Every now and then I get people asking for a playlist of every song mentioned in my videos: Well here's a Spotify link for this one: open.spotify.com/playlist/2BIRh11019nZgHKJVm9wL5?si=9ed75247aaac4d94 and the RUclips Music one: music.ruclips.net/p/PLooaZ33lSalchz8Yfs_H_6G3tUJOZsU4U&si=e6-saYIua25l-GyC
Glenn Branca is one of the most mindblowing artists of the 20th century, period, in any genre and medium. I was genuinely so depressed and gutted when he died, genuinely one of the greatest minds to ever turn itself towards guitars.
When you gonna do a story about My Bloody Valentine. Noticed you played 2 sec from their 1988 album, but Loveless was their magnum opus. I loved that one. Listen to it under the influence of H and it sounds totally different. Weird. But you'll have to take my word for it, as you surely never smoked anything but a weak blunt 😂
I was at their last concert ever, in Brazil, 2011. At the end, I was soaked in rain and crying a lot watching Lee's and Thurston's guitars touching, after they raised them and showed to the public. Kim was distant, with all that had happened, and could not wait to end the concert. But still, she gave it all. One of the most beautiful times of my entire almost 40 year old life. I'll take that to my grave.
I've met Thurston and Lee Ranaldo in NYC back in 1999 and while both Thurston and Lee were super cool and down to earth guys, very approachable and interested in what I was saying to them whilst Kim was just prancing around the place rolling her eyes as if she was above everyone else. The contrast between the personalities couldn't be greater
A lot of people dismiss Madonna as generic pop, but she was running in the same scenes as Sonic Youth and all these avant garde NYC scenes. She took all her influences in New York at the time and crafted herself into the penultimate pop star. Madonna is the coolest pop star we have lol I’m never surprised she has alternative fans because it’s all there across her discography.
Madonna has been influential on me second to Metallica like I have tried writing music because of Madonna and Metallica but I never have gotten to be in a band yet
they epitomized the crossover between art rock, indie noise, and alternative rock...they embodied the ethos of D.I.Y. music culture and outsider music...their fluid sense of self in genre definition led from experimental to spanning the spectrum...they have influenced and inspired dozens of bands that came out of the 80's and 90's because they played any thing in any way they wanted to in the moment...there were no walls, and there was no boundary...that's why they're important and that's their lasting impact on our culture...
100% changed my whole musical life. I literally threw out all my old tapes and started my record collection over from scratch when Dirty came out. The opening riff of Schizophrenia is basically the only thing I can play on the drums. Star Power, Little Trouble Girl, Diamond Sea, and Chapel Hill are all classics too. That super cut off fuzzy riffs is like 30 seconds what the inside of my brain feels like. Loved it.
I ran one of the first early websites about sonic youth in the mid to late 90s. Just wanted to say that this video is truly great. So many people didn’t really get what SY was doing, but you are a wonderful exception! I’ve met and had conversations with both Lee and Steve. Amazing people! Keep it up!!
Washing Machine was the first SY album I bought, though I had been listening to them on tapes copied from friends before. My first reaction was shock, then curiosity, then love. The Diamond Sea is probably my fav Sonic Youth track, though they have sooooo many amazing songs and soundscapes. Thank you for making this video.
As much as I absolute love most of their previous albums, 'Washing Machine' is really special and if I were to do the impossible task of listing my top 5 favourite albums, that would make it on that list
Back in the mid 90s my mate’s older brother visited the USA and came back with a bunch of obscure albums including Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation. I was 13 and when I first heard the cacophonous art noise of tunes like Eric’s Trip and Cross the Breeze something clicked for me. I’d already heard a lot of alternative music via skate and surf movies but this was something profound - it was THE thing I hadn’t realised I’d been waiting for. It kickstarted a lifelong interest in art, culture, music, literature and NYC. I made the move to NY from Australia largely because of this early inspiration.
@@antlerbraum2881- true, we didn’t have SY but we did have some amazing music that should have been huge around the world… Unfortunately our cultural cringe and belief that if it doesn’t come from overseas it ain’t no good prevented them from surviving and growing. People like The Boys Next Door/Birthday Party, Ash Wednesday, Fetus and so on, actually did it - went to Europe - and left an indelible mark on music. More than most in Australia know.
Sonic Youth were a big part of my... er... sonic youth (!), alongside the likes of Pavement and Sleater-Kinney. While all my mates were arguing about Blur v Oasis I was over in the corner listening to Dirty Boots, and drawing eyes on the palms of each hand to mimic the internal artwork of Evol. Hard to pick a single favourite so here's a top three: 1) Dirty Boots, 2) Sympathy For The Strawberry, 3) Shadow Of A Doubt. Ask me again tomorrow and you might get three different answers though!
@@corycourtney8923 totally - most people only know them because of Love Shack but they did so many great songs before their guitarists death from AIDs.
This has to be one of my favorite videos of yours, and that is saying a lot since every one of your videos so far have been nothing short of awesome. All of the music you mentioned here was part of the soundtrack of my teenage years. I just recently saw Kim Gordon in upstate NY on her solo tour. She is still amazing.
I saw them in a small Seattle street festival in the early 00's and the best I can describe it is that it was pure musical chaos and aggression in the best way possible. The audience was left confused and dumbfounded, it was hilarious but I loved it. You'd think that the audience would know what to expect by then but they were used to their radio friendly singles that were more mainstream.
Easily the best "take" on Sonic Youth I've ever seen. Couldn't stop watching once I started, which was at 4:30 am on a Monday morning, the beginning of my dreadful work week staring me in the face after actually cutting my face on accident when I fell out of bed after a nightmare where I fell out of bed into a table saw blade - I wish I was making it up. Back in the day, I listened to "Silver Rocket" and "Thersa's Sound World" like a thousand times on a car cassette I'd made. Wait - it wasn't "Silver Rocket" it was "Candle".
This was beautiful and unexpected. I've been a fan for decades but still learned some new stuff. I had the privilege of seeing them play The Diamond Sea live at Kentish Town Forum in 1996. Hello Stewart Lee.
Thank you for the wonderful video…takes me back to my teenage years and young adulthood. Empty Page, Stones, Expressway, Nic Fit. Feel blessed to have seen them live a handful of times…and makes me smile that my two girls enjoy their songs…a girlfriend paraphrased when she hears a SY song, she is reminded of my spirit. Hearing Hendrix for the first time at ten years old was mind blowing…didn’t have a similar experience until a coworker at the after school laundromat brought over his just released copy of Sister
Love this episode as I love so many of your documentaries. Sonic Youth was such an incredible group, you get the sense that they could’ve found success as anything from a power pop group to a dreamy shoegaze group… for all their experimental sound, they had an incredible ear for hooks
I'd love to see a video on the latter part of Sonic Youth's career. Their final albums are just as good as the first ones, imo. They're amazing. Their whole catalogue is astonishing.
