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Detroit Metro Times
Carleton S. Gholz
Thanks to Mike
Morris for transcribing
Guided By Voices
Do The Collapse
TVT
****
(4 of 5 stars)
PREVIOUSLY DRIVEN CARS
I am not a fan of Guided by Voices because of their now mythical,
rough-cut, non-sensical, lo-fi rock heroics: i.e. recording their music –
partly by necessity, partly for its angsty realism – so it sounds like the
underneath of an angry buzzsaw-table drowned among the weeds of a twisted
British folk lyric. Instead I’m a fan of the deeply morbid
three-and-a-half-minute-long pop anthems that have surfaced on GBV’s records
since the band’s 1994 release, Bee Thousand (on longtime home Matador).
Basically, I’ll take well-crafted pop brilliance over sonic
devolution-revolution anytime.
That said, Do the Collapse features some of the best tunes Bob Pollard
– the drunken, Princelike figure who commands 95 percent of GBV’s
songwriting credits – has churned out, though the cynic in me notices that
this breakthrough comes on an album produced by the Cars’ Rick Ocasek and
released on the un-Matador-like label TVT. But when a sell-out sounds this
good, only the most spoiled indie-rocker could whine. More to the point,
when it means that GBV finally jettisons the lion’s share of its rock-retro
fetishes – from wanna-be Beatles b-sides to REM necrophilia – then there’s
hope that musical transcendence will win the day.
And it does. The singles are plentiful and the lyrics on such songs as
"Hold On Hope" ("Well that’s the chance we take/ to be always
working/
reaching out for/the hand that we can’t see/ everybody’s got a hold on hope/
its the last thing that’s holding me") are simply beautiful. This may be
GBV’s version of a throwaway album – all more or less straightforward and
sonically pleasing – but so what. The Cars never sounded this good.