Rewind Review: My Bloody Valentine – EP’s 1988 – 1991 (2012)

Released almost a decade ago, but sounding like it could’ve come out yesterday, My Bloody Valentine‘s collection of EP’s and rarities, appropriately titled EP’S 1988 – 1991, is a two-disc wallop of sound that collects the band’s four, rare EP’s and multiple bonus tracks.

The first five tracks on disc 1 come from 1988’s You Made Me Realise. The title track, with its punishing drums and bass, opens things with enough fuzz for an entire album (and reveals the massive influence MBV had on A Place to Bury Strangers). Debbie Googe‘s heavy bass propels “Slow” while Kevin Shields‘ guitar sounds like he left it in the sun too long. “Thorn” more than doubles the speed of the previous track and has some of Shield’s clearest vocals, which almost seem odd to hear when you’re used to so many tracks dripping with reverb and distortion. “Cigarette in Your Bed” does a neat balancing act with Bilinda Butcher‘s ethereal vocals and Colm Ó Cíosóig‘s voodoo drumming. “Drive It All Over Me” is one of MBV’s most upbeat tracks and makes you want to road trip with your friends.

The next four tracks are from the Feed Me with Your Kiss EP (also from 1988) . The title track also appears on their Isn’t Anything album from the same year. It’s a wild track with Shields and Butcher trading vocals while all four band members bounce around the room like a punch-drunk boxer intent on destroying everything in his path. “I Believe,” with its pounded piano keys, seems to indicate a love of The Stooges. Shields’ vocals on “Emptiness Inside” have a bit of a punk sneer to them, and Googe’s bass spares no mercy throughout it. “I Need No Trust” could’ve been a Velvet Underground track in a previous life.

MBV returned in 1990 with the Glider EP, and the lead single, “Soon,” became one of their biggest hits. It’s no surprise. The song is a shoegaze delight with Cíosóig’s beats sounding like early rave riffs, Googe’s hip-shaking bass, and Butcher and Shields’ twin wall-of-sound guitars and soft vocals. The EP’s title track sounds like it’s made up of parts of “Soon” played backwards. “Don’t As Why” brings in acoustic guitars to mesh with the fuzz and is a song Oasis probably wishes they’d written. “Off Your Face” has a bit of a psychedelic bend and some of Butcher’s loveliest vocals on any MBV track.

Disc 2 starts with the Tremolo EP from 1991, and the first cut, “To Here Knows When,” also appears on their classic Loveless album from the same year. It’s a swirling, fog-like track that seems to envelop you with its fuzzy, bright warmth. “Swallow” has Middle Eastern touches in its percussion and even adds a flute to the mix. “Honey Power” again puts Butcher on lead vocals and deftly moves back and forth between shoegaze pop and shoegaze power. “Moon Song” begins like some sort of death dirge, but soon turns into an incense smoke mind trip.

What follows are rare tracks and previously unreleased material. “Instrumental No. 2″ (the mellow one) and Instrumental No. 1” (the scorching one) are from a bonus 7-inch single released with Isn’t Anything. The full version of “Glider” (from 1990’s Glider E.P. Remixes) is over ten minutes of psychedelic drone. “Sugar” is from a rare 1989 split 7-inch flexi-disc and sounds like a Nine Inch Nails song if Trent Reznor were a lot happier in 1989.

The last three songs are the previously unreleased ones – “Angel” (seductive shoegaze with lead vocals by Butcher), “”Good for You” (a high-speed fuzz-fest), and “How Do You Do It” (a dangerous track with everyone playing their instruments like a professional hit squad). All of them are great treats to hear.

This stuff is essential if you’re a fan of MBV, shoegaze, noise rock, drone rock, or guitar rock…or even just rock in general. MBV are still a powerhouse and a band with whom you should not trifle. Approach with caution, but you’ll love them if you embrace the power.

Keep your mind open.

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Top 30 Concerts of 2018: #’s 10 – 6

We’ve arrived at the top 10 shows I saw in 2018! Let’s get to it!

#10: All Them Witches at Nashville’s Exit / In – I don’t have a full review of this show up because it happened so late in the year (December 29th – my birthday and the birthday of ATW‘s bassist / singer Michael Parks, Jr.). I also have no photographs from it because my phone was undergoing repairs at the time. I can assure you, however, that it was a loud, powerful show. Parks did a solo set of “sad stuff” to start off the show, and the rest of it was them burning off energy like they needed to sleep well that night.

#9: Public Image Ltd. at Chicago’s Thalia Hall – I had waited (though not by choice) for thirty years to see PiL. It was worth the wait and the short night of sleep before work afterwards. I got chills during “Rise” and was happy to finally see John Lydon live.

#8: My Bloody Valentine at Chicago’s Riviera Theatre – This was, without question, the loudest show I attended all year. It was like a crushing wave that almost never ceased. Friends of mine left early from the intensity of it. My arms were trembling by the end of their set. One guy behind me on the way out told his friend he thought he was going to die during one point of the show. It was a wild experience to say the least.

