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Sonic Youth

Sonic Youth Album: “NYC Ghosts & Flowers”

Sonic Youth Album: “NYC Ghosts & Flowers”
Description :
Sonic Youth: Kim Gordon, Thurston Moore, Lee Ranaldo, Steve Shelley. <p>Additional personnel: Rafael Toral (guitar); Jim O'Rourke (bass); William Winant (percussion). <p>Principally recorded in New York, New York in August 1999. <p>NYC GHOSTS & FLOWERS marks the approximate 10-year anniversary of Sonic Youth's involvement in arguably the most historic moment in indie-rock--their signing to Geffen Records. What NYC GHOSTS & FLOWERS mostly reveals is Sonic Youth's ability to continue to pursue their own vision, unencumbered by mainstream pop sensibilities. <p>Continuing in the mellow vein of 1998's A THOUSAND LEAVES, NYC GHOSTS & FLOWERS starts on an introspective note with the gently winding "Free City Rhymes" which waits patiently for almost three minutes until Thurston Moore's unmistakable light gravel voice eases in beside the guitar noodling. The album's high point comes a couple of songs later on the lightly infectious "Nevermind (What Was It Anyway)," with Kim Gordon singing as powerfully as ever, followed by the potent poetic rambling rant of "Small Flowers Crack Concrete." While obviously not as experimental as releases on their own and other indie labels, NYC GHOSTS & SHADOWS proves that an indie band can survive a decade on a major label and retain its integrity.
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Track Listing :
1 Free City Rhymes
2 Renegade Princess
3 Nevermind (What Was It Anyway) Video
4 Small Flowers Crack Concrete
5 Side2Side
6 StreamXSonik Subway
7 NYC Ghosts & Flowers
8 Lightnin'
Album Information :
Title: NYC Ghosts & Flowers
UPC:606949065027
Format:CD
Type:Performer
Genre:Rock & Pop - Alternative
Artist:Sonic Youth
Guest Artists:Jim O'Rourke; William Winant
Producer:Sonic Youth; Jim O'Rourke
Label:Geffen Records (USA)
Distributed:Universal Distribution
Release Date:2000/05/16
Original Release Year:2000
Discs:1
Length:42:22
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
Studio / Live:Studio
Rahshad Black (Moreno Valley, CA) - July 18, 2000
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
- Poetic and artistic effort from a 'new' Sonic Youth.

So what if "NYC Ghosts & Flowers" will not sell a million, and spawn massivly popular radio singles? This is Sonic Youth we are talking about, and only one thing is important in sonikland: the music. And as long as the listener opens their mind to the album, they will surely find something in it. In some ways, this is the album Sonic Youth's entire career has lead up to. There are obvious parts of "Sister", "Experimental Jet Set, Trash & No Star", and of course "A Thousand Leaves", but nods to all of their albums can be found within. Although nothing that qualifies as grunge can be found, the themes are sometimes the same, and the energy is uniquely Sonic. The opener, "Free City Rhymes" is an excellent Thurston song, as good as anything he has written since "Dirty". The Thurston-Kim tag team "Renegade Princess" isn't great, but the guitar might remind the listener of a different time in their career, and makes up for the lyrics. Kim's "Nevermind (What Was it Anyway)" is carried by a brilliant Tom Verlaine influenced guitar part courtesy of Lee Ranaldo. "StreamXSonik Subway" is another strong Thurston number that draws the listener right back in if they haven't been paying attention after "Side2Side", which is not bad, but kind of gets lost in the middle. Thurston's other song, "Small Flowers Crack Concrete" finds him loosely imitating Lee's more poetic style, which works, but not as well as Lee's own fantasic title track. "NYC Ghosts & Flowers" is probably the best song on the album, proving how well the new approach can work. Although many of the songs are augmented with long droning sections of noise and minimalist guitar and drums, they hardly ever detract from the song. Besides, this seems to be an album for fans, and what fan cannot appreciate a little well placed noise here and there? Simply put, "NYC Ghosts & Flowers" is not just another strong effort from THE noise/alt/rock band, Sonic Youth. This is one for history.

