Sonic Youth: Classic or Dud/S&D?

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You don't like SY, fine. Talk about something else. No actually as you should well know the Giuliani song is about his current position as head of the US/UN forces in Iraq, not "inward" at all.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:23 (twenty-one years ago)

sorry, is Thurstin a "NYC Man" (like Lou Reed and Yoko Ono) ? [.. make it there, you'll make it anywhere ..] else, so why bother ?

(it's stuff like that US attitude where they have a "World Series" that's a sporting event that's completely domestic, stuff like that, which doesn't make the 4 cable sports channels where i live, doesn't feature large on the BBC or CNN either).
OK, they're "an american band" (like Grand Funk Railroad),.. is that it ?

(anyway, am going to sleep now, so see ya)

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:32 (twenty-one years ago)

That's a good point, but it reaches a LOT further than SY doesn't it? Tho if yr saying (which actually you were I think) that SY are unusually qualified what w/their networking etc to respond artistically to things beyond the US, then yeah that makes some sense, tho I think they already do by their actions (boosting many a foreign act etc) if not their records (and fuck, they can do what they want to do on those can't they?). They still make wonderful records, that's a lot more than enough for me.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:37 (twenty-one years ago)

george, nothing you write makes any sense whatsoever. your point, as far as i can gather that you have one, is that Sonic Youth suck now because a) they haven't become a laptop band, and b) haven't pursued a pretty-tiresome-actually side-project to the detriment of their own band, and c) release EPs on their own label in addition to their releases on Geffen, and d) no longer write lyrics of the devastating political wit as "xxx is a fascist jerk", or "xxx is a warpig fuck".

no, you're right. on those criteria they should no longer be allowed to detune their guitars. i'm off to throw all the post-Dirty albums on the bonfire right now. how could i have let a collusion of inspiring noise, intriguing melody and abmirable creativity blind me to this essential truth?

stevie (stevie), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:41 (twenty-one years ago)

huh, i thought New York City Ghosts And Flowers came out before the end of Giuliani's new job -- was he advising others before sept 11th ? i thought that back then he was just unpopular for the NYC policies already cited when that album came out. (.. SY song takes strange career path ..)

but i have to shut up anyway and get some sleep

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:42 (twenty-one years ago)

stevie, that's a real concise (sorry) spin

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:45 (twenty-one years ago)

stevie, with respect to your later less concise post (ie re: inwards), yes, but my point was i'd have thought they would have been the band to do it _now_
(in their sst & blast first uk times i guess they might have been more tempted)

I wonder what of percentage of sy fandom is US people, and if that US chunk has risen or shrunk.

anyway stevie and andrew,
thanks,
goodnight.

george gosset (gegoss), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 13:56 (twenty-one years ago)

'i want sonic youth to say something about US foreign policy'

george what do you think of the new Bobby Conn?

dave q, Tuesday, 6 January 2004 14:48 (twenty-one years ago)

''As discussed on New Year, Sonic Youth are mostly rubbish, at least sometimes worse than rubbish.''

pinefox do you like music that doesn't need melody?

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 14:55 (twenty-one years ago)


The albums continue to be interesting if not grebt every step of the way. Of late SY are becoming revisionist, and nostalgic even, for the pre-SY days when art wasn't "art" and CCR was just CCR. Laptops have no place in rock bands. SY are a rock band.

Speaking of, there's not much opinion on this thread regarding the SYR records aside from Goodbye 20th Century. I've only heard Goodbye 20th Century which is so awful it's almost good.

scott m (mcd), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 20:06 (twenty-one years ago)

i don't much like sonic youth but i think the pinefox is wrong here. ok i declare: i do like sonic youth so i still think the pinefox is wrong. but they are mostly rubbish; i love them.

where did you read reynolds on 'daydream nation', the pf?

david. (Cozen), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 21:00 (twenty-one years ago)

that's on blissed out david. can't remember whether it was any good or not.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 6 January 2004 21:29 (twenty-one years ago)

this was meant to read :
i thought New York City Ghosts And Flowers came out before the beginning of Giuliani's new job

one of the members of Le Tigre had plenty of civil disobedience stuff happening in response to Giuliani's night life policies. If Sy had a song attacking Giuliani for [nyc ghosts] good for them. But that song on that album [nyc ghosts] came before Giuliani's new roles. So it is an inward song.