Another great video!! As a SY fan for 38 years now and a sucker for everythings sonic, I have to say that, somewhat surprisingly, I learned a lot of new anecdotes and quotes from the band! Incredible work!
It's seen as a landmark, maybe because it was a double album, but for me Bad Moon Rising and Evol are their best two. More concentrated, more diverse, more sonically interesting than Daydream Nation IMO.
My fav band, what a treat!! ❤️ difficult to pick just one favorite song but i do love the sonic nurse album a lot. Seen them twice live and they were incredible ❤️
Every single video I watch from this channel I end up wishing there was an associated playlist with all the songs featured. I wished it contained the songs mentioned from the band itself, but also their influences and other bands whose songs were influenced by the one featured. I’d like listening to them afterwards to soak up all the tendencies and sounds from the video. Great work btw!
Thank you SO much for this vid. I've adored their albums from bad moon rising until Daydream nation ever since I randomly came across Daydream when I was about 17 or so (I'm 41 now) and I worked my way back through their music then. Their later albums I also have some of but I don't think they have that same feeling of "wow-what am I hearing" than those earlier ones. Also you're vid gave me insight I never knew, especially about Mike Watts involvement, I probably did know before but I didn't know who he was because for some stupid reason I'd never got round to listening to Minutemen until about 2yrs ago (which was also a revelation). So much nuggets of info here and there, this vid was one I'm thoroughly pleased you made. You've turned a very shitty Monday I've been having from making me want to scream from frustration with business to sitting on my couch with my cat and partner while I watch this on with a grin on my face lol thanks again!!! Keep them coming! Also that Light up Gold album by Parquet Courts is awesome haha
Got to see them in early 90s ... was a moment I won't forget. I've heard Dirty more times than I can count. Every single song on that album is top tier.
You have no idea how long I have been waiting for you to make this episode! Imagine my surprise and elation when I saw this on my feed just now. I have goosebumps and it only just started. THANK YOU!
I first saw them live for the first time in Sydney on 30 Jan 1989. Changed my life. I'd been watching local indie bands a plenty, at the time not many OS indie bands toured Australia. They blew me away. Loved their energy. Rollins was touring at the same time and I saw him after the show and asked what he thought, he replied great but I've seen them play before and they were like bam! I'm thinking how can that be possible, that was the best show I had ever seen. I had Daydream Nation but following that gig I search every record shop for their back catalogue. Fun times. Thanks Trash Theory for another great video.
your videos are absolutely fantastic and this video had me have more of an appreciation for sonic youth, a band i have heard the back catalogue of and all their albums up to goo. i Loved some of their songs but not a lot else, though this has me wanting to revisit their catalogue. i think you doing a doc on sonic youth makes a lot of sense and to be honest i was waiting for you to touch on it. you make some of the best content on this site, docs i've rewatched countless times. i'm a musician myself and these videos both give me information on different eras of indie and rock music but also inspire me deeply to try and make my own impact. in every way possible, thank you, your videos are just fantastic. keep it up. i know you will.
The best guitar album of all time. I bought this on cd for a road trip across the prairies as a young teenager , and it will always be forever weaved into my remembered idea of America. Thank you for such a great biography
20+ years later and their albums and live shows still give me so much variety and nuances to discover. Yes, they did mostly sound like noise at first but what a treat. I think some of the most rewarding music is the weird stuff that has a bit of a learning curve
Terrific overview on this band, who literally scrambled my DNA and still influence me greatly. Favorite 3: Teen Age Riot, Stereo Sanctity, Drunken Butterfly.
I just love the part in your videos where you list all the bands and tracks that were influenced by the said artist you discuss. And that "wait a minute... yes!" moment. Huge respect for your work, I'm always mesmerised by your ability to tell a story while analysing. Not to mention Sonic youth are one of my all time favourite musicians. Thanks for this video!
I found Daydream Nation at Brash’s at Werribee Plaza in 1989… The week after I had bought Candy Apple Grey by Husker Du. Those two albums blew my mind apart as a 15 year old kid…! I had always loved the Jesus & Mary Chain’s noisiest moments, but finding stuff like the Smiths, Echo & Bmen etc to be missing something, but then DNation. Ahhh!!! A sprawling adventure of an album… with a Song called the Sprawl (Edit: omfg… I always wondered, but wasn’t sure about the neuromancer connection! I wrote this comment about 4 minutes into the video. So many answers, connections etc came after that point. Excellent work Trash Theory)… a journey, a Trip (!), a work of art that took me away from start to finish. Noise, quiet, travel, noise, introspection, throwing shit at the walls, everything is in there. Still love it, still one of my favourite road trip albums (& my daughters!). Still find guitar lines, drum fills & more that I have not loved enough today. Saw them with Helmet & Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy at the Prince of Wales in about ‘94/95(???). Only chance I ever had… WHAT a night!!! Also saw Madonna at the MCG, partly bc of SY Ciccone Youth adulation & my first girlfriends worship of Madonna… dressing almost gothy bc of Madonna who took Siouxsie style to new areas. I will be listening to Daydream Nation when I am 80. It is just that foundational to the world of music as a whole… but for me as well personally. No wonder it had been put in the USA Library of congress.
You have a lot of videos that educate me about bands I don't know much about and I learn a ton, and I thank you for them. Then you do ones that are big, comfy chairs for me to sit in and revel in like this one. Thanks so much for both kinds!
