Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Sonic Youth Pictures
Band:
Sonic Youth
Origin:
United States, New York CityUnited States
Band Members:
Thurston Moore (guitars, vocals), Lee Ranaldo (guitars, vocals, organ), Kim Gordon (bass guitar, guitar, vocals), and Steve Shelley (drums)
Sonic Youth Album: «Murray Street»
Sonic Youth Album: «Murray Street» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.3 of 5)
  • Title:Murray Street
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Review - Product Description
SONIC YOUTH MURRAY STREET
Review - Amazon.com
As Sonic Youth will testify, it's not easy being avant-rock superstars. Follow your urge to experiment, and you risk alienating your more conservative fans. Stop experimenting, and you lose the impetus that made you so exciting in the first place. Such is the dilemma faced by this exceptional band in 2002, now wryly rechristened "Radical Adults" in one Thurston Moore lyric. Given the bewilderment that's unfairly greeted recent attempts to push their remarkable music to new extremes--notably their contemporary classical project, Goodbye 20th Century --Murray Street initially feels like something of a compromise; the band themselves admit it's more "song-oriented" than their last few albums. But hell, what a magnificent compromise. Named after the New York street where their studio is situated--and where a plane engine landed on September 11, 2001--Murray Street is potent, accessible, daring, and often obliteratingly lovely. For a start, the first three songs ("The Empty Page," "Disconnection Notice," and "Rain On Tin") easily rank with the highlights of SY's previous 15 albums. Obliquely melancholic, tuneful but unorthodox, all are enriched by great cascades of intricate three-guitar noise. When the Youth spin off on one of these bright and wild trips, these rich musical elegies for their city, they remain one of the world's great musical wonders. --John Mulvey
Customer review
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
- This may take a while...

Usually, I figure two or three listens are enough to get an idea of whether or not I like an album. I've reviewed some albums as early as the second time I've heard them. "Murray Street," however, defied my initial opinion-forming efforts. I'm currently at about my eighth listen, and I'm just figuring out how I feel about it. I had heard of, but never heard, Sonic Youth before I heard "Radical Adults Lick Godhead Style" on an internet station and decided to check out the album, so I can honestly say that my opinion of "Murray Street" isn't impacted by any preconceptions regarding this band or their previous body of work. Judged on its own merits, though, this album definitely calls for a more thorough examination of the Sonic Youth catalog.

Anyway, what does the album sound like, you might ask? Well, if I say so myself, pretty great. My own personal experience indicated that this album requires an ear for detail and repeated listens to get into, so I recommend to any listeners that they give this album some time and attention before rendering a judgement one way or another. Based on what I've read, this album isn't as extravagant or adventurous as Sonic Youth's previous work, but that doesn't mean it's without its charm.

"Murray Street" as a whole has a rather trippy and melodic vibe; I could even go so far as to describe much of the material here as "laid-back," but not at all in a bad way. The musicianship here is very high-quality, but the band members clearly aren't out to beat you over the head with their chops; one reason this album took me a while was because the subtleties of the music were gradually revealed to me with each subsequent listen. Traditional pop song structures can be found here, but the band can also launch into extended, improvised-sounding instrumental passages with equal success. Of special note are the mind-bending guitar solos that leave no doubt as to why Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo were both ranked in the top forty of Rolling Stone's list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time (I personally thought that list was somewhat of a travesty, but making it is still pretty impressive).

The band may have three skilled guitarists, but awe-inspiring, Hendrix-style displays of technical prowess are not to be found. Instead, Thurston and company reveal themselves to be masters of atmosphere. When every member gets locked in together and those guitars intertwine, it makes for some truly transcendent listening. "Radical Adults Lick Godhead Style," which I found to be the most accessible and "rocking" song on here, is an excellent guitar song that displays equal amounts of virtuosity and efficiency. The jagged lead lines and angular hooks are sure to get your head bobbing, and they're enhanced by mesmerizing background atmospherics that propel the song to dizzying heights. When Sonic Youth reach that perfect middle ground between conventional and experimental rock, it makes for some of best listening of the past few years.

