I saw that
Slowdive were reforming on a website. I thought I'll dig out those early Slowdive tapes (no one ever stole tapes) and cds. The first 3 EPs
Slowdive (90)
, Holding Our Breath (91) and
Morningrise (91) plus most of their debut LP
Just For A Day (91) I always rated. Listening back to them the other day revealed that I was perhaps correct, well I enjoyed them anyway. They had some stellar tunes
Celia's Dream, Catch The Breeze, She Calls & the amazing epic
Primal. They were definitely the most
Cocteau Twins influenced of the shoegaze brigade whereas say
Ride, early on, were probably more influenced by 80s noise rock. The meeting point for all these bands was
My Bloody Valentine, they would be the centre of your Venn diagram. On the outside would be girl groups, stadium rock, cutie, goth, fx pedal worship, ambient, psych pop etc. Of those
Ride tunes I recall diggin the first four EPs
Ride, Play, Fall (all from 90) and
Today Forever (91) as well well as like three quarters of the debut LP
Nowhere (90) but only a couple of tracks from the follow up
Going Blank Again (92). I saw
Ride play live a couple of times and they were a powerhouse wall of noise band (gee the drummer was good) compared to their more sedate recordings, I liked that dichotomy. What about the others?
The Pale Saints and
The Boo Radleys had their moments,
Chapterhouse didn't. I didn't hate
Lush I just didn't buy their records.
Then there was
Curve whose first couple of EPs were terrific but I don't think you were meant to like them. They were the corporate machine co-opting the underground once again and perhaps signalling the end of the scene. The lead singer of Curve
Tony Halliday was one of these
Allanis Morrissette,
Robin Thicke types who was signed to a major label, had a failed pop career then somehow got a second chance as a totally different type of artist. There was even a shoegazing band from Sydney called
Jupiter who I saw once in a South Melbourne pub. They had a great tune
Sense (note to self track down that EP). There was a time circa 90/91 when you thought this thrilling bliss would last forever. America even had a go with
The Drop Nineteens whose record
Delaware (92) was pretty good (I listened to it the other day) as was
Medicine's
Shot Forth Self Living (92)
LP. Anyone remember
Smashed Orange (very vague memory of them) or
The Belltower's
Outshine The Sun? Some kind of award should go to
Lilys who sounded so much like
My Bloody Valentine it was preposterous. They were so absurd you couldn't help but admire their commitment see their LP
In The Presence of Nothing from 92. There were many more I don't remember but when a girlfriend at the time showed up with a record by
Revolver (a C-grade Ride rip off) you knew the end was near. I never bought
Slowdive's
Souvlaki (93) or the follow up
Pygmalion (95). Some people rate these highly maybe I missed out, maybe I didn't. Worth missing out on though were
The Boo Radleys Wake Up (95),
Ride's
Carnival Of Light (94) and
The Pale Saints had lost it by
Slow Buildings (94). After the release of
Loveless in 91
My Bloody Valentine went AWOL for the rest of the 90s and even
Lilys changed their style mid decade. The spirit of MBV lived on with
Seefeel, Third Eye Foundation, Moonshake and
Flying Saucer Attack making excellent music in other genres during the 90s. There have been resurgences and revivals over the years....some current groups probably consider the original wave of shoegazers an influence.
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Award winning genuine fake. |