Geffen's meant to provide SY an oasis for artistic freedom. I won't believe that until sy say something about the whitehouse and it's supposedly Zionist/Christian direction and larger scale plans for [Nile through to the Euphrates]. Can that happen on that label ?
They don't have to do songs about anything, but assuming that consigns the sy brand from what it once was, a symbol for freedom for discussion about real ideas (ie other than love songs) to merely another annoying brand name.

The music might strike you as nice, but i thought they were more ambitious than just 'alternative' as in tunings.

Pat Metheny's 'zero tolerance for silence' got a nice bumper sticker from thurstin about how innovative it was, yet even w/out any words, the cd was distributed using alternatives to the trad. Geffen food chain,.. because it was "uncompromising" ? SYR are obv. part of a similarly different distribution chain -- i had to buy all my SYR eps from american mail order. The "Protest Records" initiative _is_ admirable, even if sy themselves didn't have a suitable song on the site. Yet both SYR and PR seem handily arms-length to Geffen to me.

If sy are into being revivalist, then let's not forget that there used to be a genre called "protest music". Laurie Anderson's breakthrough album was a protest record for instance, somewhat US-inward looking but otm with "O Superman" and "From the Air" and "Big Science".
(Of course songs like "Once in a Lifetime" and "O Superman" were much bigger hits in the UK and other countries where people might have had a different view of this hand-on-heart "land of the free" guff, though i'm sure plenty of patriotic americans are embarressed by their current whitehouse)

If sy don't want to take things that far, ok, but to me, having followed their output _as_ _it_ _came_ _out_ for 20 years, there has been a clear change of direction towards bougeouis "brat-rock", .. not "frat rock", but certainly rite-of-passage indie college music, not much of the punk-inspired ferocity "Kill yr Idols" or the more obvious "complaint music" of daydream nation, more "music dept." music.

Like REM, have fans gone on to become the parents band, not the youths ? REM are retiring or maybe re-configuring. They recognise you can do so much, get listened to by one group of people only at the expense of other audiences, as time goes by.

I'm a youth of roughly the same times as SY, and i think the branding and implicit radicalism have all become "mature" or measured, but it's this inward focus on america that upsets me when i think of them once being a quite independent force.

And a nyc trilogy ? Revivalist attempts to align with radical poets and artists that happened to come from the nyc of years ago will not make them radical, and de facto radicalism, like revisionists,.. one has to be suspicious.

(and the stereolab/sy laptop groop/groupthink idea, it was a joke, although i suspect stereolab egos would be much more ameanable to collaboration, in the interests of greater good/impact, with O'Rourke the obv. facilitator)

george gosset (gegoss), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 15:03 (twenty-one years ago)

As far as their lyrics go, SY have never evinced much of a tendency towards politics. Of their albums that I've heard, Dirty is the most political by far, and most of the politics on that are Kim Gordon's feminism, which falls into the category of the personal as political. Where are the politics on Sister or Daydream Nation? Is "Teenage Riot" a political anthem? I think not - it's a daydream about the idea of taking action, but not a specific call to action with a specific platform. So why would we expect them to suddenly get involved in politics now, especially international politics, which seems even further removed from their typical subjects and interests?

o. nate (onate), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 15:25 (twenty-one years ago)

You could argue that Hypernation is some kind of political portrait of a nihilistic blank generation, blablabla...

Baaderist (Fabfunk), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 15:27 (twenty-one years ago)

There's a big difference between portraying apathy or nihilism and advocating a specific political platform. SY almost never take the step from the first to the second.

o. nate (onate), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 15:33 (twenty-one years ago)

I heard somewhere that "Teen Age Riot" was about J Mascis becoming president.

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 17:26 (twenty-one years ago)

He dismissed his cabinet and then reformed it the next day without Secretary of Sobbing Lou Barlow.