The other songs on "Murray Street" aren't quite as immediate, but they're a taste worth acquiring. "The Empty Page" and "Disconnection Notice" may sound easygoing on first listen, but there's an abundance of intricate, fascinating noise roiling beneath the surface. "Rain On Tin" and "Karen Revisited" start out in a similar manner before shifting gears and turning into prolonged guitar-led jams. "Karen Revisited" goes on a bit too long IMO, but "Rain On Tin" is a prime example of the joy of unpredictability, and may well be the best song here. Kim Gordon's punkish, riot-grrrrrl "Plastic Sun" is a short burst of adrenaline that provides some much-needed aggression late in the album. In contrast, Kim's closing, nine-minute epic "Sympathy For The Strawberry" is one of the most elegant songs I've heard lately, with a shimmering guitar freakout eventually giving way to her very pretty, almost childlike vocals.

As I've already noted, "Murray Street" isn't for everybody. This isn't pop, so if you tend to form an opinion on songs within a minute of the first time you hear them it may not be for you. However, I think one of the most compelling qualities of "Murray Street" is the way it forces you to *listen* to each song from beginning to end. I give this album a hearty recommendation to those who want to hear some rock with brains.

Customer review
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
- One of their best.

Murray Street is right up there with Daydream Nation, Sister, and EVOL in terms of greatness. It is not as sprawling as Daydream Nation or their more recent albums, but it is essentially everything we have ever loved about Sonic Youth distilled into 45 minutes. Some of the most amazing moments of recent music appear in "The Empty Page," "Karen Revisted," "Radical Adults Lick Godhead Style," and "Plastic Sun," but really all of it is great. I especially love the gradually climax of "Karen Revisted", easily one of the best songs Lee Ranaldo has sung; you don't even know it's happening and then all of the sudden there's this explosion of sound.

The album is experimental but not pretentious, beautiful and thrilling, and it will be in your CD player for at least the next year. It is not as groundbreaking as Daydream Nation or their earlier albums, which makes just fall short of a classic for me; I'd give it 4.5 stars if I could. But, nonetheless, it is amazing.

Customer review
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
- classic rock, godhead style

So here we have it finaly,the latest offering from the great elderstatesmen(and woman)of underground rock. As with most of the band's releases since there 80's heyday, Murray St. is sure to meet with mixed reviews within their fanbase. Assertaining the stregnths of thier new material depends on which side of the fence you're on. While this album has the potential to attract new listeners while appeasing their pop-savy followers, it can be frustrating for those hooked on the band's artier and more edgy sounds.

Upon initial listens I found myself tormented along those same party lines. I knew that there was a really good album somewhere within these songs yet I couldn't convince myself of it completely. "Why is this?" I wondered endlessly. "What am I missing here?"

I finally reached some closure when I came back to an interview in which Thurston Moore stated that what the band had now reached was some sort of classic rock stage. While this seemed preposterous to me( and I'm sure most other admirers of the band)when I first read it, it made sense after hearing the album.

Following the infamous hiest of thier one-of-a-kind sound equipment the bands ability to create dissonant,fuzzy soundscapes had been seriously hampered. They bravely marched on for a while attempting to recreate thier vintage musiscal niche, but with mixed results. With Murray St. the band (with the addition of musical guru Jim O'Rourke)have conscioulsy decided to reach a different kind of plateau in thier career.

The album is marked by its dramatic shift to melody and clean guitar tones. The three opening numbers show a fine-tuned craftmanship and gentleness unheard before. Beautiful uplifting melodies and precise, unabstracted guitar chord arrangements are Murray St.'s calling card. What it really all boils down to is that Sonic Youth have truely made the most mature, warm, and inviting album possibly of thier career.

It is these qualities of the album that posses all of the charm and wonder in the music. For a band of several forty something adults Sonic Youth are finally starting to show thier age, in a good way of course! Having veered up and down the musical map with thier avant-garde sounds and punk attitude to various degrees of sucess, band have now learned the ancient art of subtlety.

