Bang Bang You're Dead... POLL In Your Head - ILM Artist Poll #87 - SMASHING PUMPKINS - Results

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At the time everyone I knew who'd been a fan (or super-fan) understood by 'Adore' or earlier that SP had lost the tack. And I seem to recall that being the critical and popular sentiment, too. For lots of ILMers, though, time seems to have leveled all of their work even through 'Machina'. Whereas for me, the passage of time has removed all of the emotional invesment I had in the band as a young person to make the degradation post-Pisces even more stark. Which just leaves me trying to figure what people see now in something like "Perfect" to rank it so high.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 02:54 (six years ago) link

"Perfect" is gorgeous and should have been one of their absolute biggest hits

lmao at Billy's sunglasses in the SNL clip

Simon H., Sunday, 8 April 2018 02:55 (six years ago) link

Ehh, half the people I knew thought SP lost the tack after Gish. For a band that evolved at the pace they did there will always be people who would rather them stick to whatever they might consider the band's strengths.

Fetchboy, Sunday, 8 April 2018 02:58 (six years ago) link

I guess what I meant is it just feels generically dated to 1995/96.

But maybe The Cardigans, for it to have been good? It sounded more like a Garbage song than SP, at the time. But I think it might've been best as a propery pop song, Kylie Minogue or Spice Girls or something.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 02:59 (six years ago) link

I could def hear that, I think I even posted that in the campaigning thread

Simon H., Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:01 (six years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/zqFvnWi.jpg
18. Stand Inside Your Love
430 points, 16 votes, 1 #1 vote
From: Machina/The Machines of God, 2000

https://i.imgur.com/GqBYgzh.jpg
18. Geek U.S.A.
430 points, 17 votes
From: Siamese Dream, 1993

ufo, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:02 (six years ago) link

shit, are we going to #1 tonight?

"Geek U.S.A." is fuckin unstoppable

Simon H., Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:03 (six years ago) link

Shot full of diamonds.

Fetchboy, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:04 (six years ago) link

WORDS CAN'T DEFINE WHAT I FEEL INSIDE

this should have been my #1

jmm, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:05 (six years ago) link

Fuck yeah

No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:08 (six years ago) link

going to #11 now, top 10 will be later (tomorrow for americans)

one thing I really like in Stand Inside Your Love is the way the first pre-chorus seems like it's going to be the loud chorus to contrast with the quieter verse though in the overcompressed Machina way, but then with "DREAM!" the real chorus kicks in which is actually loud. their last great pop song

ufo, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:09 (six years ago) link

Glad to see "Obscured" place so high even though I didn't vote for it.

No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:10 (six years ago) link

This is my favourite SP clip.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t50AitbL4II

jmm, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:10 (six years ago) link

"Stand Inside Your Love" was the track I had trouble getting through in my forced machina listens, which was a shame because I eventually found out that I really like "Wound".

Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:14 (six years ago) link

it really bugs me that "Who wouldn't be the one you love" has the same cadence as "don't wanna be your monkey wrench"

Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:17 (six years ago) link

my favorite thing about the clowns video is that only billy seems to find it remotely amusing

Simon H., Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:19 (six years ago) link

I mean, "Geek U.S.A." and "Stand Inside Your Love" tying seems like evidence there are potentially populations of listeners looking for *very* different things from SP. Which I guess makes them interesting as a band. But to me, the latter is so static--even in its "loud/soft" dynamics"--that it can't hold interest for more than a minute; while "Geek U.S.A." has genuine dynamics and depth and variety, while cohering very well as a song and as part of the vision of 'Siamese Dream'.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:23 (six years ago) link

Ehh, half the people I knew thought SP lost the tack after Gish. For a band that evolved at the pace they did there will always be people who would rather them stick to whatever they might consider the band's strengths.


this is otm, each album is so different

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:23 (six years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/DMVGXnw.jpg
16. Here is No Why
432 points, 15 votes, 1 #1 vote
From: Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, 1995

ufo, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:25 (six years ago) link

I mean, "Geek U.S.A." and "Stand Inside Your Love" tying seems like evidence there are potentially populations of listeners looking for *very* different things from SP. Which I guess makes them interesting as a band.


I think the fact there isn’t a single song on Mellon Collie that’s widely regarded as filler or shit & has passionate defenders is proof of this.

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:25 (six years ago) link

Ah, the useless drag of another day

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:26 (six years ago) link

such a great solo

Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:27 (six years ago) link

Such a great opening line. A really idiosyncratic rock song, so glammy, it has like 9 hooks, pure ear candy. And the best solo Billy ever wrote.