Michael Patrick Brady (Michael Patrick Brady), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 17:37 (twenty-one years ago)

There's a big difference between _portraying_ apathy or nihilism and _advocating_ a specific political platform. SY almost never take the step from the first to the second.

when wasn't this a careerist strategy ? and apathy about what ?

that's true. i keep forgetting that, imagining (as many old 'british punk' fans did) that punk was a musical reaction against establishment rather than the then-demonised establishment music (eg the Sex Pistols 'anarchy', Thatcher), although of course, the british punks put myriad different fans' grievances on the front page as expressions of anger/ frustration about something -- whichever, even protrayal of apathy/nihilism, it won't be misconstrued as guidance in america, misconstrued as advocacy of free expression,
ie these rock stars' apathy won't be misconstrued in the role model way that it has been for countless 'tough' rock bands

so in the "year that punk broke" in the US economy, you had to be apathetic about achieving any sort of mob manifestation of youthful anger/ frustration in the dominant media -- does this sound right ? you had to be cynical that things would be taken anywhere by any of this musical activity anyway ?

sy in their public appearances did always appear pessimistic about achieving anything beyond teenage rebellion, and that as if it was some sort of joke

the british punks -- well there were years of rock re-thinks in the '80s, with all sorts of splinters, coups and failures, and some of this oi yob stuff even, all with politics emblazened to suit their various ambitions

and so sonic youth, recognising the futility of changing minds, had their 'broken' or 'american punk' 'punk year', their MTV time, and now they're revivalist .. for whom ? bob dylan, or "new weird america", or musical heroes (idols) who haven't had a fair go because of the notorious commercial jazz industry (for example)

is it because the economies were different or because you can forget about trying to change anything in america anyway (given what happened to the hippies who at least had vietnam to complain about) ?

so it's as though they predicted the apathy and even presented as apathetic -- happy to be a music journalist's cult band ?

so "kill y'r idols" -- who were the idols ? was this just competitive or posturing, not aesthetic ? careerist-punk ? a catchy original punk slogan now abandoned, i reckon

but now we have another vietnam, with nyc the only smoking gun -- i'm curious to see where sy will go now, with nyc trilogy part3 beckoning, and with the media focus of Murray Street speaking for itself

sonic youth _is_ a catchy punk slogan, and finally people particularly younger people in the US have plenty to complain about again, so it's like full circle to a proper fit this time for the call-to-arms, and nyc pt3 will be as big as you's, your disillusion

george gosset (gegoss), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 17:50 (twenty-one years ago)

You are making absolutely no sense to me whatsoever.

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)

looking back at the thread as a whole i'd have argued it in a different order or way, as lot's of things of interest have popped up

maybe i should give it a break,
a thread "top 20 sonic youth songs and why" thread would interest me

i don't want to block others talking about sonic youth around here and i may have been a bit impolite,
but i'm real curious as to what various sy songs mean to different people

someone start a positive sonic youth thread and i promise i won't interupt, i'll do something else

it would be better if it wasn't me that started that new sy thread i want to,
but someone else is reading this hopefully

(b.t.w. i think i've made (incomplete) perfect sense, i might not be at all correct but i've left out some of the connections i'd thought of suggesting later on -- it is interesting to discuss this band -- people do seem to have a hesitancy to discuss the many aspects to sonic youth -- nah, it's just me)

george gosset (gegoss), Wednesday, 7 January 2004 20:49 (twenty-one years ago)

four months pass...
Every music writer loves at least one SY record, but I've never been able to get into them. Maybe you need to be young enough when you hear them for the first time.

Mark (MarkR), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 03:28 (twenty-one years ago)

Search albums: Bad Moon Rising, Sister, Murray Street.

Search songs: Schizophrenia, Genetic, Cotton Crown, Hey Joni, Providence, Skip Tracer, Brave Men Run, Brother James, Inhuman, Becuz, Sympathy For the Strawberry, Rain on Tin, Expressway To Yr Skull, Shadow of a Doubt, Hoarfrost, Eric's Trip, Free City Rhymes, Anagrama

Keep in mind that there's also a huge amount of shitty SY material out there. Be warned.

Ian Johnson (orion), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 03:36 (twenty-one years ago)

Given all the 90s alternative rock and post-rock you like Mark, it would surprise me if you didn't get anything at all out of "The Diamond Sea" or "Schizophrenia". They're sort of like classic rock epics but subverted, using climbing dissonant harmonies instead of heroically melodic solos, etc. (I know you've probably heard them already.) I don't regard the group nearly as highly as I used to but I do think they had some great moments. I suspect that a lot of the canonical material might be too punk-rooted for your tastes.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 19:15 (twenty-one years ago)

Mind you, by this point, if you didn't get into them in their 'glory days', you might not consider it worth your while to go through their back catalogue. There certainly is lots of other interesting new music that does interesting things with guitars or subverts rock songs, etc.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)

I was now hearing Sonic Youth's Expressway to your skull, and may I say I now get Sonic Youth.