I worked security at concerts for years in San Francisco and I have to say that Sonic Youth are some of the nicest folks I've ever met! Them, Johnny Cash (and his whole crew) and Pat Benatar! S.Y. put on incredible shows! I'll let you guess to who wasn't so nice. :)
@@johnchedsey1306 That's the way to do it. I worked in a mid-size venue and we had a saying: We saw bands on the way up and on the way down. So, if bands were especially rude to us, and there were a few, we would eventually see them on the backside of their careers. LOL
🎯 Key points for quick navigation: 00:12 *Sonic Youth's influence surpasses their music, known for blending noise, pop, and deconstructing rock tropes.* 00:40 *"Daydream Nation" marked Sonic Youth's pivotal entry into 90s alternative music with a mix of noise and pop.* 02:15 *Sonic Youth was deeply influenced by New York's No Wave scene, valuing its abstract and freeform expression.* 03:12 *Glenn Branca's avant-garde influence and unconventional guitar tunings shaped Sonic Youth's early sound.* 05:39 *Despite early criticism, Sonic Youth's chaotic live performances in Europe earned them acclaim and a growing fanbase.* 07:21 *Sonic Youth's anti-nostalgic approach led them to continually reinvent their sound and discard old songs.* 09:05 *"Bad Moon Rising" marked Sonic Youth's first major album without Glenn Branca, exploring new musical territories.* 12:15 *"EVOL" marked a shift towards more structured songs influenced by The Replacements and Lydia Lunch.* 17:22 *Sonic Youth's fascination with pop culture extended to Madonna, influencing their music and image.* 20:57 *"Sister" saw Sonic Youth refining their noise-pop style, incorporating themes from Philip K. Dick's sci-fi.* 25:12 *Distribution issues led Sonic Youth to leave SST for Enigma, aiming for wider accessibility for their records.* 28:29 *Sonic Youth prepared for "Daydream Nation" by refining songs live, creating a kinetic and freeform double album, influenced by their SST peers and hip-hop dynamics.* 29:36 *Sonic Youth used a double album format for "Daydream Nation" to playfully critique classic rock excess, titling tracks as a trilogy and using symbolic LP side labels.* 30:20 *Engineer Nick Sansano's hip-hop background brought dynamism to Sonic Youth's recording sessions for "Daydream Nation," integrating multilayered sound akin to Public Enemy.* 33:05 *"Teen Age Riot" from "Daydream Nation" pays homage to Neil Young and J Mascis, blending political commentary with Sonic Youth's signature sound.* 37:19 *Sonic Youth's "Providence" features Mike Watt's answering machine message and ends with their amp literally blowing up due to extreme volume levels.* 38:32 *"Daydream Nation" album cover by Gerhard Richter symbolically critiques the Reagan era, reflecting Sonic Youth's subversive ethos.* 39:33 *"Daydream Nation" marked Sonic Youth's critical acclaim and minor chart success, influencing subsequent indie and alternative rock bands.* 41:42 *Sonic Youth's "Daydream Nation" remains their benchmark despite later commercial successes, influencing bands like Nirvana and Beck.* 45:32 *Sonic Youth's innovative guitar work redefined the instrument's possibilities, influencing generations of musicians beyond traditional rock norms.* Made with HARPA AI
I’m a fortnight late but hopefully you still see this. I want to say how much I love your videos and how much new music they introduce me to, how it shows me so many connections and shows me what to like about stuff. It’s honestly so great man. Keep doing it as long as you keep feeling it, because it’s such a great watch every time. Genuinely fills my heart to get such great investigations of artists I know and such great recommendations of new ones I don’t. Thanks man
SY were my last big teenage obsession. That word gets thrown around a lot these days, but I was genuinely in all the way with these guys, and they changed my life. I was already listening to a lot of indie stuff, but they flew under my radar I found them because I read an article that mentioned that they liked Philip K Dick, so Sister was the first album I bought, and it just spun my head around. I felt like I'd finally found my people, especially because they were so damn funny on records and in interviews. They were worth all the adolescent devotion I had left. At the time, I was also going clubbing and listening to dance music (the late 80s were just a feast of so many different sounds, and being a Sonic Youth fan didn't mean you couldn't appreciate dance and pop music), but these guys helped me find a live scene I could finally gel with--hardcore was just too much of a boy's club--and it seemed like every band or record they endorsed turned out to be solid gold: Mudhoney, Dinosaur Jr., Pavement, Urge Overkill and Nirvana all found their way into my world via Sonic Youth's enthusiasm (I'm from Texas, so I already knew about the Butthole Surfers) mostly before they really bubbled into the indie radar. So I didn't miss a Sonic Youth show after that, if I could get there, throughout all the years until they broke up. I grew up, graduated from college and then grad school, went out into the world, travelled all oer, got married, and they were always with me. I saw them play some pretty lousy shows (in the 80s they had a reputation for playing short sets, which pissed off a lot of people I knew), and I also saw them be transcendently brilliant; you just never knew. Austin seemed to be a place they really liked. One night, Thurston Moore reached over the whole front-tow crush to hand me his (full) water bottle on a sweltering hot night at Liberty Lunch in Austin (I was out of my tree on mushrooms and it punctuated one of the best nights of my life). I literally don't know what my life would have turned out like if it hadn't been for these guys. They proved that you could be smart, educated, *and* punk rock as heck, and for nerdy kids like me, that was everything: you didn't have to pretend to be stupid or behave like you didn't come from the affluent burbs (there's a hilarious "interview" in one of the English weeklies (the NME, I think) where Gibby from the Surfers asks Thurston (son of a philosophy professor), "Do you have parents and shit?"--which was rich, considering that Gibby's own father hosted our local children's morning TV show here in Dallas-Ft. Worth). And Kim Gordon's messy tomboy style was exactly the look practical girls like me were going for so we could be comfortable at shows. Their demise was heartbreaking. It happened at a time when I was struggling in my own life with health problems and my own marriage was on the rocks. I sat shivah for a week when I found out--just moped and refused to deal with the world. They had a good run, and honestly their last few albums just didn't have the same spark as the first few, but I didn't care; they were always worth the time and attention. I miss them, still. Thanks for taking the time to provide an on-ramp for anyone who thinks that their music is difficult or unlistenable. I feel so lucky to have found them at exactly the right moment, and right at their artistic peak. Even if it was impossible to get a copy of EVOL in the shops until they finally signed to Geffen (my only means of listening to it for years was the copy in the UT music library). I want as many people as possible to find them, because they could potentially be someone else's favorite band for life, too. Cheers! Xoxo
Now you got it right with me. This band and this album are landmarks to my artistic life as a musician. Great research, indeed. Despite the fact that "Diamond Sea" is my true Sonic Youth's favorite song, I'd choose the final trilogy of "Daydream Nation" as my favorite suite any day. "Teenage Riot" is, indeed, a mandatory favorite for me in the whole album, though.
Loved the video. It was a journey through my teenage youth (pun intended). Theresa’s sound world is my favorite song, and probably their most underrated imo. It was the perfect mix of their early days’ noise combined with the cleanest production they’d ever achieve
I was at that concert in 1983 and the audience wasn't that 'sparse'. I went for SPK who had just been in the charts with Metal Dance & Danielle who I loved but not certain if was ever in the top 40 (unless you count the Indie charts). I had no idea who the thrashing US band was at the start until much later. I remember Kim asking if anyone had a spare bass string as I had just purchased a set for my chorded 8 string that had cost a fortune from Denmark St whilst I was in London for the day & thinking 'fuck that'. Some other guy clutching a mango, when mango's were a rare commodity, passed her one. If I could go back in time I would, hindsight. I still struggle with their music but I think that is the point. Nice to see Kim at Glasto the other week keeping the faith in her 70s - way to go girl.
An absolute gem of a video, thank you. If I may make a request for future content? A deep dive on J.Mascis. The guy becomes increasingly legendary with each passing year. Keep up the good work.
i love sonic youth so much. they impacted my teen years alot after my friends aunt introduced me to them when i was 11! some of my fav SY songs are definitely 100%, i dreamed i dream, sunday, into the groovey, the diamond sea, beat on the brat, mote shadow of a doubt and so many more theres just so many good ones!!!
