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{{Infobox musical artist| Name = Sonic Youth| Img = Sonic Youth live 20050707.jpg| Img_capt = Kim Gordon (left) and Thurston Moore performing live in Stockholm, 2005],
New York State, USA[Noise rock
Experimental rockPost-PunkNo Wave-present| Label = [Neutral Records
Ecstatic Peace!Homestead RecordsSST RecordsEnigma RecordsGeffen Records
Sonic Youth Recordings
Interscope Records| Associated_acts =
Ciccone Youth
[Lee RanaldoKim Gordon
Steve Shelley
[Richard Edson
Jim O'Rourke (musician)
Jim Sclavunos-->
Sonic Youth is an
United States alternative rock group formed in New York City in 1981. The group's lineup today is essentially the core of the group, having been together since 1985, comprising
Thurston Moore (guitars and vocals) Lee Ranaldo (guitars, vocals and organ) Kim Gordon (bass guitar, guitar, and vocals) and
Steve Shelley (drums). Before Steve's time the group went through several drummers, and additionally from 2000-2005 longtime friend
Jim O'Rourke (musician) became a full-time member as a multi-instrumentalist.
In their early career, Sonic Youth were associated with the No Wave art and music scene in New York City, but have outlasted most associated bands. Part of the first wave of American noise rock groups, Sonic Youth carried out their interpretation of the
punk rock ethos throughout the evolving American Indie (music) underground (as the title of their documentary
1991: The Year Punk Broke demonstrates) that focused more on the DIY ethic of the genre rather than its specific sound. They have found moderate mainstream success, and are generally seen as one of the leading
alternative rock groups of their time.
Their inspirations were the likes of the guitar symphonies of
Glenn Branca (with whom most of the band have performed), the heavy protopunk of
The Stooges, The Velvet Underground, and
MC5, the punk poetry of Patti Smith, the
Krautrock of Can, the psychedelic
garage rock of The 13th Floor Elevators, as well as
avant-garde composers like John Cage. Sonic Youth were often praised for "redefin what rock guitar could do"{{cite web]s, and
prepared guitars with objects like
screwdrivers to alter the instruments'
timbre.
Members of the band have released books of poetry and prose, produced films, staged shows of visual art and more. There is also an abundance of musical material recorded and/or performed with other artists and side projects.
History
Origins
Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo had performed (together and separately) in various short-lived punk rock groups. Ranaldo was a member of composer Glenn Branca's electric guitar ensemble; Moore and eventually Kim Gordon (who'd been introduced to Moore through future A&R rep
Terry Tolkin) would also perform with Branca. Gordon was not a musician at the time but had a fine-arts background, and in the early 1980s there was considerable crossover between the art and music worlds in New York City. Moore and Gordon began dating and decided to form a band where Gordon would play bass guitar and Moore would play guitar. The band went through a number of different names including Male Bonding, Red Milk, and the Arcadians.Azerrad, Michael.
Our Band Could Be Your Life. Little Brown and Company, 2001. ISBN 0-316-78753-1, pg. 234-35
The band then known as the Arcadians' first show was in June 1981 as part of a 10-day festival organized by Moore. Held at the White Columns gallery in SoHo, the "Noise Fest" festival also included a performance by Branca's ensemble. The band line-up at this event was Moore, Gordon, drummer
Richard Edson and keyboardist
Ann DeMarinis. DeMarinis did not stick around for another gig, but immediately after Branca's set Moore asked Ranaldo to join his band.Azerrad, pg. 235 Moore came up with the name "Sonic Youth" shortly before this concert, combining the name of
Fred "Sonic" Smith of the band
MC5 with the trend of reggae artists such as
Big Youth featuring the word "Youth" in their names. Gordon recalled that "As soon as Thurston came up with the name Sonic Youth, a certain sound that was more of what we wanted to do came about."Azerrad, pg. 236
Early releases: 1982-1985
Branca signed Sonic Youth as the first act on his record label Neutral Records. In December of 1981 the group recorded five songs in a studio in New York's
Radio City Music Hall. The material was a released as the
Sonic Youth (album) mini-LP that, while largely ignored, was sent to a few key members of the US press that gave it uniformly favorable reviews.Azerrad, pg. 237 After their first record, Edson quit the group for a modestly successful acting career (noted for roles in
Stranger Than Paradise,
Ferris Bueller's Day Off and "
Do the right thing"); he was replaced by Bob Bert.
