King Shit and the Golden Boys
(1995, Scat Records)
This is the first Guided by Voices unreleased tracks compilation. The unfortunate thing about this release is that it was only made available through the box-set entitled Box. Unfortunate only because it's so damn good on its own. Box was released in '95 through Scat Records, containing the first 4 GBV LPs and the King Shit and the Golden Boys collection. The tracks stand as outtakes and leftovers from the period of 1988 to 1993
In the late '80s, Pollard recorded songs and constructed artwork and track lists for several LPs that never saw the light of day. This collection helps unearth some of those gems. contains 2 cuts from the aborted GBV LP Learning to Hunt, 5 tracks from the also scrapped LP Back to Saturn X, and 11 songs that were at one time included for possible inclusion for the final cut of Bee Thousand. !!! Put on your mining hats and get ready to do some historical digging through the GBV back story.
We’ve
Got Airplanes- 4 Mid-tempo,
hazy ‘60s hippie-rock but put through the fuzz wringer, and
splashed with a touch of punk attitude and pop nostalgia. Controlled
and irresistibly bright pop.
Dust
Devil- 3 Slightly prog-tinged basement
pop. Big escalating choruses, recorded on the tiny side of the scale.
Sounds like a song that would have been made epic by some of Doug
Gillard style contributions.
Squirmish Frontal
Room- 3 Noisy,
paranoia psych rock. Heavy and twisted, with super distorted
vocals. Fun nightmare trip to take. Great piercing, lead guitar
riff.
Tricycle
Looper- 4 Noisy stomp, with clear,
speak-sing vocals over no-fi noodling and pulsating rhythm guitar.
Sounds like a ringleader leading a psychotic circus behind him.
Crutch
Came Slinking- 5 Shades of “Echos Myron,” in
this song. Mid-tempo early’ ’60 head-bop pop, complete with
“ooohhhs and ahhhhs.” Compact innocent pop (complete with
surreal Pollard lyrics), to put in your backpocket.
Fantasy
Creeps- 2 Fairly run-of-the-mill shrug worthy
pop instrumental with psychotic Pollard drawl over said
music. Makes for an interesting pairing of words and music, but it’s
fairly forgettable.
Sopor
Joe- 3 Slow, stoner rock with vocal
delivery that sounds like it’s being projected from a warped record
on a dying hi-fi. Manages to remain poppy throughout it’s slow
molasses drip.
Crunch
Pillow- 4 Tobin Sprout fuzz-pop. Sounds
like it’s broadcast from the broken transmissions of a dream.
Predates Neutral Milk Hotel, but perhaps Mangum learned a thing or
two from this song.
Indian
Was an Angel- 5 Acoustic song with dual vocals,
singing a infectious melody over
said guitar strums. Almost too easy, but yet quite brilliant. Simple,
haunting, and endlessly catchy.
Don’t
Stop Now [original version]- 4 Completely
rickety early version of the UTBUTS classic.
Cryptic, and beautiful, and beautifully simple. That buzzing
string gets me every time.
Bite- 2 Curt,
loud, and extremely lo-fi. Pretty forgettable.
Greenface- 5
OH MY GOD! What a song. Place the headphones on, turn
your stereo up and listen to one of the most inimitable GBV
contributions ever caught on tape. Death-psych rock. Surreal,
pissed off, strung out song, shrouded in a thick layer of bong-resin
and post-apocalyptic hangovers.
Deathtrot
and Warlock Riding a Rooster- 4 Completely
silly piano bouncer sung with dual harmonies from Pollard and
Mitch Mitchell. So completely insane it’s (arguably)
borderline genius.
2nd Moves
to Win- 2 Slow, distorted pop contortion. Toe-tapper with buzz saw riffs, while Pollard rambles. It's
always been a struggle to find much to grasp on to with this awkward,
rather improvised song.
At
Odds with Dr. Genesis- 3 The
full version of what was the beginning of “Ester's Day,” off Bee
Thousand.
Completely bizarre, with completely dreamlike, wizardry lyrics. So
ridiculous and unsettling that it’s rather enjoyable.
Please
Freeze Me- 4 Simple, excellent,
acoustic ditty. Catchy in it’s vocal delivery. Overall melancholy.
Scissors- 4 Grunge
‘50s rock, with ‘60s harmonies delivered by Tobin Sprout. Grand and sloppy. Woozy melodies for the hazy summer.
Postal
Blowfish- 5 Rarely has something so good come
from something so little. Essentially one chord carries the
entire song, verse, chorus and all. Buzzing with attitude and
distorted guitars. Classic crowd pleaser.
Crocker’s
Favorite Song- 3 Out
of all the songs in the cannon, this was Crocker’s favorite? Ehh,
not the worst. Turns out, this was an early sketch for the song
"Class Clown Spots a UFO" off the LP of
the same name. Anther version of this would pop up on Suitcase
3, under
the name "Class Clown Spots a UFO," as well. Acoustic
picking and spacey Pollard vocals from what seems to be
another realm is the makeup of this song. Saddened drivel that’s
kind of forgettable in the scheme of the great and encompassing
GBV song empire.
Dust Devil is at least 5
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