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Sonic Youth
Sonic Youth

Sonic Youth: Dirty

Sonic Youth at a glance...

Hometown: New York, NY
Year Formed: 1980

Personnel:
Kim Gordon -bass, guitars, vocals, various
Lee Ranaldo -guitars, vocals
Thurston Moore -guitars, vocals
Steve Shelley -drums, percussion
With:
Kim Deal, Lorette Velvette, Melissa Dunn -vocals

Related artists:
Ciccone Youth, Two Dollar Guitar, Free Kitten, Lee Ranaldo, William Hooker, Velvet Monkeys, The Crucifucks, Cat Power, Nels Cline, Thurston Moore, In Limbo, The Coachmen, Mats Gustafsson, William Winant, J Mascis, Kim Deal, Pavement, Half Japanese, Mike Watt, Borbetomagus, Shonen Knife, Puzzled Panthers, Jim O'Rourke

Notes:
Sonic Youth rose triumphantly out of New York's early 80s No-Wave scene. Originally fueled by the ripping guitar of Glenn Branca alumns Ranaldo and Moore, Sonic Youth grew into - and maintain their stature as - a rock 'n' roll aural-experimentation unit beyond compare. Sometimes melodic, sometimes atonal, but rarely boring, the band have covered a lot of ground in its nearly 20-year history. From the early scene-splashing Confusion is Sex (1983) to the more polished EVOL (1986), the band's early evolution is apparent. 1988's epic Daydream Nation secured Sonic Youth's status as a legendary, visionary band which would forever leave its mark on rock 'n' roll. Subsequent albums and tours have served to bolster the band's popularity, even when not establishing any new plateaus of creativity. More recently, offshoot releases (like 1997's Perspectives Musicales series) have shown evidence of a continuing interest in experimentation. A perpetually active band, Sonic Youth will surely entertain and challenge for years to come.

Links:
Read Ink Blot's tribute to Sonic Youth, "Sonic Truth"
Sonic Youth

Sonic Youth
Dirty
Geffen, Released 1992
Sonic Youth
Sonic Youth

Memory plays funny tricks on you. I played this record a few times when it first came out, then filed it away and almost forgot about it. Whenever I did recall it, I didn't think much of it. But when I started playing it again recently to prepare for this review Dirty stood revealed as a damned fine rock record that transcends its reach-for-the-brass-ring trappings.

Sonic Youth recorded it in the aftermath of Nevermind's breakout success. They tapped that album's producer, Butch Vig, and retained megabucks metal guy Andy Wallace's mixing services. The outcome was the biggest-sounding record of Sonic Youth's career. The production somewhat deemphasizes their unusual guitar tunings. Ranaldo and Moore's novel note-colors are filligrees that overlay broad, crunchy chord driven by outsized drumming -- Steve Shelley's never sounded better. Of course, the vocals are louder than they need to be -- this aspires to be radio rock, after all -- but the polish is not so much a sell-out move as one that suits the material. Sonic Youth's songs have always reflected what they were into at the time, and in 1992 they wanted to rock. "Wish Fulfillment's" chorus detonates like a depth charge, "Sugar Kane's" elongated melody soars, and "Swimsuit Issue" gnashes bright aluminum teeth of rage.

Sometimes it's nice to be wrong - I don't think it'll be years before I play this one again.

If you like Sonic Youth, check out:
Sonic Youth EVOL
Sonic Youth Sister
Sonic Youth NYC Ghosts & Flowers
Sonic Youth Daydream Nation
Sonic Youth Confusion Is Sex
Sonic Youth Goo
Sonic Youth Washing Machine
Sonic Youth Experimental Jet Set, Trash And No Star
Sonic Youth Goodbye 20th Century
Sonic Youth Bad Moon Rising
Lee Ranaldo Amarillo Ramp
Nels Cline and Thurston Moore Mirror Wand
Nirvana Nevermind
Sonic Youth

-- Bill Meyer

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