Sonic Youth

Daydream Nation (1988)

eatdogs

The first and only time I ever got to see Sonic Youth

perform was back in 2007. They were 20 minutes late to the stage with Kim

Gordan arriving last and apologizing for “being a girl”. They then opened with “Candle”

and ripped through it with speed and ferocity. I didn’t make out the song at

first because it was going at a blistering pace, but once it hit that iconic

Sonic Youth sound during the bridge, (those twangy guitar tones), I remembered

where it came from.

It came from Daydream

Nation…

This is a double album. It’s a hallmark in the indie/punk

scene and sits right alongside other notable double album works as Zen Arcade and Double Nickels on the Dime. What separates it is simply a matter of

organic feels. The same can be said of what Hüsker Dü and the Minute Men did in

their own time and place, but Daydream Nation

has this feel about it that can only

be heard if you live through it somehow.

Don’t get what I’m saying? Well I tried it this way…

I visited New York City for spring break in 2008 during

college. I chose to only listen to artists from NYC. Nothing else was going to

be my weeklong soundtrack. I jammed many bands, but Sonic Youth were the ones I

held close to my chest.

There’s

something honest about music narrating your travels. I walked past graffiti strewn

alleys and neighborhoods while jamming “The Sprawl”. The last of that tracks

instrumentation causing a filter on the once grungy looking sidewalks that now

looked more clean. “Cross the Breeze” kept pace with the busy traffic, seeing each

car move like they were connected on an electric toy track. The guitars, still

evoking that old school Post-Punk sound, evoke an angsty menace while I got on

and off the subway cars and walked up and down steps onto the streets.

The city was going under heavy gentrification, and still is,

but “Silver Rocket” cut through that like a knife through a veil. And of course

there was the Pyramid Club and the 80’s night party they were having. I danced

to The Cure, Joy Division, The Smith, and INXS. Why didn’t the dj play any Sonic

Youth? Weren’t they a part of this city too? Didn’t they make music in the 80’s?

I was drunk on scotch/soda and cheap beers. I tried to walk

back to the hostel. “Eric’s Trip” was running through my mind and I was in a

daze. This wasn’t an LSD trip, imagined and sung by Lee Ronaldo in a rare

moment, but still I felt like I was in a tube slipping away…

Daydream Nation

carried on and seemed to not give up.

“Total Trash” careened like a shuffling zombie with Thurston

Moore singing, “Never mind it now / We

can bring it back / It's total trash / And it's a natural fact…”. Lee’s

second number, “Hey Joni”, with springy guitars and bass, even has a deep cut

reference to Neuromancer by William Gibson. The Art-Punk never left

and a track like “Providence”, combing piano and old grainy voice recordings of

Mike Watt calling from a pay phone showcases the bands tendency to be weird,

yet pretty when wanted.

Once I came to the aforementioned, “Candle” things hit home.

“I see a falling snow girl walking

Broadway / Turns the corner at 14th and I know there's no way / It's alright /

It's alight candle / And I know she'll be okay by Sunday…”. Drummer Steve

Shelley is the hidden key on this entire album. His drumming was perfection and

certainly bursts out with full force on every track contained here. He’s no

slouch, such as the constant buildups going back to opening track “Teen Age

Riot”. Little is left to grasp. This band was on the razor it seemed and you

can hear that clearly on this album. I felt like I was also on that razor.

“Rain King” is the third Lee song on the album, reminiscing

of their old No-Wave days with aplomb in the face of a concrete city. He sings

like he’s about to break, or at least be defeated by some force and it’s an

emotional experience. “Kissability” was a welcome listen since Kim was again on

main vocal duty. She seemed like a cool tour guide, but of course things fall

apart when Sonic Youth goes full on punk mode and thrashes the song apart like

two dogs ripping a cat in half. Kim gets angrier, singing lines like “You're driving me crazy, I feel so sick”.

I’m sorry Kim…

And then there’s the 14-minute final track, “Trilogy: a) The

Wonder, b) Hyperstation, c) Eliminator Jr.” I felt like the trip to NYC came to

an end once this song finished. It goes off like a rocket, explodes in the

atmosphere, then come crashing back down. “Trilogy” is one of many epic Sonic

Youth tracks that exceeds the normal running time a “punk” band makes for a tune.

This is where the live version of Sonic Youth got captured on tape. Sonic Youth's

live shows had so much improvisation that fans wanted it on a record setting. It’s

one of those final part of the show type moments. I left NYC feeling like I just

got out of a basement gig…

Daydream Nation

isn’t for everybody. It’s a demanding album that asks for the listener’s

attention. It’s almost like a coursework album these days in indie rock 101.

You hear about it, and you might recognize the artwork, but have you really

listened to it?

This was the last independent album Sonic Youth

made. They signed to a major label afterwards, released Goo and rode the alternative music train for a long while. Still,

that doesn’t diminish the effect this one album had on the underground music scene.

It’s a masterpiece. Dig it…