The most brilliant and pleasing moments on Murray St. are really the simplest and subtle ones. The crisp-sounding interplay in "Rain on Tin", the short but sweet guitar solo on "disonection notice" and most exceptionally the simple addition of sustain key organ chords to "sympathy for the strawberry." All of which in one way or another seem to have O'Rourke to thank. Instrumentally he dosent' make a huge splash, but allows things to gel as never before within the band, allowing them to "jam" in a very real sense as Thurston had pointed out in that same interview.

This cohesiveness and new-found sense of control over thier music is what makes Sonic Youths better moments so sweet on this disc. Unfortunately though the album is somehwat marred by its failure to follow through with its scope. The music really losses itself when the band tries to verge into familer territory. Murray St.'s most glarying pitfall can be found in Kim Gordon's "plastic sun" a song obvioulsy attempting to resurrect the noisy, attitude filled youth of old, but lacks the spine to do it. The same can be said of several other moments on the album where the band seems hellbent on going back in time.

Its unfortunate that the album hits these moments, yet it does. With thier more clean, mature sounding songs Sonic Youth have emerged reborn. The few moments on the other end of the spectrum hurt the album's flow but don't destory it. In the end the band have come up with a rewarding album of wonderful music. Yet its short tracklist and the few dud moments make this one just shy of being a classic. Nearly essential. Totally wortthwhile.

Customer review
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- Easy Sonic Youth Listening

I was kind of skeptical about this CD when it came out. I mean, I LOVE SONIC YOUTH! Especially the 80's trilogy- Evol, Sister, and Daydream Nation. There 90's stuff is good too, but Sonic Youth in 2002? Come on, Kim Gordon is 50! They're practically on Social Security. I bought "Murray Street" anyway, not expecting much. After the first couple of minutes I was surprised by how beautiful and complex it was (like all SY albums) but also that it was really accessible. "The Empty Page" is fantastic, Thurston and Kim give a great vocal track. "Disconnection Notice" and "Rain on Tin" are reminiscient of Sister or Daydream Nation, or maybe "The Diamond Sea". Lots of people have said good things about "Karen Revisited", I thought it was okay, maybe I just need to listen to it a few times. "Radical Adults Lick Godhead Style"- what? This is the part about Sonic Youth that both fascinates me and terrifies me- they're so hip they're scary. But still good stuff. "Plastic Sun" is faster and more punk rock and "Sympathy for the Strawberry" is a great experimental rock closer. This album is fantastic, I'd rank it among the best of 2002 along with the Trail of Dead's "Source Tags & Codes" (Some call it Sonic Youth for kids) Murray Street is a fantastic album, at 45 minutes its not like the epic Daydream Nation but I think this is a great album, and really easy to listen to. I highly recommend it.

Customer review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- Open wrapper and get surprised!

Wow! I am always truly excited to hear a SY record for the first time because it never gives me much Deja Vu. Sure, I could compare it to Daydream Nation or EVOL and talk about how they will never sound like Dirty or Goo again because they are no longer the "big" alt rock band, but that doesn't matter. Each new album is a pleasant surprise, and this is an ever better one, with Jim O'Rourke finally credited as a 5th member. His production mixes Steve's drums better than any other SY album I've heard, which is saying a lot. Kim is free to do more guitar work, which is fantastic since it hasn't been so prominant since Washing Machine.

Onwards...

The album flows together so well that you can easily fall asleep to it, or take it to work, or just rock out to it. Very versatile indeed. The 9/11 references are subtle but firm, only explicit in the artwork (featuring a picture of a deserted building across the street from their Ground Zero studio). You feel a sense of melancholy that easily evolves into healing power, regardless of where you stand in the Amerikan mess.

The only flaw is that the version of the (classic) "Plastic Sun" on the album does not contain the witty Britney Spears jab that the version featured on a CD sampler given out by Jane magazine last year (which featured the same instrumental with different vocals).

A perfect album to listen to next to Goodbye 20th Century, if only to fully realize the versatility and genious of this group.