Details

Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Dirty Boots 2. Tunic (Song For Karen) 3. Mary-Christ 4. Kool Thing - (with Chuck D) 5. Mote 6. My Friend Goo 7. Disappearer 8. Mildred Pierce 9. Cinderella's Big Score 10. Scooter and Jinx 11. Titanium Expose 12. Lee #2 13. That's All I Know (Right Now) 14. Bedroom, The 15. Dr. Benway's House 16. Tuff Boyz
DISC 2: GOO: DELUXE EDITION: 1. Tunic 2. Number One (Disappearer) 3. Titanium Expose 4. Dirty Boots 5. Corky (Cinderella's Big Score) 6. My Friend Goo 7. Bookstore (Mote) 8. Animals (Mary-Christ) 9. Dv2 (Kool Thing) 10. Blowjob (Mildred Pierce) 11. Lee #2 12. I Know There's an Answer 13. Can Song 14. Isaac 15. Goo Interview Flexi
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Chuck D, Don Fleming, J Mascis | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | AAD |
Album Notes Sonic Youth: Thurston Moore, Lee Ranaldo (vocals, guitar); Kim Gordon (vocals, bass); Steve Shelley (drums). Additional personnel: Nick Sansano (percussion); Don Fleming (percussion, background vocals); J. Mascis, Chuck D. (background vocals). Producers: Sonic Youth, Nick Sansano, Ron Saint Germain. Recorded at Sorcerer Sound and Greene Street, New York, New York. Sonic Youth: Thurston Moore (vocals, guitar); Kim Gordon (vocals, bass guitar); Lee Ranaldo (guitar); Steve Shelley (drums). GOO was Sonic Youth's major label debut and allowed the band to blend its skewed sense of aesthetic and cultural criticism into a more understandable stab at pop culture. GOO unleashed the band's ability to create monster riffs out of fuzzy, unlikely tunings, while bringing their once aloof songwriting into a more pop-sensitive light. GOO's stunning collection of material once again highlighted Sonic Youth's unique writing talents. "Dirty Boots" and "Mary Christ" showed Thurston Moore's delicious slant on rock melody. Yet it was Kim Gordon who stole the show with her chilling "Tunic (Song For Karen)" and the brilliant "Kool Thing." In "Tunic," Gordon wrapped her cunning insight around the Karen Carpenter story: "I feel like I'm disappearing/Getting smaller every day/But I look in the mirror/And I'm getting bigger in every way..." The song was one of the album's many attempts at understanding the mechanics of pop stardom. "Kool Thing" summed up rock's once blatant "fear of a female planet" by placing women rockers in a rap context. "Are you going to liberate us girls/From male, white, corporate oppression?" Gordon toyed, saying more in her deadpan delivery than years of articles on women in rock or rap combined.
Industry Reviews Rated #6 of the Top 10 Recordings for 1990. New York Times (12/30/1990)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...a brilliant, extended essay in refined primitivism... Rolling Stone (08/09/1990)
...moves from lush, airy chords to brutalizing power riffs--the bristling sound of rock in the future. - Rating: B - Ranked by EW as the #6 Album of 1990.
4.5 Stars - ...This album is miles away from pop music with its unpredictable tempo leaps, the fidgeting with speaker noise and feedback, and the stumblings through instrumental excursions that succeed by a combination of drive and joy....immensely rewarding... Down Beat (11/01/1990)
Highly Recommended - ...a compelling, identifiable consistency...
4 stars out of 5 - [S]panning spazzed-out Krautrock, malevolent electronic drones and open-tuned jazz-punk....Exhilarating.
Q 3 Stars - Good
Option Highly Recommended - ...a compelling, identifiable consistency...
Entertainment Weekly ...moves from lush, airy chords to brutalizing power riffs--the bristling sound of rock in the future. - Rating: B - Ranked by EW as the #6 Album of 1990.
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