During their early days as part of the New York music scene, Sonic Youth formed a friendship with noisy New Yorkers Swans (band). The bands came to share the same rehearsal space, and Sonic Youth embarked on its first tour, a two-week journey through the southern United States starting in November of 1982, supporting Swans. During a second tour with Swans of the Midwest the following month, tensions ran high and Moore constantly criticized Bert's drumming, which he felt wasn't "in the pocket."Azerrad, pg. 241 Bert was fired afterwards and replaced by
Jim Sclavunos, who played drums on the band's 1983 album
Confusion Is Sex. Sonic Youth managed to set up a two-week tour of Europe for the summer of 1983. However, Sclavunos quit after only a few months. The group asked Bert to rejoin, and he agreed, on the condition that he would not be fired again after the tour's conclusion.Azerrad, pg. 245
Sonic Youth had found themselves well-received in Europe, but the New York press largely ignored the local
noise rock scene. Eventually, as the press began to take notice of the genre, Sonic Youth was grouped along with bands like
Big Black, the
Butthole Surfers and
Pussy Galore (band) under the "pigfucker" label by
Village Voice music critic Robert Christgau.Christgau, Robert. "Township Jive Conquers the World: The 13th (or 14th) Annual Pazz & Jop Critics Poll".
Village Voice. March 3,
1987. (Christgau saw these bands as sharing an abrasive, noisy and confrontational aesthetic.) Based on this classification, and on a negative live review by Christgau, a feud developed between Moore and the critic, with Moore renaming the song "Kill Yr Idols" "I Killed Christgau With My Big Fucking Dick" before the men sorted out their differences amicably.Azerrad, pg. 246
During another tour of Europe in 1984, Sonic Youth's disastrous
London, England debut (where the band's equipment malfunctioned and Moore consequently destroyed the equipment onstage in frustration) actually resulted in rave notices in
Sounds and the
NME. By the time they returned to New York, they were so popular they played shows practically every week.Azerrad, pg. 248 That same year Moore and Gordon were married and Sonic Youth released
Bad Moon Rising (album), a self-described "Americana" album that served as a reaction to the state of the nation at the time.Azerrad, pg. 250 The album, recorded by Martin Bisi, was built around transitional pieces guitarists Moore and Ranaldo had come up with in order to take up time onstage while the other guitarist was busy tuning his instrument;Azerrad, pg. 248 as a result there are almost no breaks between the songs on the record, which feature walls of feedback and pounding rhythms.
Bad Moon Rising featured an appearance by
Lydia Lunch on the album's single "Death Valley '69," inspired by the
Charles Manson Family murders. In contrast to their abrasive, atonal material of the time, the band considered the song relatively conventional. Due to a falling-out with Branca over disputed royalty payments from their Neutral releases, they were signed to
Homestead Records by Gerard Cosloy and by
Blast First in the UK (which founder Paul Smith (music industry) created simply so he could distribute the band's records in Europe).Azerrad, pg. 252 While even the New York press ignored
Bad Moon Rising upon its release, now viewing the band as too arty and pretentious, Sonic Youth was becoming quite critically acclaimed in the United Kingdom, where the new album had sold five thousand copies in just six months.Azerrad, pg. 252-53
Claiming he was bored with playing
Bad Moon Rising live in its entirety for over a year, Bert quit the group and was replaced by Steve Shelley, formerly of the hardcore group
Crucifucks. The band was so impressed with Shelley's intense drumming after seeing him play live they hired him without an audition.Azerrad, pg. 258 Bert has remained on good terms with the group; he and Shelley both appeared in the
music video for "Death Valley '69", for Bert performed the drums on the song, but Shelley was the group's drummer when the video was made.
SST and Enigma: 1986-1989
Sonic Youth had a long fascination with influential indie label
SST Records. Ranaldo said, "It was the first record company we were on that we really would have given anything to be on."Azerrad, pg. 261 Sonic Youth eventually signed to the label in early 1986 and began recording their SST debut
EVOL with Martin Bisi in March of that year.