#7: Slowdive at Levitation Austin – I’d heard nothing but good things about these shoegaze legends and their live shows. They didn’t disappoint. It was a beautiful set with a psychedelic light show under a warm Texas sky. I saw fans in Slowdive shirts leaving early, however, which boggles my mind. It was one of the best sets of the festival.

#6: The Flaming Lips at Fort Wayne’s Clyde Theatre – Shame on you if you live within a couple hours driving time of Fort Wayne, Indiana and you missed this show. There was plenty of room in the theatre for you, but thanks for leaving the room for us and the Flaming Lips. They provided one of the happiest shows my wife and I saw all year in an intimate venue.

The top five are coming up tomorrow. Come back to see who topped the list!

Keep your mind open.

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Live: My Bloody Valentine and Martha’s Vineyard Ferries – Riviera Theatre – Chicago, IL – July 28, 2018

The second of two sold-out shows for My Bloody Valentine at Chicago’s Riviera Theatre was added when the first sold out in minutes.  I was surprised the second didn’t sell out as fast, but happy that I got a ticket to what I was sure was going to be a face-melting experience.

Opening up for MBV were Martha’s Vineyard Ferries – a sort of shoegaze / garage punk band with bits of doom flavor sprinkled in now and then.  I expected something a bit more psychedelic with a name like that, but they were “honored” to be opening for My Bloody Valentine and their enthusiasm came through in their set.

Martha’s Vineyard Ferries

The stacks of amplifiers for MBV were tall and numerous.  A woman behind me said her friend had come to the first show and told her, “It was louder than Dinosaur, Jr.”  Her friend was right.  It was louder than them and probably five more bands combined.

My Bloody Valentine

Opening with “I Only Said,” the four of them powered through with walls of distortion and reverb.  Vocals were barely audible at times, and usually incomprehensible.  You don’t go to a MBV show to hear crisp vocals, however, not even on the two new songs they played.  You go to experience the raw energy that comes at you like a pounding surf on a rocky beach.

Of course “Only Shallow” was a big crowd favorite (and as heavy-hitting as you imagine), but “What You Want,” “Nothing Much to See,” and, naturally, “Soon” were big wallops to your chest, too.  A friend of mine held my hands in hers after “Who Sees You,” and we noticed our hands were trembling.  She patted her chest and said, “Wow!  Intense!”

“My ears are hurting!” was the cry of a guy to my left after they finished “Wonder 2.”  I saw a lot of people without earplugs.  I pitied them.  Many of us were in near-meditative states by the time they got to “Feed Me with Your Kiss” and the audio avalanche that closed the show – “You Make Me Realize.”  The bridge in that was a couple minutes of cymbals and guitar noise that almost reached the point of punishment before breaking back into the power chords.  It left us all dumfounded.

As we were walking out, a woman behind me told her boyfriend he should’ve put in his earplugs for the finale.  He said, “I could feel my chest vibrating.  I thought, ‘Am I having a heart attack?  Is this how it ends?'”

“Not a bad way to go,” I said.

“That’s true,” he said.

True, indeed.  A My Bloody Valentine show isn’t for everyone, but it is something everyone should experience.

Keep your mind open.

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My Bloody Valentine announce first U.S. tour dates in five years.

MY BLOODY VALENTINE ANNOUNCE FIRST U.S. TOUR SINCE 2013

My Bloody Valentine return to the stage this summer for the first time since late 2013. The band will tour the United States and play overseas festivals including Robert Smith’s Meltdown in London, Roskilde in Denmark, and Sonicmania in Japan. This is the first stateside run since My Bloody Valentine toured in support of m b vTickets will be on sale at www.mybloodyvalentine.org this Friday, April 27th at 10am local time, except for New York, which will be on sale at 11am Eastern. A presale code will be available via Brooklyn Vegan on Thursday, April 26 at 10am Eastern.

Listen to Kevin Shields and Bob Boilen discuss the newly released all-analog versions of Loveless and Isn’t Anything and more on NPR Music’s “All Songs Considered,” and read recent interviews with Shields on Pitchfork and Rolling Stone.

My Bloody Valentine Tour Dates:
Sat. June 23 – London, UK @ Royal Festival Hall – Robert Smith’s Meltdown
Sat. June 30 – Sat. July 7 – Roskilde, DE @ Roskilde Festival
Tue. July 17 – Seattle, WA @ Paramount
Thu. July 19 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
Sun. July 22 – Los Angeles, CA @ FYF Fest
Wed. July 25 – St. Paul, MN @ Palace Theatre
Fri. July 27 – Chicago, IL @ Riviera Theatre
Mon. July 30 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Fillmore
Wed. Aug. 1 – New York, NY  @Hammerstein Ballroom
Fri. Aug. 17 – Makuhari Messe, JP @ Sonicmania

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Keep your mind open.