Zachary A. Hanson | Tallahassee, FL United States | 04/08/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This CD has no less impact than when it came out eighteen years ago. As Byron Coley says on the band's website, it shows their sound becoming more orderly as they were ready to burst from internal strife. Well, sad but true, but tension often makes for the best music of a band's career, and J didn't live up to the manic glory here ever again. (Now this line-up is reunited! Got to see them for the first time with Lou on bass last week. HO-LY CRRRRRAAAP!!!).
So many highlights, where do you start? I think Kurt really learned the soft/hard dynamic from J, and in many ways J's use of it sounds more fresh (likely because a trillion J wanna-be's failed to ever pop up--only a score, Kurt being one of them). The album starts with this in somewhat famous fashion on "Freak Scene," where there's a major chord strumming pattern that is mildly distorted. Within in a minute, the low E power chord is thrashed so hard that the piece resembles a form of proto-death metal. The middle part is really pretty . . . and then back to the death metal. A lot of the songs feature this dynamic & it really never gets boring. If you have the right tools, use them to make as many creations as possible. I think my favorite use of this dynamic is in "Pond Song." It starts out with a delicate picking pattern: "Long distance left you undecided/ I'd sprinkle enough to let you know," J pathetically croons to the girlfriend he never finds. Before you know it, the song is awash in fuzz, reverb, and thrashing chords. This pattern happens to match J's attitude towards his love interest, which alternates between tender yearning and murderous disenchantment, best reflected in "Freak Scene": "Sometimes I don't thrill you/ Sometimes I think I'll kill you./ Just don't let me f**k up will you,/ 'Cos when I need a friend it's still you."
There's so much more to say about this classic, but I will leave it at the guitars for now. Simply put, the interplay between J on guitar and Lou on bass remains a high watermark for alternative. Sometimes muddy, but always evocative of new and fresh emotions, there have been few power trios who have got as much out of their guitars (Rush comes to mind, tho' I know the hipster "cognoscenti" would poo-poo me for saying this). Lou ups the ante with his use of chords and arpeggios on the bass for one thing. J himself is certainly one of the top guitarists in the history of alternative. He's not a harmonic genius in the technical sense: more in the intuitive sense. His use of feedback is heartbreakingly beautiful at times (the solo in "No Bones" amply evidences this). He uses dissonance strategically, creating hooks out of repeating skronky lines after a particularly melodic run (again, the second solo in "Freak Scene" is great for this). He shreds the thing like he's, well, ready to break it in two. Oh yeah, and it's LOUD. I saw them live (without Lou) back in the early '90's. J would play solos and my head literally felt like it was being cleft at the lobes. It hurt!!! But it was the true definition of sublimity: intense pleasure mixed with intense pain. You, too, may be able to feel the pain if they come to your area and smash your head on the punk rock.
Last contrast: I played this to my girlfriend for the first time today. She liked it a lot. Of all the grunge bands in the '90's, this was a good one for the women, 'cos J writes more traditional melodies and also wears his heart on his sleeve, unlike, say, the phrygian modes and D&D bludgeonings of Soundgarden. Male/female, yin/yang, silence/noise, love/hate, within/beyond . . . _Bug_ has more than enough contrasts to keep you occupied for a long, long time to come.
"
Kings of Slacker Rock
John | Cleveland, OH | 05/07/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Where has this band been all my life? You know that feeling right? You've been ignoring a band for such a long time. You keep hearing things about them, but for whatever reason just don't get around to listening to them. Then when you do, it's so mind-blowingly amazing and exactly everything that you like about music that you wish you had gotten in on the ground floor. That's how I felt about Dinosaur Jr the first time I heard this album. Regrettably, that was only about 4 months ago.
I came across Dinosaur Jr in my journey to fill the holes of my musical knowledge (I am one of those obsessive music people, with a bias towards underground and indie). I never liked the eighties at all, so I was in the course of listening to all the underground acts that I had missed by dismissing the whole decade for so long. Along the way I discovered the Minutemen, Husker Du, the Jesus and Mary Chain, Echo & the Bunnymen and many more that I had heard mentioned a lot but had basically ignored (more because of the fact that I always have such a long list of bands to listen to that I never got to it). I kept seeing Dinosaur Jr's name pop up, but it was still last on the list. What a shock when I finally heard "Freak Scene" by them! It was one of those moments where, before you even are done listening to the song the first time, you know it has entered into your personal pantheon of all-time great songs. Naturally, I went out and bought `Bug' which only cemented my love of Dino Jr and I have since become very familiar with their whole catalogue.
`Bug', currently the last album by the original trio, opens with a one-two sucker punch of "Freak Scene" and "No Bones". "Freak Scene" opens as lazy garage rock at it's finest, with J delivering the first verse in typical laid back fashion:
"Seen enough to eye you,
But I seen too much to try you.
It's always weirdness while you
Dig it much too much to fry you.
The weirdness flows between us,
Anyone could tell to see us.