Just last week I decided to listen to all 15 of sonic youth’s albums bc I love them but I haven’t heard most of their music (and they have a lot more than I realized!). Then you posted this video absolutely amazing timing thank you trash theory!
At last! One of my favourite bands! Can't pick a song, but the album i love most is Jet Set... Thanks for this episode, and now i can only hope for Soul Coughing.
Saw them many, many times and can attest to them being one of the greatest live bands ever. Changed my life. Too many incredible songs to choose just one. ❤❤❤
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I want to say, after reading Our Band Could Be Your Life by Michael Azerrad, a common theme developed. Sonic Youth were one of the kindest and most giving bands to everyone coming up in punk, hardcore, indie, experimental, alternative. No one in that book had a bad thing to say about them. It was always 'they took us on tour' or 'they let us sleep in their floor.'
You're right at the start, every band I play with wants to be at least a little like Sonic Youth, it's great. A band can never be Sonic Youth, but they can capture a similar energy from them.
Thanks again for another terrific video. Truly creative people find their own way to express themselves. The transformative artist changes the way we see, or hear, reality. Thank you Sonic Youth.
The most mind blowing fact from Kim's biography is that Sonic Youth were rehearsing in their practice room when the news came in that John Lennon had been murdered. They span entire eras!
I saw sonic youth on the dirty tour at the city gardens in Trenton n.j. I stage dived into another crowd surfer, hit the ground and split my bottom lip wide open. I took of my shirt, held it on my mouth and stayed for the rest of the show
Brilliant work as always -- SY were an all-time fave band for me, as a teenager in the 90s. Fave song: probably "Tuff Gnarl" off of Sister, which for my money is their best album -- the whole record is bursting with amazing energy and catchy songs washed in creative dissonance. "Dirty Boots" off of Goo, another fave, another classic album...
So thankful to have been in my teens when Evol/Sister/Daydream Nation came out. It seemed like boundaries didn't exist for them. To me they showed no interest in right or wrong, only exploration.The trifecta of greatness from Sonic Youth! Very important music in my life.
So SO stoked to see this on my youtube homepage. I got into Sonic Youth way late in the game, but I've been inspired by their music recently and listening to it a ton, so this came at the perfect time.
I discovered Sonic Youth with their album Goo, Mote is one of my favorites by them, it feels like a great balance between the more accessible songs on the album and their more traditional songs, it still blows me away
I had a psychedelic experience at a Spiritualized gig on no drugs, just their strobe light and musc. I dunno what year it was, maybe 1996, Kate Radley was still on keyboaards.
Sonic Youth has been my favorite band for some years now and the reason why is exactly what you describe in the video. They prove that with sheer creativity you can make any music that you want, reinventing tools that have been used for decennia by reducing them to their most primal beginnings. They are the perfect example of music nerd punkers or diy'ers and i will always try and support those artists in the music industry, because i think these artists are truely the ones that are able to push us forward. Favorite tracks: -Pipeline/Kill Time -Silver Rocket -In The Kingdom #19 -She's in a bad Mood -Chapel Hill i could go on
I saw SY in the mid 80s and watched slack jawed as Thurston jabbed a screw driver between the strings and fretboard and The noises that screamed out of his backline blew us all away.... It was a revolutionary moment I'll never forget.
As ever, fascinating stuff mate. Grew up on these guys and the bands they influenced and were influenced by. Favourite song is probably Youth Against Fascism, not exactly a super cool deep cut but I just fucking love it.
Every now and then I get people asking for a playlist of every song mentioned in my videos: Well here's a Spotify link for this one:
open.spotify.com/playlist/2BIRh11019nZgHKJVm9wL5?si=9ed75247aaac4d94
and the RUclips Music one:
music.ruclips.net/p/PLooaZ33lSalchz8Yfs_H_6G3tUJOZsU4U&si=e6-saYIua25l-GyC
THANK YOU!
@@TrashTheory ❤️
Thanks! Now I don’t need to buy a CD player…
Glenn Branca is one of the most mindblowing artists of the 20th century, period, in any genre and medium. I was genuinely so depressed and gutted when he died, genuinely one of the greatest minds to ever turn itself towards guitars.
When you gonna do a story about My Bloody Valentine. Noticed you played 2 sec from their 1988 album, but Loveless was their magnum opus. I loved that one. Listen to it under the influence of H and it sounds totally different. Weird. But you'll have to take my word for it, as you surely never smoked anything but a weak blunt 😂
I hate watching Trash Theory because I have to pause the video every few minutes to add a song I've never heard before to my playlist.
That's a good problem to have
Ain't it the truth
Don’t watch then
Ooooh.... you must be from the Problem Solvers Caucus! @@austins.2495
@@austins.2495 It's a joke.
I was at their last concert ever, in Brazil, 2011. At the end, I was soaked in rain and crying a lot watching Lee's and Thurston's guitars touching, after they raised them and showed to the public. Kim was distant, with all that had happened, and could not wait to end the concert. But still, she gave it all. One of the most beautiful times of my entire almost 40 year old life. I'll take that to my grave.
My one and only SY show was at the Hollywood Bowl that year. Mind blowing..
I read her words on that I think you just described it perfectly again you can tell she was in pain though
I've been to Kim's show just this month, she's still amazing live.
Amazing comment
I've met Thurston and Lee Ranaldo in NYC back in 1999 and while both Thurston and Lee were super cool and down to earth guys, very approachable and interested in what I was saying to them whilst Kim was just prancing around the place rolling her eyes as if she was above everyone else. The contrast between the personalities couldn't be greater
A lot of people dismiss Madonna as generic pop, but she was running in the same scenes as Sonic Youth and all these avant garde NYC scenes. She took all her influences in New York at the time and crafted herself into the penultimate pop star. Madonna is the coolest pop star we have lol I’m never surprised she has alternative fans because it’s all there across her discography.
Madonna has been influential on me second to Metallica like I have tried writing music because of Madonna and Metallica but I never have gotten to be in a band yet
You can't overstate how important they were. The alt-rock explosion of the 90s would not have happened without Sonic Youth.
Or it would sound completely different...
they epitomized the crossover between art rock, indie noise, and alternative rock...they embodied the ethos of D.I.Y. music culture and outsider music...their fluid sense of self in genre definition led from experimental to spanning the spectrum...they have influenced and inspired dozens of bands that came out of the 80's and 90's because they played any thing in any way they wanted to in the moment...there were no walls, and there was no boundary...that's why they're important and that's their lasting impact on our culture...
I agree completely. And yet that entire paragraph could describe dozens of bands and artists. 🙂
@@jachyra9 what bands? which artists?
@@startervisions - David Bowie. Roxy Music. Joy Division. R.E.M. Black Flag. Jane's Addiction. Radiohead...
@@jachyra9 ...The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Velvet Underground, Frank Zappa, Black Sabbath, Queen...