EVOL itself represented an evolution of sorts for the band: in addition to increasingly melodic material and the impact of new drummer Shelley's playing, the record also dealt with themes of celebrity, particularly with songs like "Madonna, Sean and Me" and "Marilyn Moore". Signing to SST catapulted the band on to a national stage, something that did not happen to their peers in the New York underground.Azerrad, pg. 262-63 The mainstream music press subsequently began to take notice of the band. Robert Palmer of the
New York Times declared that Sonic Youth was "making the most startlingly original guitar-based music since Jimi Hendrix" and even
People (magazine) magazine praised
EVOL as the "aural equivalent of a toxic waste dump."Azerrad, pg. 265 On 1987's
Sister (Sonic Youth album), Sonic Youth continued refining their blend of pop-music song structures with uncompromising experimentalism. Another loose concept album,
Sister is partly inspired by the life and works of science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. (The "sister" of the title was Dick's fraternal twin, who died shortly after her birth, and whose memory haunted Dick his entire life).Azerrad, pg. 266
Sister sold 60,000 copies and received very positive reviews, becoming the first Sonic Youth album to crack the top twenty of the Village Voice's Pazz & Jop critics poll.
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However, the band was becoming increasingly dissatisfied with SST due to concerns about payment and other administrative practices.Azerrad, pg. 268 Sonic Youth decided to release their next record on
Enigma Records, which was distributed by Capitol Records and partly owned by EMI. The 1988 double LP
Daydream Nation was a critical success that earned Sonic Youth substantial acclaim. The album came in second on the
Village Voice Pazz & Jop poll and topped the year-end album lists of the
NME,
CMJ, and
Melody Maker. A number of prominent music periodicals including
Rolling Stone hailed
Daydream Nation as one of the best albums of the decade and named Sonic Youth as the "Hot Band" in its "Hot" issue.Azerrad, pg. 270 Unfortunately, distribution problems arose and
Daydream Nation was often difficult to find in stores. Moore considered Enigma a "cheap-jack Mafioso outfit" and the band began looking for a major label deal.Azerrad, pg. 271
Major label career and alternative icons: 1990-1999
Their 1991 tour with the then relatively unknown
Nirvana (band) was captured in the film
1991: The Year Punk Broke.
1990 saw the release of
Goo (album) (their first album for
Geffen Records), which featured the single "Kool Thing" on which Chuck D from
rapping Public Enemy guested. "Kool Thing" became the song that most casual music fans associate with the band. The record is considered much more accessible than their previous work.
In 1992, the band released
Dirty (album) (DGC). Their influence as tastemakers continued with their discovery of acclaimed
skateboard music video director
Spike Jonze who they recruited for the video for "100%" which also featured skateboarder Jason Lee (actor). This song, along with the Gordon tune "JC" contain lyrical references to the murder of Joe Cole (roadie), a friend who worked with the band as a roadie. The album features artwork by Los Angeles-based artist
Mike Kelley.
Moore and Gordon's daughter,
Coco Hayley Gordon Moore was born in 1994, the year the band released
Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star. Possibly their most adventurous album, it was filled with low-key melodies and even had a semi-hit single, "Bull in the Heather", which gained even more attention when it was played at the
Tibetan Freedom Concert in 1996. Many of the songs from Experimental Jet Set were never played live because there was never a full tour to support the album due to Kim's pregnancy. episode "Homerpalooza"The band headlined the 1995 Lollapalooza festival. By that time alternative music had gained considerable mainstream attention, and the festival was parodied on
The Simpsons 1996 episode "
Homerpalooza", which featured voiceovers from the band. They also performed the final credits theme for that episode.
Kim Gordon collaborated in Free Kitten, and started an MTV-adored clothing label X-Girl, based in Los Angeles, California. Lee Ranaldo and Thurston Moore have played with many experimental/noise musicians, including
William Hooker,
Nels Cline, Tom Surgal,
Don Dietrich, Christian Marclay and Mission of Burma, among others. Steve Shelley runs the
Smells Like Records record label, as well as playing in backing bands for Chan Marshall (
Cat Power) and
Two Dollar Guitar.
From Sonic Youth's earliest days, Gordon had occasionally played guitar with the group. About the time of
A Thousand Leaves and
Washing Machine she began playing guitar more frequently, resulting in a three-guitar and drums lineup. These songs were something of a shift for the group's sound, and would lead to the introduction of a fifth member a few years later.
The
Washing Machine album started a major shift in the band, away from their punk roots, that working with longer noise-jam sections and included two tracks that showed the new approach in full force (the track "Washing Machine" which is just under ten minutes long and the last track "The Diamond Sea" which is around twenty-five minutes long.)
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, the band began releasing a series of highly experimental records on their own Hoboken, New Jersey,
New Jersey-based label SYR. The music was mostly instrumental, and the album and track titles and even the liner notes and credits were in different languages:
SYR1: Anagrama was in
French language,
SYR2: Slaapkamers Met Slagroom in Dutch language,
SYR3: Invito Al Ĉielo in
Esperanto,
SYR5 in
Japanese language, and
SYR6: Koncertas Stan Brakhage Prisiminimui in
Lithuanian language.