Freak scene just can't believe us,
Can't it just be cool and free us."
The last line is delivered and almost drowned out by the immediate thrashing on low E. The bashing seems to be the musical representation of breaking free, although it doesn't seem to work because the first verse is repeated as some acoustic strumming manages to peak it's head forward. Maybe J decided to stop trying to break free and accept his place? No, as he says it's "so f**ked I can't believe it...what a mess it's best to leave it." The following guitar solo is perfect, but it's when everything suddenly drops out and J delivers the classic last lines that "Freak Scene" crosses the threshold of greatness:
"Sometimes I don't thrill you,
Sometimes I think I'll kill you.
Just don't let me f**k up will you,
Cause when I need a friend it's still you."
Clearly this is a song about a particularly stormy relationship, but there's just something in the details of it that make it more. Maybe it's just the fact that this is the first song I ever heard by them, the one that started it all for me. Maybe the way that even after that last verse you still can just barely make out Mascis sigh "what a mess" as he fires his way through the final solo.
"No Bones" pretty much continues in this same fashion. The little descending guitar riff/fill that permeates throughout the song gives it a unique identity on the album as it slowly winds its way to the climactic end. The solo at the end gives out to what sounds like layers of feedback that can best be described as sounding how lightning actually looks. Keep listening for the acoustic guitar strumming that doesn't quite break through the noise completely, but the feedback somehow compliments it while J slowly sings the last verse.
"Yeah We Know" is set apart by the bludgeoning wah-wah riff that refuses to let up at any point, as well as yet another great solo. "Let It Ride" is, musically, a bit of a lighthearted point of the album and on this album that's quite welcome. "Pond Song" continues this kind of faux-happy sound. The guitar is somewhat restrained, with a great riff and quiet, high pitched feedback that beautifully harmonizes with J. throughout the song, which is one of the album highlights. "Budge" follows with some straight ahead grunge rock comparable to Pearl Jam with a touch of Pavement (and it's worth noting that Pavement weren't formed until a year later).
As a rabid Neil Young fan, it's really no surprise that Dinosaur Jr has quickly become such a favorite. J Mascis somehow manages to channel not only Neil's voice, but his lead guitar and songwriting style as well. The big, dumb riffs of "Yeah We Know" are pure `Rust Never Sleeps', while things like "Pond Song" and "Keep the Glove" have melodies that recall the poppier songs from `Zuma' or `Everybody Knows'. Of course, all this is not to say that Dino Jr sounds anything like a Crazy Horse cover band. Certainly they are informed by the hardcore scene they came out of, as witnessed in the thrashy parts of "Freak Scene" and obviously in "Don't". The rhythm section of Murph and Barlow are also clearly more musical than Crazy Horse at their best.
After `Bug', bassist Lou Barlow left, feeling smothered by Mascis, to form his own band, Sebadoh, which would become a great indie band in it's own right. Dinosaur Jr's first three albums would become huge influences on Pavement, Pearl Jam, Weezer, and of course Nirvana which, looking back, ironically would become a dinosaur of a different sort. J. continued making albums under the bands name until 1997, never quite reaching the same heights but coming awfully close on `Where You Been?' and `Green Mind'. The new album, `Beyond', proves that they are as great as ever, if not better. Long live Dinosaur Jr."
The Third in the Trilogy
M. Buisman | Amsterdam, NL | 11/30/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This album came out a year after the classic "You're Living All Over Us" and maybe it was too much to ask to surpass it. That doesn't mean 'Bug' is a bad album, not at all. It makes the Dinosaur JR with Lou trilogy complete.
The first song however might be the best of all the early Dinosaur work. "Freak Scene" is an indie classic that can rival with Pavement's 'Cut Your Hair' or even 'Smells Like Teen Spirit'
Everything is in order again, the sound is still murky but that's part of their sound back then. J's guitar sound is great of course. The sound is a little more varied and fresh, there's even an occassional acoustic guitar in there.
Songs like 'Pond' and 'No Bones' remind you of the previous albums and 'Budge' seems to be the ultimate song showing the old but also the new Dinosaur that would later record 'Green Mind'.
Like YLAOM this album is like wine, it gets better over time and even though it might not get a Hall of Fame status, it's still really good."
Before it all went wrong
Gogol | England | 03/18/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Remember the indie charts? Remember when the word indie actually meant that the record you had was produced by an independent record company and it didn't just mean a particular sound of music or dress. Remember when 'emo' was just By word for a mid to late 80s trend in US punk?
Those where the days when you actually had an 'alternative music' before combat pants became sold in high street stores and t shirts over long sleeves were just something worn not something you could buy stitched in.
This band just came on the tail end before record companies realised that there was a last stream of music that they have swallowed up and churned out at will. Those distorted guitars, the heavy bass and free rhythm that so personified bands like Jr, Soundgarden, Nirvana and others.
This is music at its best and most free and kids who really think Fall out Boy and Green Day are the be all and end all of alternative music meed to check this out."