When Daydream Nation first appeared at the tail end of 1988, it was greeted with equal amounts of surprise and elation; the former probably due to the fact that it heralded a major musical departure for Sonic Youth compared to their previous escapades into uneasy listening, avant-garde territories, and the latter because Daydream Nation simply rewrote the rulebook, welding segments of noise with straightforward rock 'n' roll tuneage, not to mention lyrics ranging from Hendrix eulogies to Warhol-inspired LSD trips and high school murderers.
More importantly, of course, is the fact that Daydream Nation signalled a change in attitude and stance on both sides of the pond. Their next two records (Goo and Dirty) may have been more commercially successful, and the intertwining period between the two tagged 'The Year That Punk Broke', but this was the trailblazer to all that followed in its wake.
Looking back, 1988 really was a groundbreaking year for music: alongside Daydream Nation was the equally incisive triumvirate of Isn't Anything, Surfer Rosa and Superfuzz Bigmuff. Obviously, several global popstars-in-waiting spent the ensuing months studying each and every one of these records' ostentatious paths, and grunge was born.
But back to the record at hand: Sonic Youth's fifth full-length album. Self-produced and initially released via the soon-to-be defunct Enigma imprint, Daydream Nation epitomised the mid-point on the axis where lo-fi sensibilities and stadium possibilities could meet up, have lunch, swap numbers and go their separate ways as life-long buddies.
The original release runs to 14 tracks in total and - let's be honest here - if you haven't heard these songs already then you really should. From the opening bars of the now legendary 'Teen Age Riot', Thurston Moore's ode to making something happen rather than waiting for someone else to do it, to the closing segment of the album's Trilogy piece 'Eliminator Jr', Daydream Nation doesn't just stand the test of time but remains a cornerstone for any budding artists aspiring to be in a band.
Of course, with this deluxe edition come extra tracks. The re-mastered original doesn't sound that much different from the original – unless you have played your original vinyl copy to death you won’t notice much in the way of change. But the extras are worthy of your hard-earned cash alone.
An acoustic home demo recording of 'Eric's Trip' by Thurston Moore rounds off the first disc, but it's on disc two that the realisation of just what an astonishing piece of work this record is kicks in. Entitled Live Daydream, it collects live performances from various shows, even so far as the double-edged breakdown of 'Total Trash' (complete with sibling 'Totally Trashed') and the Trilogy of 'The Wonder', 'Hyperstation' and 'Eliminator Jr' in its full, uninterrupted glory.
Tagged onto the end of the record are four, extremely hard-to-find (unless you're an eBay anorak) cover versions, the best of which sends The Beatles' 'Within You Within You', which comes on like it’s on an MDMA induced magical mystery tour of its own. Add to all this an insightfully informative booklet and you're left with arguably the most essential (re)release of 2007.
Still as compelling to this day, and utterly timeless.
I still can't tell
which Sonic Youth album I like most out of Daydream Nation, Dirty and Washing Machine.
Dirty was my introduction to them - I was all of 12 when it was released and the cover was freaky. Daydream Nation kind of sealed the deal musically and Washing Machine was catharsis in a turbulent period of my teens. Either way, it's good to see something as seminal as Daydream Nation find it's way onto the Deluxe Edition format. A friend of mine says Sonic Youth are one of those bands people always name-drop but never actually *know*. Perhaps this rerelease will rectify that. I'm gonna stick my musty old copy on now till I've got the cash.
hmm
its always washing machine.
always
dirty was my first too!
then washing machine (because of the wonderful Diamond Sea).
i msy have to buy this just to hear "Within Without You".
can I...
...buy this album in HMV, or have I got to go and buy a Starbucks to get it?
sell outs.
go fuck
yourself
why
do people get so defensive over bands they like? Sonic Youth let Starbucks buttfuck them.
stupid
they've been signed to a major label since 1989. they reclaimed all of the masters for their previous released and sold them to that major label.
your arguement is stupid, baseless and basically retarded indie kid whining.
but
there's a difference between selling albums to a major label, and cutting a deal with the arse end of globalisation, Starbucks.
hahahahahahah
really?
really?
REALLY?
go do some reading about Universal Vivendi and see if you really feel the same.
ok
but Universal is a record label. Starbucks is a coffee shop. Sonic Youth are just giving Starbucks a load of free advertising!
do they need the advertising?
Nah. They have (popular) stores in nearly every major town.
okay then
why do nike still advertise? why do coca cola?
Daydream Nation
is not my favorite SY record, but I can see why it's considered "important" in the indie canon.
As a side note, I think calling those esteemed albums a precurser to grunge does those albums a disservice. Grunge is simply garage rock from the 90s and however interesting (in the case of Pearl Jam or Nirvana ...or uninterestingly, mostly) it wasn't groundbreaking stuff. Daydream Nation, Isn't Anything etc were.
Silly point to pick with Dom's fine review perhaps.
And I gotta admit I'm not that pleased about the whole Starbuck's bullshit. I think I prefered it when they only sold shitty Paul McCartney albums. Maybe because I'm a selfish cunt who thinks yuppie cunts can't appreciate "real" art. *shrugs*
I'd rather
hear Sonic Youth in Starbucks than The Feeling, Maroon 5 or Nutini though. As an aside like....
as if you'd go in starbucks
unless they started doing a StellaWithLimeAchino
that sounds really nice
my mate works in starbucks
he gets free coffee every week
ah, the joy
i get nothing free at work. i even got my vending machine key taken off me for hitting it with a shining wizard when it robbed me of 50p. now i have to pay 'outsider' prices for food :(
whats a shining wizard?
i get free coffee at work
i also have a bloc party mug which the cleaners stole for over 2 weeks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hteSceIwssA&NR=1
knee with trailing leg.
Bigbluesky...
...it's worth the money just to hear that cover of Within Without You. It's magnificent.
[well, OK, maybe it's not worth £21 just to hear it - which is how much Virgin Oxford Street are charging!)
Dirty
I reckon that if Dirty hadn't been done in a big fancy studio with a producer and a major label backing, it would be the one heralded as the masterpiece. I think it's their most acomplished album and is lightyears better than the slightly shoddyily produced (if you can get through 4 songs of those pathetic sounding drums then i applaud you), two hit wonder that is Daydream Nation. It's a great record, it's just nowhere near their best. Sister's even better.
In my opinion :)
correction
very good review. i have 2 very minor correctons: the eric's trip demo is by lee and the trilogy is not quite "full, uninterrupted" as it is taken from 2 different shows months and half a world apart.
major gripe...
what's annoying about this release (and why I won't be buying it) is that the "live" version is as mentioned a patchwork of lots of different gigs. my guess is there'll be an official DVD or the like of the live shows they're playing this summer and wait for that to spend your hard earned cash on. if it's a patch of the power they put together at Primavera when they played it all in one go it'd be money very well spent.
it's shite
admit it
okbutoverrated
okbutoverrated
excellent review
which gets rarer and rare on this website
Sonic Youth day is
on August the 12th at the Bloomsbury Bowling lanes and 7 bands each cover a classic Sonic Youth Song and the gig is free!
more details at www.damnably.com
and www.myspace.com/damnablypresents