Cacaman Flores, Tuesday, 11 May 2004 19:40 (twenty-one years ago)

Oh yeah, that one too. It ends with an ambient drone thing.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 19:52 (twenty-one years ago)

Sonic Youth is/was the perfect expression of a specific thing and anyone who likes noisy guitars and rock should find something to hold dear to their heart. This has been taking place for years, when working at my local record score in college in 96 my friend who loved the Dead C. and Skullflower was looking at a sale table including Confusion is Sex/Kill Yr. Idols CD on dgc and I suggested it and she looked at me like I was recommending the Goo Goo Dolls. I had no idea anyone could think of Sonic Youth as being anything less then godlike, because when I got into them in the mid to late 80s they blew my mind way open. By that time they were getting poppier, but not quite at the Dirty stage of actually trying to be a youthfull hardcore band(which I didn't like much) Teenage Riot is the power-pop skate-rock epic art-punk song that get's me out of be every morning, Expressway to Yr Skull is the psychedelic noise explosion that knocks me out every night.

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 19:57 (twenty-one years ago)

I first heard SY when I was 15. The first albums I had were Experimental Jet Set and Washing Machine, both of which I think are classic and unfairly maligned.

Oddly enough, I had a conversation this morning with a co-worker who said he used to like SY but thinks they took a major nosedive with those two albums. For him, SY was never better than the five-year period between Daydream Nation and Dirty. Of course, he's five years older than me and I think those were probably the first three SY albums he ever heard, back when he was a teenager.

(And meanwhile, though I like Dirty and Goo okay, I hardly ever listen to them.)

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 20:02 (twenty-one years ago)

don' t know if I'm older, but maybe started listening to Sonic Youth earlier then your co-worker, I'm tend to love their entire career up to Daydream Nation, with Goo having a few tracks I like, Dirty one or two, and I stopped following after that, though I did get a copy of Washing Machine and thought it had moments as well. But they changed, or were always changing, and I changed, or whatever, and even if they put something out that was just like Sister, which wouldn't make sense now anyway, I don't know that I'd be into it.

Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 20:25 (twenty-one years ago)

In order (only real albums and I haven't heard the new one):

Evol
Confusion is Sex
Sister
Bad Moon Rising
Experimental Jet Set
Daydream Nation
A Thousand Leaves
Dirty
Goo
NYC Ghosts & Flowers
Washing Machine

(Note: I don't think Sonic Youth has yet released a truly bad album so even the last five on my list have some great moments.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 21:09 (twenty-one years ago)

I don't think Sonic Youth has yet released a truly bad album

AHEM:

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drd800/d808/d80872xi202.jpg

http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/cov200/drd200/d284/d28473xgh9r.jpg

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 21:37 (twenty-one years ago)

silver session is quite pretty!

Ian Johnson (orion), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 21:39 (twenty-one years ago)

Mr. Snrub is here again with his 'where are the tunes' schtick shockah!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 21:54 (twenty-one years ago)

Snrub I did say REAL ALBUMS above. I haven't heard all the six million side-projects, EPs and various other silliness. I like the Silver Session thing too though.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 21:54 (twenty-one years ago)

this "posting a picture of the album cover instead of just saying the title" deal is really getting old.

my favorite SY albums are dirty and confusion is sex, weirdly enough. i still can't sit through daydream nation without falling asleep.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 22:41 (twenty-one years ago)

Seriously, I really like their new album!!

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Tuesday, 11 May 2004 22:45 (twenty-one years ago)

eight months pass...
Kim Gordon sings crap on purpose - it's her style.
It's so fine-tuned to being totally off key at specifically brilliant moments.. it's kind of an Art.

I'm deadly serious in this opinion by the way. She's not so totally stoopid that she sings *that* badly. It's a cool druggy "i don't care, gimme what i want" attitude. Dirty's 'Swimsuit Issue' is a brilliant example; her vocals are so atrociously bad it's obvious that it's part of a style she's aware of & in attempting to achieve.

Anansie, Friday, 21 January 2005 21:54 (twenty years ago)

Oh sure it's a style, but it still sounds like crap (just a value judgement.) (and there are exceptions.)

