Albums by this artist

Spiderland (Recommended) (1991)

Slint

Spiderland


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Slint
Spiderland
Touch & Go, 1991
RiYL: Don Caballero, June Of 44, Joy Division, Shellac, Aerial M
Spiderland doesn't attenuate the experimental grasp of Slint's sound, which had been introduced on the 1989 album Tweez. Rather, it accents the Louisville band's eternal search for rhythm and timbre.

The coarse blues in "Breadcrumb Trail" features harmonies that are just as chaotic and interlocutory than on the group's first record. "Don, Aman" indulges in a concert of avant-garde guitar chords that, played in a normal tempo, would be melodic. But played with such long, irregular breaks, they are only a sequence -- a hypnotic effect mirrored in the acoustic passages of new age music and ravaged by Slint's very "rock" neuroses.

The slow progressions of "Washer," with its whispers and pulsations, owe more to night-time blues than acid-rock, giving birth to the music of future slow-core progenitors such as Codeine. "For Dinner..." is even more narcotic, anemic and drowsy.

Almost all of the passages, despite these excursions, feature sudden winces of hard, hard rock, with "Nosferatu Man" perhaps more struck by this than any other track. The closer, "Good Morning, Captain," seems to summarize all of these highbrow techniques, alternating between fragments of irritable guitar and haunting vocal recitations. The effect erects an iceberg of tragic suspense, and actually constitutes a true upsetting of modern rock history.

Spiderland expresses emotions often put aside in modern rock, bucking stereotypes and never resorting to the prefabricated ideas of earlier sonic icons. Here, in only six tracks, Slint achieve the nirvana of alternative rock, wedding masterful playing, thoughtful composing and lyrical expression to a degree seldom reached by popular music. And even though its members probably never thought twice about it, they gave true inspiration, for better or for worse, to an entirely new subgenre of guitar-based music.

PIERO SCARUFFI | Piero Scaruffi runs the exhaustive music database Scaruffi.com. A native of Italy, he has also been praised for his work on the General Theory of Relativity, formal theories of the mind, and artificial intelligence. And no, we aren't making that up.