who doesn't. when washing machine came out i pretty much gave up on the band. i continued buying the albums out of some kind of respect but didn't listen to them a lot. even the syr albums. some of them still wait for my first listen.

je est un autre, l'enfer c'est les autres (alex in mainhattan), Monday, 14 October 2019 21:07 (four years ago) link

Yah, post-Nevermind, whereas Goo was still from that mysterious time we remember as the Poppy Bush Interzone.

timellison, Monday, 14 October 2019 22:12 (four years ago) link

Speaking of "Nevermind," I'm listening right now to NYC Ghosts & Flowers... I really like this one, I think it's one of their most enjoyable albums. It's "experimental" in a way that hits my sweet spot (as opposed to the approach they take on a lot of other stuff, which doesn't connect with me so much)

drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Monday, 14 October 2019 23:11 (four years ago) link

funny that you mention the clash. i cannot relate to their stuff at all and find it conventional, predictable and tedious. urgent is about the adjective which seems furthest away of any song i have ever heard by the clash.

thank god i'm not the only one who feels this way about the Clash.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, 14 October 2019 23:29 (four years ago) link

thought The Clash had a great sound

Dan S, Monday, 14 October 2019 23:34 (four years ago) link

10 favorite SY albums, chronologically

Evol
Sister
Daydream Nation
Goo
Dirty
A Thousand Leaves
Goodbye 20th Century
NYC Ghosts & Flowers
Murray Street
Sonic Nurse

not sure of the order, maybe Sister/Daydream Nation are overall tops for me, but Evol was the first one I heard. It was the one that made me obsessed with them, and it has several amazing tracks as well as the ∞ locked groove at the end of Expressway to Yr. Skull

in retrospect I appreciate Goo and Dirty a lot more

Dan S, Monday, 14 October 2019 23:34 (four years ago) link

Not so sure that the first time I saw Sonic Youth play might be the best show I ever saw. It was on the Goo tour and the opening act was Redd Kross. They played Big Star before Red Kross played and Richard Hell before Sonic Youth. It was in the Indiana room in the Union at Indiana University in Bloomington. Not that big a room at all and I saw an insane Primus and Fishbone show the next year in the same place. That SY show was the first time I saw a big circle pit open up and people stage dive at a show. They stopped the show and played Madonna's Rock the Vote video when it aired during their set. Lee Ranaldo's got a poem called "Bloomington Indiana...Autumn" that might have it's origins to the date perhaps. And I think the recording of that poem was the fist collaboration between a SY member and Jim O'Rourke.

earlnash, Tuesday, 15 October 2019 00:15 (four years ago) link

Oh yeah, the McDonald brothers came out for the encore and sang backing vocals ala the Supremes with Kim with Thurston on bass on the show closer "My Friend Goo." The set was awesome, big part of their set was off Sister and EVOL. They opened with "Stereo Sanctity" and I remembered getting carried away from the stage in the crowd like being in the middle of the ocean. I had been to some punk rock shows before that but it was usually like 10 people beating each other up in the middle of a basement, different kind of thing.

earlnash, Tuesday, 15 October 2019 00:20 (four years ago) link

that was right after I left town, but a ton of my friends were at that show!

sleeve, Tuesday, 15 October 2019 00:35 (four years ago) link

funny that you mention the clash. i cannot relate to their stuff at all and find it conventional, predictable and tedious. urgent is about the adjective which seems furthest away of any song i have ever heard by the clash.

thank god i'm not the only one who feels this way about the Clash.

― blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Monday, October 14, 2019 7:29 PM (three hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

me too zzzzzzzz

The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, 15 October 2019 03:14 (four years ago) link

first time I saw sonic youth was at the WFMU benefit at the Ritz. Lineup was Love Child, Gumball, Dim Stars, John Zorn's Painkiller and Sonic Youth. I was a huge Sonic Youth fan but was getting pretentious and ended up feeling like Painkiller blew them out of the water. I definitely listen to Sonic Youth more than Painkiller these days.

dan selzer, Tuesday, 15 October 2019 04:23 (four years ago) link

v enjoyable thread!

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 15 October 2019 11:58 (four years ago) link


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