Suitcase 3: Up We Go Now
(2009, Guided by Voices Inc.)
This Disc is a bona fide drool session for fanatics and historians of the band, as it provides a glimpse into an improvised acoustic noodling session between Tobin Sprout, Greg Demos, and of course, Robert Pollard. The name states that the recording took place in between Bee Thousand and Alien Lanes, and in fact, some Bee Thousand sound snippet material can be found on this particular release. At any rate, if one were to latch on to Suitcase 3, after years of listening, this is a nice gift. Although not always necessary, exactly. Like the box-set (or sets) itself, this is a FOR FANS ONLY collection.
ALSO!...
For a proper introduction for Suitcase 3: Up We Go Now, click here, on Disc 9.
Disc 12: Tall Tale Moon (Antiquated) and Other Known Facts- Spontaneous Lo-Fly Field Recordings (Controlled Acoustic Jams 1994- Between The Recordings Of Bee Thousand And Alien Lanes)
Pluto
is Polluted - 3 Later
made into a Boston Spaceships track featured on Camera
Found The Ray Gun,
this song is a few angular minor acoustic chords with a
typically Pollard cryptic rapport. Would have easily fit on on
one of the Pollard outputs, but this isn’t exactly a standout
track.
Aquarian
Hovercraft- 4 Another
song that was later adapted by Boston Spaceships, this track boasts
some bizarrely awesome Pollard vocals, and unexpected off-timey
guitar parts.
Brand
New Star- 3 Slightly
out of tune and rambling words, in a stream, perhaps a river in this
case, of consciousness lyrics. Isolated, the song is fairly strong as
a snippet type track.
Sea-Mint
Robots- 2 Sea-Mint?
Hmmm. Creepy minor chord strumming meets some kind of William
Burroughs cut and paste nightmare imagery. Listen closely and you can
hear a kid playing in the background.
South
Rat Observatory- 4 Whoa!
The acoustic strums that are tacked on to the beginning of "Tractor
Rape Chain," and essentially comprise the verses of the song,
are heard here in original form. Muttered vocals are heard on this
cool artifact, of a still rad skeleton of a tune. Song also
proves that despite the title given to the disc, some of this
material was NOT recorded between said
LPs.
The
Cinnamon Flavored Skull- 2 Repetitive,
downer of a song. Sounds like it could have been fitting
material for a mid-90s Matador GBV EP.
Porpoise
Mitten (Was a Real Good Kitten) - 4 Nursery
rhyme scheme over a cool acoustic song that is pretty insanely catchy
and equally sad. Short and bittersweet.
Mr.
Spoon- 3 Up strokes verses with saddened,
tinged with tears chorus strumming. Melancholy and sweet, if
not pretty damn silly.
Hey
Mr. Soundman [Acoustic Version]- 1 Early
version of same song that appeared on the split
7'' w/ The Grifters.
Mehhh. Acoustic uninteresting waste of time.
Oh
Pie- 2 Pollard croons while Sprout noodle picks
all around the guitar, but the song stays pretty stagnant. Pollard
then kind of drunkenly yells, which is the most interesting part of
the song, but it is still an easily tossed off contribution.
Kotex
Moon- 3 Repetitive as
hell in terms of the vocals, we hear Bob
repeat "Kotex Moon" and Sprout or Greg
Demos comes in with more repetitive
melodic backups. Possibly could have been fleshed out in a more
satisfactory way, but this song is by no means terrible. Early
EP territory for sure.
Bingo
Pool Hall of Blood- 1 This is a 50 second
unfinished track where Bob sings in a few different voices after
announcing the oddball title, and then it goes unfinished before
everyone laughs. Okay.
There
Goes the King Again- 2 Another repetitive demo
that sounds fairly made up on the spot. Off the cuff and pretty
grating. Pollard delivers a good dose of strange accent bending on
this one.
Evil
Vandalia/Mojo Crown Zenith- 3 The first part of
this song is a 30 second song snippet, before stopping and breaking
into a mid-tempo (SMOG)-esque tune, but more tuneful. Some solidly
improvised lead guitar noodling is nestled underneath.
Cuddling
Bozo's Octopus- 4 A
minute and a half song that sounds like a drunk swimming in a hammock
and singing himself to self to sleep. And this is before the song is
cut short with laughing and eventually resumed. Actually, this
song is pretty goddamn awesome! Sounds like a lost cut
from Static
Airplane Jive.
I
Shot a Jezebel- 2 This song really has no
direction to it whatsoever. It features Pollard bellowing seemingly
completely off the cuff, with some modest noodling over simple,
enjoyable chord structures. The "I tell my story to the world"
repetitive outro had promise, but nothing more.
After
the Quake (Let's Bake a Cake)- 2 Innocent
enough. Average basement acoustic jam with run of the mill GBV era
melody. Minor chord pop.
P
Melts Everything- 4 The repetition of the
title and rhyme at the beginning is pretty classic Pollard of this
time. Could have been a cool track if tacked onto an EP from around
the same era. Make no mistake, there's nothing to this song, and it's
still pretty great.
My
Dad Is a Motorboat-3 Find yourself a window, and
stare out of it sadly while listening to this lo-fi gem. Not the best
song ever, and it's garnished with some motorboat sounds, but all in
all this is a pretty solid track.
Ugly
Ba Ba- 1 What the fuck? Classic GBV
song structure, with hand on knee percussion while Pollard sings to a
baby, I assume. However, this song is absolutely perfect for
newborns that were into GBV of this era.
Hairspray
Lies- 2 Someone's gotten into the beer trough
again. Pollard wails some anthemic, wobbly melodies over his guitar
strumming. No new ground broken, as title is repeatedly sung.
Sawhorse
With Big Blue Ears- 1 This one has a phone
ringing in the background!!! The phone rings four times, with the
fourth ring being cut short. Did anyone answer? Was it the
machine? No one knows. Oh the song? It's pretty damn
forgettable.
Tough
Skin River- 1 Notable for Greg Demos singing
lead vocals on it! And that's all it's notable for. This song is
constructed from an odd mess of guitar chords, with level peaking and
off-timed accents. When the last beer is guzzled, and the sun has
set, I guess sometimes you gotta let Demos sing a song.
Cruise
[Acoustic Version]- 3 Demo
version of the Freedom Cruise song that appeared on the split
7'' w/ Nightwalker.
This is a fairly slow, grungy, hazy kind of song. Recalls a Nirvana
box set outtake.
Alright
[Acoustic Version]- 3 "Alright"
closes out Alien
Lanes and
I've never been that big of a fan of the song in the scheme of that
album when you consider how fantastic Alien
Lanes is. It's loud and noisy on the LP version, but this acoustic demo is
actually a very enjoyable alternative. This could have easily held its own as a
solid track on almost any given GBV EP.
This is the most disappointing disc in the suitcase series for me--these acoustic versions just don't hold my interest. Pluto is Polluted is such a strong song that I consider it an exception, but the rest of the songs on this c.d. are just meh. Glad the Boston Spaceships revisited Pluto is Polluted and Aquarian Hovercraft and did them justice.
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