:: ESSENTIAL LISTENING: SLINT ::
Slint formed in 1986, and in their five year life-span released two full length records, debut Tweez and stunning follow-up Spiderland, which has rightly received much attention and praise since its release in 1991. Slint are often credited as one of the first bands to experiment with minimalism, a technique previously only really employed in film scores.
In 2005, three members of Slint - Brian McMahan, David Pajo, and Britt Walford - reunited to curate UK three day festival All Tomorrow's Parties, where an enthralled crowd were treated to a live performance of Spiderland in its entirety. During that year the band also played a number of shows throughout the US and Europe. However, any expectations for a proper reformation came to an end when the band parted ways again, this time for good - selling off much of their musical equipment on eBay.
Much has been written on the band and the massive influence they still have on post-rock. But nowhere has the essence of the band’s sound been so lovingly captured in words as in Steve Albini’s* now famous review of Spiderland, published in Melody Maker in 1991. For this reason, rather than attempt to rehash it in my own words, his original review has been republished in its entirety below. Please take the time to read it and discover one of the most important bands in post-rock.
SPIDERLAND
Trust me on this; all but maybe three of those records are pure bullshit. My primary association with rock music is that I am a fan of it, though listening to the aforementioned nearly killed that. In its best state, rock music invigorates me, changes my mood, triggers introspection or envelopes me with sheer sound. Spiderland does all those things, simultaneously and in turns, more than any records I can think of in five years. Spiderland is, unfortunately, Slint's swansong, the band having succumbed to the internal pressures which eventually punctuate all bands' biographies. It's an amazing record though, and no one still capable of being moved by rock music should miss it. In 10 years it will be a landmark and you'll have to scramble to buy a copy then. Beat the rush. Slint formed in 1986 as an outlet and pastime for four friends from Louisville, Kentucky. Their music was strange, wholly their own, sparse and tight. What immediately set them apart was their economy and precision. Slint was that rare band willing to play just one or two notes at a time and sometimes nothing at all. Their only other recording, 1989's Tweez hints at their genius, but only a couple of the tracks have anything like the staying power of Spiderland. Spiderland is a majestic album, sublime and strange, made more brilliant by its simplicity and quiet grace. Songs evolve and expand from simple statements that are inverted and truncated in a manner that seems spontaneous, but is so pricise and emphatic that it must be intuitive or orchestrated or both. Straining to find a band to compare them with, I can only think of two, and Slint doesn't sound anything like either of them. Structurally and in tone, they recall Television circa Marquee Moon and Crazy Horse, whose simplicity they echo and whose style they most certainly do not. To whom would Pere Ubu or Chrome have been compared in 1972? Forgive me, I am equally clueless. Slint's music has always been primarily instrumental, and Spiderland isn't a radical departure, but the few vocals are among the most pungent of any album around. When I first heard Brian McMahan whisper the pathetic words to "Washer", I was embarrassed for him. When I listened to the song again, the content eluded me and I was staggered by the sophistication and subtle beauty of the phrasing. The third time, the story made me sad nearly to tears. Genius. Spiderland is flawless. The dry, unembellished recording is so revealing it sometimes feels like eavesdropping. The crystalline guitar of Brian McMahan and the glassy, fluid guitar of David Pajo seem to hover in space directly past the listener's nose. The incredibly precise-yet-instinctive drumming has the same range and wallop it would in your living room. Only two other bands have meant as much to me as Slint in the past few years and only one of them, The Jesus Lizard, have made a record this good. We are in a time of midgets: dance music, three varieties of simple-minded hard rock genre crap, soulless-crooning, infantile slogan-studded rap and ball-less balladeering. My instincts tell me the dry spell will continue for a while- possibly until the bands Slint will inspire reach maturity. Until then, play this record and kick yourself if you never got to see them live. In ten years, you'll lie like the cocksucker you are and say you did anyway. Ten fucking stars. Steve Albini (Melody Maker, 1991) |
* Steve Albini produced Slint’s debut "Tweez". He is a renowned and highly respected sound engineer and has worked with a number of other well known artists including Pixies, Nirvana, PJ Harvey, Mogwai, Neurosis, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, The Jesus Lizard, and Fugazi. His own band, Shellac, formed shortly after Slint’s demise and are heavily influenced by Slint.

Since about 1980, America has been host to an ever-increasing parasitic infestation of rock bands of ever-dwindling originality. It seems there is no one left on the continent with an aspiration to lay guitar that hasn't formed a band and released a record. And that record sounds a little bit like Dinosaur Jr.