‘ello ‘ello, been a while since our paths crossed so closely; other Dez… ♠️🏴☠️🙏🏿
100% changed my whole musical life. I literally threw out all my old tapes and started my record collection over from scratch when Dirty came out. The opening riff of Schizophrenia is basically the only thing I can play on the drums. Star Power, Little Trouble Girl, Diamond Sea, and Chapel Hill are all classics too. That super cut off fuzzy riffs is like 30 seconds what the inside of my brain feels like. Loved it.
Don't forget the amazing song jc
I ran one of the first early websites about sonic youth in the mid to late 90s.
Just wanted to say that this video is truly great. So many people didn’t really get what SY was doing, but you are a wonderful exception!
I’ve met and had conversations with both Lee and Steve. Amazing people!
Keep it up!!
That's freaking awesome. Thanks for sharing that
Washing Machine was the first SY album I bought, though I had been listening to them on tapes copied from friends before. My first reaction was shock, then curiosity, then love. The Diamond Sea is probably my fav Sonic Youth track, though they have sooooo many amazing songs and soundscapes. Thank you for making this video.
I saw them tour that album in 1995. They were incredible
That really is a great album
@brandbird Diamond Sea is the song I play most, and before that dropped, Disappearer
As much as I absolute love most of their previous albums, 'Washing Machine' is really special and if I were to do the impossible task of listing my top 5 favourite albums, that would make it on that list
Back in the mid 90s my mate’s older brother visited the USA and came back with a bunch of obscure albums including Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation. I was 13 and when I first heard the cacophonous art noise of tunes like Eric’s Trip and Cross the Breeze something clicked for me. I’d already heard a lot of alternative music via skate and surf movies but this was something profound - it was THE thing I hadn’t realised I’d been waiting for. It kickstarted a lifelong interest in art, culture, music, literature and NYC. I made the move to NY from Australia largely because of this early inspiration.
I wouldn't call Daydream Nation obscure
Moving from Australia to New York is a major downgrade, I’m sorry you made that mistake :/
@@galetinmWell I’m sure when YOU were a 13 year old Australian kid in the mid-nineties you were well versed in alternative music.
@@austins.2495Yeah but Aus never had Sonic Youth mate
@@antlerbraum2881- true, we didn’t have SY but we did have some amazing music that should have been huge around the world…
Unfortunately our cultural cringe and belief that if it doesn’t come from overseas it ain’t no good prevented them from surviving and growing.
People like The Boys Next Door/Birthday Party, Ash Wednesday, Fetus and so on, actually did it - went to Europe - and left an indelible mark on music.
More than most in Australia know.
Sonic Youth were a big part of my... er... sonic youth (!), alongside the likes of Pavement and Sleater-Kinney. While all my mates were arguing about Blur v Oasis I was over in the corner listening to Dirty Boots, and drawing eyes on the palms of each hand to mimic the internal artwork of Evol. Hard to pick a single favourite so here's a top three: 1) Dirty Boots, 2) Sympathy For The Strawberry, 3) Shadow Of A Doubt. Ask me again tomorrow and you might get three different answers though!
Right on man, good taste, And for the record, in my opinion, Blur and Supergrass over everyone except Stone Roses.
Holy crap, a video about my favorite album released on my birthday? Best gift ever! :D
Happy Birthday!! 🎉
Definitely need a B-52s Trash Theory on tracks like Give Me Back My Man! Such a great band and such tragedy tinged with success.
This
It is CRAZY how good and under-rated a song Give Me Back My Man is.
@@corycourtney8923 Could we stop calling things underrated?
@@corycourtney8923 totally - most people only know them because of Love Shack but they did so many great songs before their guitarists death from AIDs.
Definitely. Those first two albums in particular are more than worthy of the TT treatment. It must be done! :)
This has to be one of my favorite videos of yours, and that is saying a lot since every one of your videos so far have been nothing short of awesome. All of the music you mentioned here was part of the soundtrack of my teenage years. I just recently saw Kim Gordon in upstate NY on her solo tour. She is still amazing.
My favourite band of all time. Not just because of their music, but how their music changed my perspective of what music could sound like.
Favourite song would have to be “Skip Tracer” from Washing Machine.
In the Kingdom #19 is my favorite EVOL song. You just made me love it even more.
I saw them in a small Seattle street festival in the early 00's and the best I can describe it is that it was pure musical chaos and aggression in the best way possible. The audience was left confused and dumbfounded, it was hilarious but I loved it. You'd think that the audience would know what to expect by then but they were used to their radio friendly singles that were more mainstream.
Easily the best "take" on Sonic Youth I've ever seen. Couldn't stop watching once I started, which was at 4:30 am on a Monday morning, the beginning of my dreadful work week staring me in the face after actually cutting my face on accident when I fell out of bed after a nightmare where I fell out of bed into a table saw blade - I wish I was making it up. Back in the day, I listened to "Silver Rocket" and "Thersa's Sound World" like a thousand times on a car cassette I'd made. Wait - it wasn't "Silver Rocket" it was "Candle".
I like Sugar Kane from Dirty. Noise pop loveliness
One of the most perfect songs ever written, in my opinion
Best noise break in the middle of a beautiful pop song, ever.
This was beautiful and unexpected. I've been a fan for decades but still learned some new stuff.
I had the privilege of seeing them play The Diamond Sea live at Kentish Town Forum in 1996.
Hello Stewart Lee.
I adore this channel. The best of RUclips! 🍸
@@DJL78 amen to that
Love this! Please do a retrospective on no wave, punk funk, turntablism, and other nyc noise artists like Swans when you get a chance! ❤
Thank you for the wonderful video…takes me back to my teenage years and young adulthood. Empty Page, Stones, Expressway, Nic Fit. Feel blessed to have seen them live a handful of times…and makes me smile that my two girls enjoy their songs…a girlfriend paraphrased when she hears a SY song, she is reminded of my spirit. Hearing Hendrix for the first time at ten years old was mind blowing…didn’t have a similar experience until a coworker at the after school laundromat brought over his just released copy of Sister
Sonic Youth and their music CHANGED MY MIND AND MY LIFE. Thank you Sonic Youth!
Trash Theory is the best RUclips channel period. Thank you so much for making cool videos about interesting music.
Trash Theory is criminally underrated
Love this episode as I love so many of your documentaries. Sonic Youth was such an incredible group, you get the sense that they could’ve found success as anything from a power pop group to a dreamy shoegaze group… for all their experimental sound, they had an incredible ear for hooks
I'd love to see a video on the latter part of Sonic Youth's career. Their final albums are just as good as the first ones, imo. They're amazing. Their whole catalogue is astonishing.
So glad I got to see a bunch of their shows over 30+ years... miss 'em
Me too. They went on too long though. They should have stopped long ago, and should be doing reunion tours now and earning millions.
Another great video!! As a SY fan for 38 years now and a sucker for everythings sonic, I have to say that, somewhat surprisingly, I learned a lot of new anecdotes and quotes from the band! Incredible work!
