Well. Both inarguably? great bands but who is your most favourite or played these days? I guess The Clean have been more consistently sporadic with their touring and albums, especially within USA, and their reputation and 'influence' has only apparently grown, whereas The Chills fell completely off the radar after a busier 80's and it kind of feels like to me they are less remembered and regarded than Kilgour, Kilgour and Scott. Also as great as The Clean are, personally I have probably played them too much so now I listen to The Chills more these days. They have a new record coming out too and it sounds very fine. So. Who is your favourite, who has aged the best? If someone put a gun to your head etc, etc....choose your own stupid pointless scenario and discuss this battle of the ageless grace.
― Hinklepicker, Friday, 22 August 2014 04:51 (ten years ago)
If someone put a gun to your head etc, etc
point that thing somewhere else
― mookieproof, Friday, 22 August 2014 05:57 (ten years ago)
Look for the good in others and they'll see the good in you. I figured The Clean would be most people's picks.
― Hinklepicker, Friday, 22 August 2014 06:13 (ten years ago)
Pick.
chills
― the kingness of stranders (electricsound), Friday, 22 August 2014 10:09 (ten years ago)
The Bats over both!
― Evan, Friday, 22 August 2014 13:42 (ten years ago)
Chills
― sleeve, Friday, 22 August 2014 14:52 (ten years ago)
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 14:54 (ten years ago)
clean
― tylerw, Friday, 22 August 2014 16:08 (ten years ago)
I don't play music these days, but Chills
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Friday, 22 August 2014 16:26 (ten years ago)
i dunno. but "pink frost" might hit me harder than any single song by the clean
― Tom Waits for no one (outdoor_miner), Friday, 22 August 2014 16:59 (ten years ago)
I'd go Chills (but also Bats above both, even if Chills highs are higher).
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:23 (ten years ago)
There are a host of Flying Nun pop bands whose appeal never quite hit me, like the Verlaines, Straightjacket Fits, etc. I've heard them, but don't quite get them.
Soft spot for the noisy stuff, though, like Gordons/Bailter Space and 3Ds.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:25 (ten years ago)
Dead C rule all
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 17:27 (ten years ago)
Eh, different animal, really, isn't it?
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:28 (ten years ago)
I'm not sure what you mean by noisy stuff then
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 17:29 (ten years ago)
they released records on flying nun. they're from new zealand. they wrote lots of songs. their drummer played with the verlaines. but yes, an entirely different animal.
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 17:31 (ten years ago)
Oh, sure, I would definitely put them in the noisy pantheon of those bands I mentioned as an aside. I just meant different animal from the popier stuff the thread addresses.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:36 (ten years ago)
right i forgot you were the only person allowed to introduce the topic of noisy stuff from new zealand like Gordons/Bailter Space and 3Ds on a thread that is otherwise about the popier stuff the thread addresses
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 17:40 (ten years ago)
I'm sorry you're taking this very personally. Ward Fowler rules all.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:42 (ten years ago)
I mean, dude, we're only posting on a thread about bands we all or many of us like. I like the Dead C., I like the Bats. I wasn't trying to shut down discussion or your tastes.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:43 (ten years ago)
Did not realize the Dead C's had released records on Flying Nun or that their drummer had played with the Verlaines.
― curmudgeon, Friday, 22 August 2014 17:45 (ten years ago)
Chills. I love everything on Kaleidoscope World, Brave Words and Submarine Bells.
― I have a website, Glen is very active on Facebook. (cajunsunday), Friday, 22 August 2014 17:48 (ten years ago)
Bailter Space also isn't so completely far removed from the pop side like Dead C, which could be why Josh reacted that way initially.
― Evan, Friday, 22 August 2014 18:59 (ten years ago)
didn't we already have this conversation on the sandbox a few years ago?!
― cross over the mushroom circle (La Lechera), Friday, 22 August 2014 19:29 (ten years ago)
there are no new waves there is only the ocean
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Friday, 22 August 2014 19:34 (ten years ago)
See I love both, but I'm the same way in the other direction, "Odditty" towers over the rest of both bands' output, so the Clean it is.
I do love "Brave Words" to death though.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 22 August 2014 19:44 (ten years ago)
All those other bands are undeniably great - I was hoping for once the discussion might mainly stick to these two bands in particular - they do share similar qualities and places in the ' conversation'. I mean does every single discussion about an individual band or bands on Flying Nun have to devolve into a into some kind of comparative study of the whole roster? I don't suppose it is that much of a problem, but if I was in any of these bands I could imagine getting tired of always having to talk about Flying Nun in general like it was some big homogeneous blob, ignoring the colour and identity of each band.