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:27 (six years ago) link

re: Soundslike - i think it’s the difference between experiencing a band in real time & discovering the body of work after it’s been completed

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:29 (six years ago) link

The sequencing for this song is so perfect, too. Coming right after jellybelly and zero and right before BWBW almost disguises how much of a fuckin rocker it is. And steamrolling out of the solo into "if you're giving in" is genius.

Fetchboy, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:33 (six years ago) link

FUCK YES HERE IS NO WHY

bless u #1 voter

Simon H., Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:33 (six years ago) link

I’ve never heard a more annoying cadence / forced syllable rhyme scheme whatever than “he pulls his hair down”

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:36 (six years ago) link

IT SHOULD BE
Somewhere
People tear down
Over a frowning smile

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:37 (six years ago) link

Whereas for me, the passage of time has removed all of the emotional invesment I had in the band as a young person to make the degradation post-Pisces even more stark. Which just leaves me trying to figure what people see now in something like "Perfect" to rank it so high.

― Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 02:54 (thirty-six minutes ago)

Huh, opposite for me (as someone else who hadn't revisited them since the 90s) - decided not to put anything from SD on the ballot as the removal of emotional investment etc makes me realise I can listen to My Bloody Valentine if I want layers of guitar etc, without those techniques smeared over what might as well be Rush/Aerosmith/etc songs (no slight on those bands, just not my cup of tea; had no idea of anything outside the Pumpkins as a small-town teen and didn't know classic rock radio stuff they drew on); "Perfect" and the like don't inspire that visceral queasiness.

etc, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:44 (six years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/e2HsQAo.jpg
15. Porcelina of the Vast Oceans
460 points, 19 votes
From: Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness, 1995

ufo, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:45 (six years ago) link

huh, no?

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:46 (six years ago) link

oh that was an xp to flappy’s weird feelings about “here is no why”’s lyrics

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:46 (six years ago) link


re: Soundslike - i think it’s the difference between experiencing a band in real time & discovering the body of work after it’s been completed

― flappy bird, Sunday, April 8, 2018 3:29 AM (four minutes ago)

That's what's odd about it to me, though. Experiencing it in real time, having a lot of my nascent juvenile identity tied up in the band, I had a lot "riding on" their continuing to be the greatest thing in the world, and thus a lot of reason to rationalize and overlook their mounting failings: becoming harsh vocally, overproduced, static, fractured, trying to reverse-engineer what might keep their alternative-rock star ascendant, becoming over-long, etc. etc. And believe me, I tried, and it took discovering a lot of other music and SP becoming really a shadow of themselves to finally give up and let go.

Whereas, I would think someone coming in with no "real-time" youthful investment in the band, and certainly little to know cultural (or at least fan-cultural) cachet involved (i.e. being a Pumpkins fan in '95 made you part of a community, such as it was--hardly the case 5, 10, 15, now 20 years later) would be more discriminating in their assessment of the band. No one *needs* hundreds of Smashing Pumpkins songs (not to mentioned all the demos, live bootlegs, sketches, etc. we all sought out like potential gems) if you're coming at them as classic rock or as a waning standard-bearer of the marketing ploy of "alternative rock". We only thought we did because we were wrapped up in it as it was happening, and feeling that ones investments in what's-happening-right-now are "important" really matters to self-identity for young people.

So why someone coming to it as a body of work would see it relativistically rather than judicially is confusing to me. They're a band with a great album, a good album, and another disc or so of great odds-and-sods--a tiny corner of a Micro SD card or, more likely, a fairly short playlist on somebody's streaming service of choice, these days. Judged on the basis of their best work, I could see them continuing to find new fans, albeit fewer and fewer as "rock music" fades in significance. But I would think presented as a monolith of a hundred hours of sound, all apparently equally good--they'd sink from public perception like a stone, or a fossil.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:47 (six years ago) link

“porcelina” is the best song

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:47 (six years ago) link

xp "little to no," of course. Sorry, it's late and I've been up far too long.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:48 (six years ago) link

ts: "the dilly dally / of my bright lit stay" vs "the jimmy jakes of consequence"

etc, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:52 (six years ago) link

Porcelina tooooooooooo low. My #3

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:53 (six years ago) link

If you had to sum up in one song what the Pumpkins could do it’s Porcelina

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:54 (six years ago) link

And even then it’s still too narrow. They did so much with so much depth and intensity

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:55 (six years ago) link

I guess for me the equivalent would be like discovering OMD when I was 22. I was born after their first singles were released, and didn't hear them in the ether as a kid such that nostalgia played any factor. They had a long-tailed body of work by then. I discovered their first few albums and b-sides, and *loved* it--was amazed by it, couldn't believe it. Followed it to their later work--and was able to say, yeah, even when this isn't bad, it's never great. And ultimately saw that there had been a big fall-off, and their body of work was not a level listening field. I formed attachment to the music, but only to the music that stood the test of time and decontextualized listening.

Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:55 (six years ago) link

is anyone saying the smashing pumpkins discography is totally level

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:59 (six years ago) link

_
re: Soundslike - i think it’s the difference between experiencing a band in real time & discovering the body of work after it’s been completed

― flappy bird, Sunday, April 8, 2018 3:29 AM (four minutes ago)
_


That's what's odd about it to me, though. Experiencing it in real time, having a lot of my nascent juvenile identity tied up in the band, I had a lot "riding on" their continuing to be the greatest thing in the world, and thus a lot of reason to rationalize and overlook their mounting failings: becoming harsh vocally, overproduced, static, fractured, trying to reverse-engineer what might keep their alternative-rock star ascendant, becoming over-long, etc. etc. And believe me, I tried, and it took discovering a lot of other music and SP becoming really a shadow of themselves to finally give up and let go.

Whereas, I would think someone coming in with no "real-time" youthful investment in the band, and certainly little to know cultural (or at least fan-cultural) cachet involved (i.e. being a Pumpkins fan in '95 made you part of a community, such as it was--hardly the case 5, 10, 15, now 20 years later) would be more discriminating in their assessment of the band. No one *needs* hundreds of Smashing Pumpkins songs (not to mentioned all the demos, live bootlegs, sketches, etc. we all sought out like potential gems) if you're coming at them as classic rock or as a waning standard-bearer of the marketing ploy of "alternative rock". We only thought we did because we were wrapped up in it as it was happening, and feeling that ones investments in what's-happening-right-now are "important" really matters to self-identity for young people.

So why someone coming to it as a body of work would see it relativistically rather than judicially is confusing to me. They're a band with a great album, a good album, and another disc or so of great odds-and-sods--a tiny corner of a Micro SD card or, more likely, a fairly short playlist on somebody's streaming service of choice, these days. Judged on the basis of their best work, I could see them continuing to find new fans, albeit fewer and fewer as "rock music" fades in significance. But I would think presented as a monolith of a hundred hours of sound, all apparently equally good--they'd sink from public perception like a stone, or a fossil.


“approaching it realistically” suggests taste is objective. I became obsessed with them when I was 17/18 in 2010 because the body of work spoke to me at every level. This is after 6+ years of constant music consumption, mostly weirder / smaller bands than SP. they’re not a childhood favorite beyond the singles. I was surprised I became such a fan so late in my teens.

flappy bird, Sunday, 8 April 2018 03:59 (six years ago) link

I formed attachment to the music, but only to the music that stood the test of time and decontextualized listening.

― Soundslike, Sunday, 8 April 2018 3:55 AM (one minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Maybe for some people that's Machina...

I mean, it's not for me, but this whole double-act with Turrican of performatively shaking your head at everyone who disagrees with what you know that everyone knows to be true isn't really getting us anywhere.

Tim F, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:00 (six years ago) link

Also I'm gonna come back and right about a whole bunch of these placements, the last few stretches of the roll-out have been incredibly pleasing to me.

Tim F, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:01 (six years ago) link

It's not as though the Adore and Machina fans here are leveling the entire catalogue. You don't seem them defending mk 2 albums with the same fervour. You can be a judicious listener and also happen to not think there was a drop-off after Pisces.

jmm, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:02 (six years ago) link

Ah, Porcelina, the epic song of drunken wretching. Ten shots in, you find yourself in the slipstream of thoughtless thoughts, without a care in this whole world, bent over the the porcelain bowl staring into its vast oceans, blacking out to the seashell hissing lullabies of the last flush.

Fetchboy, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:04 (six years ago) link

Porcelina rules

jmm, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:04 (six years ago) link

https://i.imgur.com/komUP3z.jpg
14. Today
502 points, 18 votes
From: Siamese Dream, 1993

ufo, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:06 (six years ago) link

I mean, I love Adore but think "Stand Inside Your Love" is the only listenable thing on MACHINA.

FourLegsGood, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:06 (six years ago) link

Haven't listened to SIYL since 2003 when I first discovered the band (and loved them) and woah woah woah what a great track.

Van Horn Street, Sunday, 8 April 2018 04:08 (six years ago) link


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