SYR3 was the first to feature
Jim O'Rourke (musician), who went on to become an official band member.
SYR4: Goodbye 20th Century was different—it was subtitled "Goodbye, 20th Century" and featured works by avant-garde classical composers such as
John Cage,
Yoko Ono, Steve Reich, and
Christian Wolff (composer) played by Sonic Youth along with several collaborators from the modern avant-garde music scene, such as Christian Marclay, William Winant,
Wharton Tiers, Takehisa Kosugi and others. The album received mixed reviews, but most critics praised the group's efforts at popularizing and reinterpreting the composers' works.
Recent events: 2000-present
On July 4, 1999, Sonic Youth's instruments, amps, and gear were stolen in the middle of the night while on tour in Orange, California (see initial post on Usenet). Forced to start from scratch with new instruments, they recorded
NYC Ghosts & Flowers and opened for Pearl Jam during the east coast leg of their 2000 tour.
When the
September 11, 2001 attacks occurred, several members of the band were blocks away, Jim at their NYC studio (Echo Canyon on Murray Street) and Lee and his wife Leah nearby at home. After the attacks, they curated the first US outing of the
All Tomorrow's Parties (music festival) music festival in L.A. The festival was originally scheduled for October 2001, but it was delayed until March the following year due to the attacks.
In the summer of 2002,
Murray Street (album) was released; many critics heralded a "return to form for SY", seemingly revitalized by the addition of Jim O'Rourke, who became a full member during this period.This was followed in 2004 by the release of
Sonic Nurse, an album similar in sound and approach to its immediate predecessor. "Pattern Recognition," a song named after the 2003
William Gibson novel, finds SY once again using Gibson's work for inspiration. As the opening track on the record, SY clearly signals a return to the postmodern well. The band also showed their
pop culture commentary and sense of humor with the track "Mariah Carey and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream," a faster-tempo song sung by Kim Gordon which Parodyed Carey's life, including her short-lived relationship with rapper
Eminem, which originally appeared on a 2003 split 7" with Erase Errata. (On the album cover, the reference to "Mariah Carey" in the title was replaced by "Kim Gordon" due to copyright issues, which presented the issue in an even more postmodern and ironic light).
Sonic Nurse had decent sales, in part due to performances on TV talk shows including
Late Night with Conan O'Brien and
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. The band was also slated to perform in 2004's Lollapalooza tour along with acts such as
Pixies (band) and The Flaming Lips, but the concert was cancelled due to lackluster ticket sales. When the band toured later that year, they played extensively from their 1980s catalog.
On October 6, 2005,
Los Angeles CityBeat reported that some of the gear stolen in 1999 was surprisingly recovered and that it might be used for recording of the next album, then tentatively titled
Sonic Life. The report also said that Jim O'Rourke might be leaving the band soon; his departure was confirmed by Lee Ranaldo in an interview to
Pitchfork Media. When Jim O'Rourke did play for the group, he would play bass guitar, guitar, and occasionally
synthesizer. In May 2006, the group announced on their website that ex-
Pavement (band) member
Mark Ibold would play bass for the band on their upcoming tour.
In the early years of the 21st century, Sonic Youth expanded their following by acquiring some fans in the neo-
jam band community. The band performed at the 2003 Bonnaroo Music Festival, which featured a large collection of jam bands. While Sonic Youth comes from a different background than the typical jam band (punk/post-punk as opposed to
psychedelic), some prominent jam band musicians have long noted the influence of Sonic Youth on that scene; in the Phish documentary
Bittersweet Motel, a Sonic Youth poster can be seen in the band's recording studio.
Rather Ripped was released in Europe on 5th June 2006 and in the USA on 13th June 2006. As with
Sonic Nurse, the majority of the tracks were written by Moore. Compared to previous Sonic Youth recordings, the album features many short, conventionally structured, melodic songs and fewer feedback-fuelled left field improvisations (the band's avant garde tendencies nowadays have been largely exorcised through SYR releases and solo outings rather than band albums). Later that summer, Sonic Youth played the 2006 Bonnaroo Festival, as well as Lollapalooza, promoting the album. In December Rolling Stone magazine made it their number three Album of the Year 2006.