― Hinklepicker, Friday, 22 August 2014 22:12 (ten years ago)
Sorry, silly rant.
Chills every day and twice on Sunday.
"Sketch book" over "Oddities".
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 22 August 2014 22:47 (ten years ago)
Chills for me, too. Though I thought they were disappointing live recently.
― emil.y, Friday, 22 August 2014 23:02 (ten years ago)
Surprised that most are choosing The Chills. What makes them more compelling than the Clean? For me The Cleans best songs are all on Compilation - a record which for some reason makes me think about The Buzzcocks Going Steady comp. In that it is uniformly great and could stand as a single document representing the whole. Not to say Vehicle et al are not fine but that for me, by then they had lost the element of surprise. Live though of course The Clean is whole different beast. Whereas The Chills I think spread out there goodness and have so many great songs up to and including Submarinr Bells - before they were swallowed up by ' acid house and grunge'. I have had a listen to Soft Bomb recently and was surprised to discover I liked a lot of this too. So to sum up: Chills by a nose because they have more hummable,songs which I still play now. If it were a comparison as a live animal though I would find it hard to vote against The Clean who on a good night feel so elemental and locked in to some great mysterious primal pulse that they seem like the only band worth bothering with.
― Hinklepicker, Saturday, 23 August 2014 00:24 (ten years ago)
clean. chills never did it for me, 'pink frost' aside.
― B. A. 'Baracus' Santamaria (haitch), Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:19 (ten years ago)
Surprised that most are choosing The Chills.
Cosign; in NZ the Clean loom a lot larger both by seeming earlier/more protean (they're the Velvet Underground of NZ indie tbh, leading to the Xpressway or Pumice-y end of things as much as landfill Flying Nun stuff), + having quietly kept on rather than the various implosions of Martin Phillips. The Terminals vs 3Ds thread sort've underlined how wildly different the stature/positioning of these bands in NZ vs overseas is, though.
― etc, Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:24 (ten years ago)
sometimes boodle boodle boodle is the greatest thing i can ever imagine happening in my lifetime.
― dynamicinterface, Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:26 (ten years ago)
that last post is poorly worded. i meant to say ' the clean '
― dynamicinterface, Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:27 (ten years ago)
I think one reason I veer Chills is because in many ways it's the evolution of one man's musical vision, with lots of great beauty every step of the way. The Clean have that, too, but not only is shambling a part of its appeal, it's almost more of a sum of its parts thing. NZ VU OTM, basically. And that should be enough. But ultimately I think I like a lot of Chills stuff more.
does every single discussion about an individual band or bands on Flying Nun have to devolve into a into some kind of comparative study of the whole roster?
As much my fault as anyone's, but I think the Clean and Chills and Bats and Tall Dwarves/Chris Knox et al. are so tied together, it's hard to talk about one without the other. So many shared members. I mean, Peter Gutteridge was in the Clean, and also co-founded the Chills, but also played with Shayne Carter (right?). Then you get Chris Knox, who produced "Tally Ho!" (on which Martin Phillipps played the organ part), did his own thing, Tall Dwarves, etc.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:45 (ten years ago)
This is a hard question to answer. There was a time in my life when I valued Kaleidescape World and Brave Words more than just about everything. But that was a long time ago. Now I'm more likely to listen to Compilation or Vehicle.
― first is the worst (askance johnson), Saturday, 23 August 2014 01:54 (ten years ago)
Boodle, Boodle, Boodle is untouchable
― du mein bestie (micarl), Saturday, 23 August 2014 04:23 (ten years ago)
Was just listening to "Soft Bomb" again, and man, "Song for Randy Newman, Etc." is such a sad, weird tragic song, the only song about overlooked cult artists sung by an overlooked cult artist. Saw some blurb online that accurately described it as "so full of humility and yet so arrogant and so certain of what it knows and resigned to it that it transcends and leaves behind the downer vibe it carries like a cross."
