No New Music Today: Here’s Yo La Tengo

Yo La Tengo are Fucking Ace

Yo La Tengo and The Wedding Present count as two of my favourite bands.  Both of them I absolutely hated at first listen, too.  Both I owe to my friend James Strath who played them repeatedly, amidst a shower of scorn, over the course of our five years at uni together, until I finally caved in and embraced both bands as my own.  In fact most of what I so wittily called ‘Strath’s Shit Music Collection’ has in fact ended up pretty much at the forefront of my own shit music collection in the intervening years.  So the joke’s on… erm, yes, let’s move along shall we.

For The Wedding Present that came with the release of Mini in about, erm, 1995 or 6 was it?  For Yo La Tengo it was much later.  I bought the Little Honda EP and Ride the Tiger immediately after uni, but I think it was And Then Something Turned Itself Inside Out, from very early in 2000, that was the moment the penny finally and permanently dropped.

The funny thing is, once you get into a group you can go back and really, really enjoy songs that previously put your back right up.  I remember when Strath used to play Painful, now one of my favourite albums in the world, I used to scoff at tracks like Big Day Coming for being repetitive and boring: no hook, going nowhere, what are you listening to, man?

Somehow, after my conversion, I love Big Day Coming in both its incarnations on Painful.  Yo La Tengo occasionally exercise a habit of building tension through this kind of underlying beat, a repetitive signature, and then slowly ratcheting the noise up further and further until that underlying structure is all but obliterated by howling feedback.  In this case that signature simmers along, threatening to break out, but never quite does, which is just as effective.

Of course if I’d just read the above paragraph at the time I’d have told myself I was talking pretentious bollocks…

Yo La Tengo - Big Day Coming


Yo La Tengo - From a Motel 6


Yo La Tengo - Sudden Organ

4 Comments

  1. Comment by Dusty on Friday, 11 April, 2008 3:24 pm

    Matthew,

    All roads lead back to the toad.

    Mrs Dusty is an obsessive fan of all things Gedge and I’m a massive fan of the Tengo - so kudos to you yet again.

    We now have podcasts of our radio show - which includes a section called ‘His n Hers’ where I pick something I’ve loved for years, a la Yo la Tengo and she always picks The Wedding Present (or Cinerama)…

    If you fancy a listen the clips are at:

    web.mac.com/martinjohnston1/iWeb/Site/BringMeSunshine/BringMeSunshine.html

    or you can listen live if you’re ever at your computer Tuesdays 8-10pm at:

    http://www.pureradio.org.uk

    Cheers

    Martin

  2. Comment by Jon on Friday, 11 April, 2008 7:34 pm

    From a Motel 6 was probably the first thing I head from Yo La Tengo and it was love at first listen. The album is brilliant and I have enjoyed everything else I have heard since then. I used to play this song as the intro to my college radio show for awhile so hearing it brought back some nice memories. VERY GOOD CALL!!

  3. Comment by Ed on Saturday, 12 April, 2008 9:47 am

    Bought the sugarcube and Little Honda 7″s on spec when they came out, and then picked up ‘I Can Hear the Heart beating as One’ love the Tengo. Saw them live in edinburgh at the Usher Hall in 2005, an excellent night. Need to investigate the pre-1995 (i.e. pre-electro-Pura) where would you recommend starting/

    Ed

  4. Comment by Matthew on Saturday, 12 April, 2008 2:15 pm

    There’s not much before that apart from Fakebook and Ride the Tiger is there? I love both of those, but albums like President Yo La Tengo and New Wave Hotdogs never quite wormed their way into my brain really. So perhaps those two would be best. Tiger is a slightly folky indie-rock album, and Fakebook is even more folky - even a touch of Daniel Johnston in there.

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