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The Onion
Keith Phillips
April 4 2001
Guided By Voices
Isolation Drills
TVT
Since abandoning the low-fidelity sound that
first brought him fame--or at least consigning it to his abundant side projects
and solo albums--Guided By Voices frontman Robert Pollard has set out on a quest
for studio perfection with the stated intention of hearing his music on the
radio. If he recognizes the quixotic nature of the endeavor, coming at a time
when the guitar-based pop-rock at which he excels has largely fallen out of
fashion, his music never reveals it. Here's hoping he never wakes up from the
delusion. After getting off to a tentative start with Under The Bushes Under
The Stars and Mag Earwhig!, the new-sound GBV hit its stride with
1999's Do The Collapse. Or so it seemed at the time. The overreaching
chunk-rock of Isolation Drills outdoes it while exemplifying everything
that makes Pollard's progress so fascinating. From GBV's earliest days, Pollard
has displayed, in almost equal measure, a talent for catchy melodies and for
daring eccentricity, with his best songs balancing the two instincts. That
dynamic pervades Isolation Drills, with the tension producing some of the
most instantly enjoyable songs of Pollard's career while maintaining a strong
sense of experimentation. By trading in former producer Ric Ocasek for Rob
Schnapf (Foo Fighters, Beck), Pollard has found a kindred soul who matches his
fondness for the sound of rock played big. All the group has lost from the new
approach are the quiet, acoustic asides, which have largely been sacrificed. But
Isolation Drills, which knows when to tone down the bombast, doesn't lack
for delicacy. "Chasing Heather Crazy" and "Glad Girls"
immediately stand out, but the subtle moments of "Sister I Need Wine"
and "How's My Drinking?" (spot the motif!) prove equally important in
making Isolation Drills another highlight in GBV's continued ascent.