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 24 August 2014 18:55 (ten years ago)
Coupla nice/perceptive Christgau blurbs on the Slash records, too:
Submarine Bells [Slash/Warner Bros., 1990]I might never have known without the printed lyrics, but there's no evidence here that Martin Phillipps is in love with death. He just sees too much of it. So don't dismiss the printed Greenpeace propaganda as gratuitous--for the Chills it's an antidote. What distinguishes them from so many politically well-meaning popsters is that neither cheery music nor dour message is one-dimensional or pro forma--they generate plenty of punk gall and a surprising complement of bliss. Maybe "Heavenly Pop Hit" is about waking up as an angel, but I say Phillipps believes there can be a heaven before he's dead, and if his vision of transcendence is a bit nature-bound for my tastes, it's the thought that counts. Anyway, his true theme song is "Singing in My Sleep," about all the other theme songs--"a word from the wise for the mindless," "a stinging reproach against violence," etc.--that he can't remember in the morning. ASoft Bomb [Slash/Reprise, 1992]As with so many formal coups, one of the pleasures of Submarine Bells was how incorrigibly it challenged unwritten rules (about brightness, concreteness, pretension, keyboards) while adhering to the ones you really can't break (about tunefulness, concision, savvy, guitars). This is just the opposite: adventurous on a surface that accommodates depressive codas and Van Dyke Parks strings, but produced with Martin Phillipps's newly acquired phalanx of L.A. sidemen in mind. Though most garage-pop improves when the beat gets solider, the hooks get clearer, the singer moves up in the mix, and Peter Holsapple adds a guitar, these devices are misconceived for the evanescent Chills. Even when they're all 20 seconds too long, however, Phillipps's tunes stay with you. Reordered to close on "Song for Randy Newman Etc.," a living metaphor for the difficulty of his craft, and to surround the personal songs with the social context Phillipps captures so much more vividly than he thinks he does, this would be a worthy follow-up. I suggest a tape that goes 1-2-3-11-8-6-12-10-13-14-4-9. Skip the fragments, and the long dead metaphor for the shallowness of his craft that implicates a defenseless cab driver. Continue to foreground "Male Monster From the Id," a Greenpeace supporter's bleeding-heart analysis of the sexual power play. A-
Soft Bomb [Slash/Reprise, 1992]As with so many formal coups, one of the pleasures of Submarine Bells was how incorrigibly it challenged unwritten rules (about brightness, concreteness, pretension, keyboards) while adhering to the ones you really can't break (about tunefulness, concision, savvy, guitars). This is just the opposite: adventurous on a surface that accommodates depressive codas and Van Dyke Parks strings, but produced with Martin Phillipps's newly acquired phalanx of L.A. sidemen in mind. Though most garage-pop improves when the beat gets solider, the hooks get clearer, the singer moves up in the mix, and Peter Holsapple adds a guitar, these devices are misconceived for the evanescent Chills. Even when they're all 20 seconds too long, however, Phillipps's tunes stay with you. Reordered to close on "Song for Randy Newman Etc.," a living metaphor for the difficulty of his craft, and to surround the personal songs with the social context Phillipps captures so much more vividly than he thinks he does, this would be a worthy follow-up. I suggest a tape that goes 1-2-3-11-8-6-12-10-13-14-4-9. Skip the fragments, and the long dead metaphor for the shallowness of his craft that implicates a defenseless cab driver. Continue to foreground "Male Monster From the Id," a Greenpeace supporter's bleeding-heart analysis of the sexual power play. A-
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 24 August 2014 18:57 (ten years ago)
Sorry for the bad form of posting one's own piece, but thought Chills fans would like to see my interview with Martin Phillipps.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Monday, 24 November 2014 13:40 (ten years ago)
cool! been digging the bbc sessions chills release lately.
― tylerw, Monday, 24 November 2014 16:22 (ten years ago)
Nice
― Johnny Fever, Monday, 24 November 2014 16:32 (ten years ago)
Wow, did not know of all his health issues...
― curmudgeon, Monday, 24 November 2014 19:40 (ten years ago)
That is a great interview, thank you for sharing. Very sad to hear about all of his health issues. Hep C is really tragic. Is there any chance The Chills will ever make it back stateside? Would be a dream...
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Monday, 24 November 2014 23:55 (ten years ago)
this clip is fun because at about 1:25 in you can see the guy from the chills dancing in moderation on the side
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8X46Pw5zQgc
― 1992 ball boy (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 29 July 2015 04:20 (ten years ago)
if you asked me at a concert standing by The Clean, I'd have said I'm okay and this is what I mean
― geoffreyess, Wednesday, 29 July 2015 19:03 (ten years ago)