So glad I got to see this incredible unbelievabley original band live 5 times. They were my first proper rock concert when I was 15.
Daydream Nation is hands down one of the greatest albums ever released.
Agreed, but it’s not even a top three best SY to me. That’s how great they were
Without a doubt. It's also the greatest album from the 1980s. Period!
@@itsjonathangray That part
@@itsjonathangray One of the best albums ever. They are in my top five bands and best ever live band I've ever seen.
It's seen as a landmark, maybe because it was a double album, but for me Bad Moon Rising and Evol are their best two. More concentrated, more diverse, more sonically interesting than Daydream Nation IMO.
My fav band, what a treat!! ❤️ difficult to pick just one favorite song but i do love the sonic nurse album a lot. Seen them twice live and they were incredible ❤️
Every single video I watch from this channel I end up wishing there was an associated playlist with all the songs featured. I wished it contained the songs mentioned from the band itself, but also their influences and other bands whose songs were influenced by the one featured. I’d like listening to them afterwards to soak up all the tendencies and sounds from the video.
Great work btw!
Yea, kids these days like to have everything spoon fed to them. God forbid you do a little research and exploration yourself.
@@austins.2495 Could I request that you not bring unnecessary snark to this space? I kinda liked the positive vibe...
Thank you SO much for this vid. I've adored their albums from bad moon rising until Daydream nation ever since I randomly came across Daydream when I was about 17 or so (I'm 41 now) and I worked my way back through their music then. Their later albums I also have some of but I don't think they have that same feeling of "wow-what am I hearing" than those earlier ones.
Also you're vid gave me insight I never knew, especially about Mike Watts involvement, I probably did know before but I didn't know who he was because for some stupid reason I'd never got round to listening to Minutemen until about 2yrs ago (which was also a revelation). So much nuggets of info here and there, this vid was one I'm thoroughly pleased you made. You've turned a very shitty Monday I've been having from making me want to scream from frustration with business to sitting on my couch with my cat and partner while I watch this on with a grin on my face lol thanks again!!! Keep them coming!
Also that Light up Gold album by Parquet Courts is awesome haha
Got to see them in early 90s ... was a moment I won't forget. I've heard Dirty more times than I can count. Every single song on that album is top tier.
You have no idea how long I have been waiting for you to make this episode! Imagine my surprise and elation when I saw this on my feed just now. I have goosebumps and it only just started. THANK YOU!
I first saw them live for the first time in Sydney on 30 Jan 1989. Changed my life. I'd been watching local indie bands a plenty, at the time not many OS indie bands toured Australia. They blew me away. Loved their energy. Rollins was touring at the same time and I saw him after the show and asked what he thought, he replied great but I've seen them play before and they were like bam! I'm thinking how can that be possible, that was the best show I had ever seen. I had Daydream Nation but following that gig I search every record shop for their back catalogue. Fun times. Thanks Trash Theory for another great video.
Thank you for continuing to make some of the best content RUclips has to offer.
This video made me love the band and Daydream Nation even more - thank you!!!
your videos are absolutely fantastic and this video had me have more of an appreciation for sonic youth, a band i have heard the back catalogue of and all their albums up to goo. i Loved some of their songs but not a lot else, though this has me wanting to revisit their catalogue. i think you doing a doc on sonic youth makes a lot of sense and to be honest i was waiting for you to touch on it. you make some of the best content on this site, docs i've rewatched countless times. i'm a musician myself and these videos both give me information on different eras of indie and rock music but also inspire me deeply to try and make my own impact. in every way possible, thank you, your videos are just fantastic. keep it up. i know you will.
The best guitar album of all time. I bought this on cd for a road trip across the prairies as a young teenager , and it will always be forever weaved into my remembered idea of America. Thank you for such a great biography
20+ years later and their albums and live shows still give me so much variety and nuances to discover. Yes, they did mostly sound like noise at first but what a treat. I think some of the most rewarding music is the weird stuff that has a bit of a learning curve
I like "learning curve". Never applied that to music, but it's such an apt expression for the process.
Best doc yet!
Really well done!
And Sonic Youth rules.
Terrific overview on this band, who literally scrambled my DNA and still influence me greatly. Favorite 3: Teen Age Riot, Stereo Sanctity, Drunken Butterfly.
I just love the part in your videos where you list all the bands and tracks that were influenced by the said artist you discuss. And that "wait a minute... yes!" moment. Huge respect for your work, I'm always mesmerised by your ability to tell a story while analysing. Not to mention Sonic youth are one of my all time favourite musicians. Thanks for this video!
9:44 "Are you sure this is the band we read about?"
That's pretty fucking hilarious.
This was long overdue. :)
An excellent summary of one of my favourite ever bands. Thank you. 😊 🙏🏿
I found Daydream Nation at Brash’s at Werribee Plaza in 1989…
The week after I had bought Candy Apple Grey by Husker Du.
Those two albums blew my mind apart as a 15 year old kid…!
I had always loved the Jesus & Mary Chain’s noisiest moments, but finding stuff like the Smiths, Echo & Bmen etc to be missing something, but then DNation.
Ahhh!!! A sprawling adventure of an album… with a Song called the Sprawl (Edit: omfg… I always wondered, but wasn’t sure about the neuromancer connection! I wrote this comment about 4 minutes into the video. So many answers, connections etc came after that point. Excellent work Trash Theory)… a journey, a Trip (!), a work of art that took me away from start to finish.
Noise, quiet, travel, noise, introspection, throwing shit at the walls, everything is in there.
Still love it, still one of my favourite road trip albums (& my daughters!).
Still find guitar lines, drum fills & more that I have not loved enough today.
Saw them with Helmet & Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy at the Prince of Wales in about ‘94/95(???).
Only chance I ever had… WHAT a night!!!
Also saw Madonna at the MCG, partly bc of SY Ciccone Youth adulation & my first girlfriends worship of Madonna… dressing almost gothy bc of Madonna who took Siouxsie style to new areas.
I will be listening to Daydream Nation when I am 80.
It is just that foundational to the world of music as a whole… but for me as well personally.
No wonder it had been put in the USA Library of congress.
You have a lot of videos that educate me about bands I don't know much about and I learn a ton, and I thank you for them. Then you do ones that are big, comfy chairs for me to sit in and revel in like this one. Thanks so much for both kinds!
I have listened to this album a thousand times and know every song inside out. But i didn't know the history behind it. Thanks for the information.
I worked security at concerts for years in San Francisco and I have to say that Sonic Youth are some of the nicest folks I've ever met! Them, Johnny Cash (and his whole crew) and Pat Benatar! S.Y. put on incredible shows! I'll let you guess to who wasn't so nice. :)
I once worked for a touring band (not Sonic Youth, of course) and the first thing they told me was to always be nice to the venue staff.