Ian John50n (orion), Friday, 21 January 2005 22:04 (twenty years ago)

I've literally only heard SYR 1 and SYR 3. Am I on the right track or am I ruining myself for SY forever? Please advise.

tremendoid (tremendoid), Friday, 21 January 2005 22:09 (twenty years ago)

Look up the tracks in my post above.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 21 January 2005 22:11 (twenty years ago)

I love SYR 1 and SYR 3, but it all depends on what you're looking for in the band. Where are you coming at them from? From indie rock? From noise? From jazz? If you want pop songs or rock songs, search Evol through Daydream Nation as well as the Sonic Nurse and Washing Machine. For things (way) more open-ended, search Silver Session or SYR 4. For a combination of the two I'd suggest Bad Moon Rising for starters.

But, I love almost all of their albums.

Ian John50n (orion), Friday, 21 January 2005 22:13 (twenty years ago)

Kim Gordon, with famous Jazz musician Matts Gustafsson,
for anyone doubting that her bad singing is a 'perfected style'
rather than accidental:

http://www.mp3search.ru/album.html?id=19676

Here, Matts off-key jazz accompanies her off-key verbal meanderings..

Anansie, Friday, 21 January 2005 22:18 (twenty years ago)

Anansie do you have perfect pitch? I wish I had perfect pitch, or at least an ear trained well enough to recognize these things. Still, whether it's 'well done' and whether it's 'good' are two entirely separate issues.

Ian John50n (orion), Friday, 21 January 2005 22:23 (twenty years ago)

Y'know what, I think it's this 'tongue-in-cheek' humour & playfulness which is key to appreciating many aspects of Sonic Youth.
Like Kim Gorden's voice, it's so perfectly off-key it has an addictive quality.. you mind starts naturally predicting what off-key note she will hit next; and aftertime you get good at doing this.
Addictively trashy, druggy voice; when you start to take SY less seriously, they become enjoyable. You can laugh at the things that are meant to be funny. Her style & attitude makes me smile, grin, laugh. Many of their lyrics are blatantly carp/stoopid/silly but said/sung in such an 'earnest' way makes it hillarious. We're *meant* to find a lot of it funny. They will never announce this intention, if they did, that special something which *makes them* would be lost.

Anansie, Friday, 21 January 2005 22:27 (twenty years ago)

Ian.. I agree that essentially, the voice you hear on the record is crap. We both agree that it's an intentional style right? If not, that's why I posted the link. Listen to the beginnings of some of the tracks (it's free).. and you'll see what I mean, plus it becomes 'obvious' that off-keyness is the intention pretty quick.
I find it very 'clever' in a very 'arty' way - but then again Sonic Youth are an Art Rock band. Singing perfectly off key isn't as easy as you think.. she really hits every off-key note perfectly, in a consitent dischordant pattern (a musician could probabally map it out in musical notation); here a definate pattern emerges, in SY any 'pattern' would get boring after a while, so occasionally she'll sing well, which collectively makes her vocals very interesting & addictive. Not for everyone, admittedly, but I definately love her voice, as do many others I'm sure.

Anansie, Friday, 21 January 2005 22:34 (twenty years ago)

Anansie, I find your assessment of the 'Youth to be very much OTM, though I've never heard anyone describe it as such. Her vocals, the lyrics, the fact that you're not supposed to take it seriously. It's honest, but not too honest. Yes, that is a big part of their appeal for me, even if I don't own all their albums and wouldn't wish to. "Dirty" is definitely the high point.

Bimble... (Bimble...), Saturday, 22 January 2005 07:52 (twenty years ago)

Art couched in a deceptive form of amateurism.

Bimble... (Bimble...), Saturday, 22 January 2005 07:54 (twenty years ago)

Anansie, that album is excellent, probably the most successful SY avant/'art' project. Thanks for linking it. Track 3 in particular has some intense and arresting moments in the dynamics and textures. And you're right about KG's vocals - it really proves your point that what she's doing is technically calculated, something I wasn't always sure about. I haven't heard her pull off that type of 'jazzy' singing so well - it's a conclusion of things she was trying on Thousand Leaves and the SYR projects but it seems much more fully realized and successful than those.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Sunday, 23 January 2005 21:25 (twenty years ago)

four months pass...
and for point of comparison look at her vocal on 'kotton krown'; if she can sing that well it's not as if she sounds the way she does everywhere else just because she can't hack it somehow.

Josh (Josh), Sunday, 29 May 2005 09:27 (twenty years ago)


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