Mr L. Hakner (Leeds, England) - May 19, 2000
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
- Better than ever

This is another brilliant record from Sonic Youth. As far as I am concerned, this is the sound of a band that has a lot more distance yet to run. People might look back on the days when they produced lo-fi, quasi-punk albums such as 'Daydream Nation' and 'Dirty' as being their heyday, after which the nineties revealed a steady decline. This is all rubbish. Sonic Youth have never been for the masses - and now they are for the few. It is too much even to think of them as a rock group anymore: the SYR series showed that they have more respect for the dissonant guitar structures of Jim O'Rourke (who produces on this) and modern composers such as John Cage than for punk.

The album opens with 'Free City Rhymes', a track that recalls parts of 'Washing Machine', starts off melodically before disintergrating into familiar chaos. It is not really indicative of what is to follow, but is fantastic nevertheless. 'Renegade Princess' is your true induction: harshly grating sound that will require more than one listen to truly appreciate. 'Nevermind (What Was It Anyway?)' and 'Small Flowers Crack Concrete' both begin slowly and (horror!) with a tune before betraying your trust (in the nicest possible way) by overloading you with bizarre bleeps and frantic drums. 'Side2Side' and 'StreamXSonik Subway', the next two tracks, are the ones that will separate the patient, real fans from those that are still searching for another 'Sister'. Strange but beautiful. Next up: the title track. Similarly structures to the opener, but the mood completely different. It really 'feels' like walking through a city falling apart at the hands of violence and history. Brilliant! - is this Sonic Youth's best song to date? No - it's 'Lightnin'', the last piece that pushes the boundaries of music even further. Imagine 'Invito Al Cielo' off SYR3 given an adrenalised makeover. And you're close. A perfect end to the best album of the twenty-first century (so far!).

Colley Wilkes (Philadelphia, PA) - June 05, 2000
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- NYC G&F

A long time ago now, or at least what seems like a long time ago, an acquaintance slipped me a copy of an album called "Daydream Nation" by a band I sorta thought I had maybe kinda heard of called Sonic Youth.I popped the tape into my walkman(the CD and the discman still being more or less science fiction in those long ago days of not so very long ago), and experienced one of those rare wonderful epiphanies that you get only a few times in life.Its a cliche of course, but I realized I had almost been waitimg my whole life for those sounds without realizing it.....haven't been the same since, thank goodness.....

Which brings us to NYC Ghosts and Flowers.Does it carry the same life changing shock of the new charge that I....and apparently a lot of others got out of Daydream/Goo/Dirty era Sonic Youth... ...Nah.But how could it?And why should it be expected to?Its a decade or so later.I'm not in the same frame of mind I was ten years ago and neither is Sonic Youth.Nobody is, or at least they shouldn't be, if they've done any living at all. I haven't stayed in place, and I'm not surprised that this band, of all bands, hasn't either.ghosts and flowers is good for what it is.....a document a group dedicated to the idea of experimentation trying with varying degrees of success to keep the music fresh for themselves as well as us, for which they are to be applauded.They don't owe me anything....they already gave me "Hey Joni", which probably saved my life.And I if wanna go back and relive those thrilling moments, well thats what Cds are for.Sonic Youth are just growing up...not old...gracefully.More power to 'em.

E. Kutinsky "ekutinsky" (Seattle, WA) - May 01, 2004
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- mournful and misunderstood

After Sonic Youth accomplished everything they could accomplish, they made A Thousand Leaves and souned miles off their game - or, four musicians phoning in their parts from different planets. The game on this one is more daring and more upsetting - I think it's a concept album of regret, one that says after it's all over, you could possibly spend the rest of yoru life wondering what if. Possibilities of defiance and desire are long gone. That's a profound take for a profound band that shot for a mood and stayed there. I think a lot of people felt frustrated by the record, but it's all part of its brilliant design - it's a dark catharsis of a record.

Peter Krogh (Nevada City, CA United States) - July 03, 2000
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
- "No longer the groundbreakers" totally misses the point

All Sonic Youth have ever been about IS the sound. I'm as old as they are and have been a massive fan since 88'.

As somebody who went to Dead concerts in order to hear what Phil may or may not cook up with SOUND during a space, I am a SY fan of the most dedicated sort. Screw the social/political relevance of pop music. If, when putting my headphones on and clicking "Play" I'm taken to a continent of sound I've never been to before, Eureka!

And SY does it again. EVOL is still their best work, but this is definitely second tier along with Daydream Nation. If you're a SY-head, you've got this album already. If you're not, chances are poor you'll get it anyway...

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