@@johnchedsey1306 That's the way to do it. I worked in a mid-size venue and we had a saying: We saw bands on the way up and on the way down. So, if bands were especially rude to us, and there were a few, we would eventually see them on the backside of their careers. LOL
The eagles?
@@pjr5913 I never worked one of their shows. One of the worst, which isn't much of a surprise was Green Day.
They are absolute sweethearts! Lee is a treasure.
Another mini doco masterclass.... many thanks
🎯 Key points for quick navigation:
00:12 *Sonic Youth's influence surpasses their music, known for blending noise, pop, and deconstructing rock tropes.*
00:40 *"Daydream Nation" marked Sonic Youth's pivotal entry into 90s alternative music with a mix of noise and pop.*
02:15 *Sonic Youth was deeply influenced by New York's No Wave scene, valuing its abstract and freeform expression.*
03:12 *Glenn Branca's avant-garde influence and unconventional guitar tunings shaped Sonic Youth's early sound.*
05:39 *Despite early criticism, Sonic Youth's chaotic live performances in Europe earned them acclaim and a growing fanbase.*
07:21 *Sonic Youth's anti-nostalgic approach led them to continually reinvent their sound and discard old songs.*
09:05 *"Bad Moon Rising" marked Sonic Youth's first major album without Glenn Branca, exploring new musical territories.*
12:15 *"EVOL" marked a shift towards more structured songs influenced by The Replacements and Lydia Lunch.*
17:22 *Sonic Youth's fascination with pop culture extended to Madonna, influencing their music and image.*
20:57 *"Sister" saw Sonic Youth refining their noise-pop style, incorporating themes from Philip K. Dick's sci-fi.*
25:12 *Distribution issues led Sonic Youth to leave SST for Enigma, aiming for wider accessibility for their records.*
28:29 *Sonic Youth prepared for "Daydream Nation" by refining songs live, creating a kinetic and freeform double album, influenced by their SST peers and hip-hop dynamics.*
29:36 *Sonic Youth used a double album format for "Daydream Nation" to playfully critique classic rock excess, titling tracks as a trilogy and using symbolic LP side labels.*
30:20 *Engineer Nick Sansano's hip-hop background brought dynamism to Sonic Youth's recording sessions for "Daydream Nation," integrating multilayered sound akin to Public Enemy.*
33:05 *"Teen Age Riot" from "Daydream Nation" pays homage to Neil Young and J Mascis, blending political commentary with Sonic Youth's signature sound.*
37:19 *Sonic Youth's "Providence" features Mike Watt's answering machine message and ends with their amp literally blowing up due to extreme volume levels.*
38:32 *"Daydream Nation" album cover by Gerhard Richter symbolically critiques the Reagan era, reflecting Sonic Youth's subversive ethos.*
39:33 *"Daydream Nation" marked Sonic Youth's critical acclaim and minor chart success, influencing subsequent indie and alternative rock bands.*
41:42 *Sonic Youth's "Daydream Nation" remains their benchmark despite later commercial successes, influencing bands like Nirvana and Beck.*
45:32 *Sonic Youth's innovative guitar work redefined the instrument's possibilities, influencing generations of musicians beyond traditional rock norms.*
Made with HARPA AI
I’m a fortnight late but hopefully you still see this. I want to say how much I love your videos and how much new music they introduce me to, how it shows me so many connections and shows me what to like about stuff. It’s honestly so great man. Keep doing it as long as you keep feeling it, because it’s such a great watch every time. Genuinely fills my heart to get such great investigations of artists I know and such great recommendations of new ones I don’t. Thanks man
What lovely timing. I just fell into a weeks long Sonic Youth kick when this video should appear.
SY were my last big teenage obsession. That word gets thrown around a lot these days, but I was genuinely in all the way with these guys, and they changed my life. I was already listening to a lot of indie stuff, but they flew under my radar I found them because I read an article that mentioned that they liked Philip K Dick, so Sister was the first album I bought, and it just spun my head around. I felt like I'd finally found my people, especially because they were so damn funny on records and in interviews. They were worth all the adolescent devotion I had left.
At the time, I was also going clubbing and listening to dance music (the late 80s were just a feast of so many different sounds, and being a Sonic Youth fan didn't mean you couldn't appreciate dance and pop music), but these guys helped me find a live scene I could finally gel with--hardcore was just too much of a boy's club--and it seemed like every band or record they endorsed turned out to be solid gold: Mudhoney, Dinosaur Jr., Pavement, Urge Overkill and Nirvana all found their way into my world via Sonic Youth's enthusiasm (I'm from Texas, so I already knew about the Butthole Surfers) mostly before they really bubbled into the indie radar.
So I didn't miss a Sonic Youth show after that, if I could get there, throughout all the years until they broke up. I grew up, graduated from college and then grad school, went out into the world, travelled all oer, got married, and they were always with me. I saw them play some pretty lousy shows (in the 80s they had a reputation for playing short sets, which pissed off a lot of people I knew), and I also saw them be transcendently brilliant; you just never knew. Austin seemed to be a place they really liked. One night, Thurston Moore reached over the whole front-tow crush to hand me his (full) water bottle on a sweltering hot night at Liberty Lunch in Austin (I was out of my tree on mushrooms and it punctuated one of the best nights of my life).
I literally don't know what my life would have turned out like if it hadn't been for these guys. They proved that you could be smart, educated, *and* punk rock as heck, and for nerdy kids like me, that was everything: you didn't have to pretend to be stupid or behave like you didn't come from the affluent burbs (there's a hilarious "interview" in one of the English weeklies (the NME, I think) where Gibby from the Surfers asks Thurston (son of a philosophy professor), "Do you have parents and shit?"--which was rich, considering that Gibby's own father hosted our local children's morning TV show here in Dallas-Ft. Worth). And Kim Gordon's messy tomboy style was exactly the look practical girls like me were going for so we could be comfortable at shows.
Their demise was heartbreaking. It happened at a time when I was struggling in my own life with health problems and my own marriage was on the rocks. I sat shivah for a week when I found out--just moped and refused to deal with the world. They had a good run, and honestly their last few albums just didn't have the same spark as the first few, but I didn't care; they were always worth the time and attention. I miss them, still.
Thanks for taking the time to provide an on-ramp for anyone who thinks that their music is difficult or unlistenable. I feel so lucky to have found them at exactly the right moment, and right at their artistic peak. Even if it was impossible to get a copy of EVOL in the shops until they finally signed to Geffen (my only means of listening to it for years was the copy in the UT music library). I want as many people as possible to find them, because they could potentially be someone else's favorite band for life, too. Cheers! Xoxo
One of yr hands down best takes. Thanks!
As always another stunning TT vid, well worth the wait.
Now you got it right with me. This band and this album are landmarks to my artistic life as a musician. Great research, indeed. Despite the fact that "Diamond Sea" is my true Sonic Youth's favorite song, I'd choose the final trilogy of "Daydream Nation" as my favorite suite any day. "Teenage Riot" is, indeed, a mandatory favorite for me in the whole album, though.