In 2006 the band's album
Daydream Nation, often cited as their best work, was inducted into The Library of Congress' National Recording Registry. The Library of Congress' National Recording Registry documents America's history in sound. Its mission is to preserve recordings "that are culturally, historically, or aesthetically important and/or inform or reflect life in the United States." Here's what the National Recording Registry's website had to say about the album:
Pioneer members of New York City’s clangorous early 1980s No Wave scene, Sonic Youth are renowned for a glorious form of noise-based chaos. Guitarists Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo had previously performed with Glenn Branca’s large guitar ensembles, and their alternative guitar tunings and ringing harmonies attest to this apprenticeship. On
Daydream Nation, their breakthrough album, the group’s forays into outright noise always return to melodic songs that employ hypnotic arpeggios, driving punk rock rhythmic figures and furious gales of guitar-based noise. Bassist Kim Gordon’s haunting vocals and edgy lyrics add additional depth to the numbers she sings.
The band released
The Destroyed Room: B-sides and Rarities on December 12th, 2006. It features tracks previously available only on vinyl, limited-release compilations, b-sides to international singles, and even some material that had never before been released. Sonic Youth Unveil Rarities Comp Tracklist (http). pitchforkmedia.com (2006). Retrieved on 2006-11-07
Musical style and influences
Alternate tunings
Sonic Youth's sound relies heavily on the use of alternate tunings.
Scordatura on stringed instruments is being used for centuries and alternate guitar tunings had been used for decades in blues music, and to a limited degree in rock music (such as with Lou Reed's Ostrich guitar on The Velvet Underground and Nico), but Sonic Youth began using a variety of tunings more radical than nearly anything in rock music history. Azerrad writes that early in their career, Sonic Youth "could only afford cheap guitars, and cheap guitars
sounded like cheap guitars. But with weird tunings or something jammed under a particular
fret, those humble instruments could sound rather amazing—bang a drumstick on a cheap Japanese Stratocaster copy in the right tuning, crank the amplifier to within an inch of its life, and it will sound like church bells"Azerrad, pg. 243 The tunings were painstakingly developed by Moore and Ranaldo during the band's rehearsals; Moore once reported that the odd tunings were an attempt to introduce new sounds: "When you're playing in standard tuning all the time ... things sound pretty standard". Rather than retune for every song, Sonic Youth generally use a particular guitar for one or two songs, and can take dozens of instruments on tour.
Influences
Besides Branca,
Patti Smith,
The Stooges, and
The Velvet Underground another influence was the hardcore punk of the early 1980s; after seeing a Minor Threat performance in May 1982, Moore declared them "the greatest live band I have ever seen" (Azerrad, 273). While recognizing that their own music was very different from hardcore, Moore and Gordon, especially, were impressed by hardcore's speed and intensity, and by the nationwide network of musicians and fans. "It was great," said Moore, "the whole thing with slam dance and
stage diving, that was far more exciting than
pogoing and spitting.... I thought hardcore was very musical and very radical".Ignacio, Julia & Jaime Gonzalo.
Sonic Youth: I dreamed of noise. Barcelona: RUTA 66, 1994. Pg. 51
Members of the band have also maintained relationships with other avant-garde artists from other genres and even other media, drawing influence from the work of
John Cage and
Henry Cowell as well as European
musique concrete (as evidenced by songs such as "Providence" on the album
Daydream Nation). For a 1988
John Peel Session, Sonic Youth covered three The Fall (band) songs and "Victoria" by The Kinks, also covered by the Fall. Sonic Youth has featured album art by several well-known avant-garde visual artists such as Mike Kelley and
Gerhard Richter.
Discography
References
- Azerrad, Michael. Our Band Could Be Your Life. New York: Little, Brown, 2001.
- Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. " Sonic Youth". All Music Guide. Retrieved June 13, 2005.
- Foege, Alec. Confusion is Next: The Sonic Youth Story. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994.
- Ignacio, Julia & Jaime Gonzalo. Sonic Youth: I dreamed of noise. Barcelona: RUTA 66, 1994.
- Prendergrast, Mark. The Ambient Century: From Mahler to Trance, the Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age. Bloomsbury, 2000. ISBN 1-58234-134-6
Notes
External links
- Sonicyouth.com
- Sonic's ghostsite with a very extended information archif by Chris Lawrence
- Sonic Youth Official RSS Feed
- Sonic Youth at Geffen Records
- Extended interview with the band from 1985, including a discussion of violence in America, and the band's desire to break through "sexual and emotional repression"
- Sonic Youth at MySpace
-
www.sonicyouth.com : official website of sonic youth
Official Site. Features news, biographies, MP3, videos, photos, and links.
sonicyouth.com home page
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