Loved the video. It was a journey through my teenage youth (pun intended).
Theresa’s sound world is my favorite song, and probably their most underrated imo. It was the perfect mix of their early days’ noise combined with the cleanest production they’d ever achieve
That one is really good, always loved it
I was at that concert in 1983 and the audience wasn't that 'sparse'. I went for SPK who had just been in the charts with Metal Dance & Danielle who I loved but not certain if was ever in the top 40 (unless you count the Indie charts). I had no idea who the thrashing US band was at the start until much later. I remember Kim asking if anyone had a spare bass string as I had just purchased a set for my chorded 8 string that had cost a fortune from Denmark St whilst I was in London for the day & thinking 'fuck that'. Some other guy clutching a mango, when mango's were a rare commodity, passed her one. If I could go back in time I would, hindsight. I still struggle with their music but I think that is the point. Nice to see Kim at Glasto the other week keeping the faith in her 70s - way to go girl.
I was also at that SPK show! I remember being disappointed that they had moved past their Leichenschrei phase.
An absolute gem of a video, thank you. If I may make a request for future content? A deep dive on J.Mascis. The guy becomes increasingly legendary with each passing year. Keep up the good work.
One of the most formative bands ever for me... one of the all time greats IMO.
i love sonic youth so much. they impacted my teen years alot after my friends aunt introduced me to them when i was 11! some of my fav SY songs are definitely 100%, i dreamed i dream, sunday, into the groovey, the diamond sea, beat on the brat, mote shadow of a doubt and so many more theres just so many good ones!!!
Brilliant video.. what a band.. compulsive viewing
Just last week I decided to listen to all 15 of sonic youth’s albums bc I love them but I haven’t heard most of their music (and they have a lot more than I realized!). Then you posted this video absolutely amazing timing thank you trash theory!
At last! One of my favourite bands! Can't pick a song, but the album i love most is Jet Set... Thanks for this episode, and now i can only hope for Soul Coughing.
Saw them many, many times and can attest to them being one of the greatest live bands ever. Changed my life. Too many incredible songs to choose just one. ❤❤❤
Fantastic video on Sonic Youth, you do a great job!
I fell in love to "Daydream Nation" once. 10/10 would recommend.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
I want to say, after reading Our Band Could Be Your Life by Michael Azerrad, a common theme developed. Sonic Youth were one of the kindest and most giving bands to everyone coming up in punk, hardcore, indie, experimental, alternative. No one in that book had a bad thing to say about them. It was always 'they took us on tour' or 'they let us sleep in their floor.'
You're right at the start, every band I play with wants to be at least a little like Sonic Youth, it's great. A band can never be Sonic Youth, but they can capture a similar energy from them.
Saw them in 2000 at a small theatre in LA. Couldn't believe how good they were. Still ranks in my top 3 best shows.
This just dropped as I was getting lunch and the timing couldn’t be more perfect 😢
One of the best bands to discover when you're young and yearning to hear something out there and totally different
Daydream Nation is arguably one of the greatest albums of all time. I wish there was more music like it.
This album always ends up at my #1 when I take a mental tour of the music I’ve heard in the past 50+ years.
Thanks again for another terrific video. Truly creative people find their own way to express themselves. The transformative artist changes the way we see, or hear, reality. Thank you Sonic Youth.
The most mind blowing fact from Kim's biography is that Sonic Youth were rehearsing in their practice room when the news came in that John Lennon had been murdered.
They span entire eras!
Your videos are amazing thank you for creating and sharing 🖤
Outstanding, as always.
Punk rock changed our lives. Now I know where that line came from. Thanks for the awesome history. I found so much music since finding yr Channel🤘
love love love this album. i think its their best work. one of my favorite all time albums
My favorite album, and my favorite band. Excellent video.
i’m happy that my favourite channel made a video about my favourite band
I saw sonic youth on the dirty tour at the city gardens in Trenton n.j. I stage dived into another crowd surfer, hit the ground and split my bottom lip wide open. I took of my shirt, held it on my mouth and stayed for the rest of the show
Been waiting awhile for a video like this, Thank you! 🎉😊
Excellent. Thanks for covering one of the greatest bands ever.
Awesome video. My favourite band ever. The run from Evol > Dirty is unbelievable.
Brilliant work as always -- SY were an all-time fave band for me, as a teenager in the 90s. Fave song: probably "Tuff Gnarl" off of Sister, which for my money is their best album -- the whole record is bursting with amazing energy and catchy songs washed in creative dissonance. "Dirty Boots" off of Goo, another fave, another classic album...
So thankful to have been in my teens when Evol/Sister/Daydream Nation came out. It seemed like boundaries didn't exist for them. To me they showed no interest in right or wrong, only exploration.The trifecta of greatness from Sonic Youth! Very important music in my life.
So SO stoked to see this on my youtube homepage. I got into Sonic Youth way late in the game, but I've been inspired by their music recently and listening to it a ton, so this came at the perfect time.
who's youth'ing their sonics rn?
Always
I discovered Sonic Youth with their album Goo, Mote is one of my favorites by them, it feels like a great balance between the more accessible songs on the album and their more traditional songs, it still blows me away
I've been waiting for a video about this band, brilliant!
Best live gig i ever 'experienced'.
Well, them and a Spiritualized concert i saw on mushrooms!
@@-xirx- orbital at tribal gathering 1997 after dropping a whole pill and sharing half a wrap of speed with a mate - who says the drugs don’t work!
I had a psychedelic experience at a Spiritualized gig on no drugs, just their strobe light and musc.
I dunno what year it was, maybe 1996, Kate Radley was still on keyboaards.
Sonic Youth has been my favorite band for some years now and the reason why is exactly what you describe in the video. They prove that with sheer creativity you can make any music that you want, reinventing tools that have been used for decennia by reducing them to their most primal beginnings. They are the perfect example of music nerd punkers or diy'ers and i will always try and support those artists in the music industry, because i think these artists are truely the ones that are able to push us forward.
Favorite tracks:
-Pipeline/Kill Time
-Silver Rocket
-In The Kingdom #19
-She's in a bad Mood
-Chapel Hill
i could go on
I saw SY in the mid 80s and watched slack jawed as Thurston jabbed a screw driver between the strings and fretboard and
The noises that screamed out of his backline blew us all away.... It was a revolutionary moment I'll never forget.
As ever, fascinating stuff mate. Grew up on these guys and the bands they influenced and were influenced by. Favourite song is probably Youth Against Fascism, not exactly a super cool deep cut but I just fucking love it.
it's always such a nice surprise seeing that you published a new video, incredible as always
Great Sonic Youth doc. I was a teenager when Sonic Youth put out EVOL. Changed my musical world. Daydream Nation was so fucking cool.