Edit History
Optional description
What to report
Reason
Report

Daydream Nation 1988 Album

Daydream Nation Daydream Nation
Affinity
85%
rate.house choice
rate.house
choice
0.5
1
8%
1
0%
1.5
0%
2
0%
2.5
1
8%
3
1
8%
3.5
3
23%
4
3
23%
4.5
2
15%
5
2
15%
My Tags
No tags added.
My Lists
Not added to a list.
Choose a list
New list name
New list description
Item description
My Catalog
Length
Empty (Edit page)
Country
United States
Release Dates
1988-10-08
Description
Daydream Nation was ranked high in critics' year-end lists of 1988's best records, being voted second in The Village Voice's annual Pazz & Jop poll. Daydream Nation has since been widely considered to be Sonic Youth's greatest work, as well as one of the greatest albums of all time, specifically having a profound influence on the alternative and indie rock genres. It was chosen by the Library of Congress to be preserved in the National Recording Registry in 2005.
artist
producer
label
Other Roles
Howie Weinberg
Howie Weinberg
Mastering
Tracklist
1. Teen Age Riot 6m 56s
2. Silver Rocket 3m 46s
3. The Sprawl 7m 39s
4. 'Cross The Breeze 7m
5. Eric's Trip 3m 46s
6. Total Trash 7m 30s
7. Hey Joni 4m 17s
8. Providence 2m 39s
9. Candle 4m 57s
10. Rain King 4m 38s
11. Kissability 3m 6s
12. Trilogy: a) The Wonder 4m 27s
13. Trilogy: b) Hyperstation 7m 4s
14. Trilogy: z) Eliminator Jr. 2m 37s

Reviews

All Reviews
"At a historical juncture we can only hope isn't a fissure, a time when no sentient rock and roller could mistake extremism in the defense of liberty for a vice, the anarchic doomshows of Our Antiheroes' static youth look moderately prophetic and sound better than they used to. But they don't sound anywhere near as good as the happy-go-lucky careerism and four-on-the-floor maturity Our Heroes are indulging now. Whatever exactly their lyrics are saying--not that I can't make them out, just that catch-phrases like "You've got it" and "Just say yes" and "It's total trash" and "You're so soft you make me hard" are all I need to know--their discordant never-let-up is a philosophical triumph. They're not peering into the fissure, they're barreling down the turnpike like the fissure ain't there. And maybe they're right--they were the first time. A" - from Robert Christgau's 1988 Consumer Guide http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv1188-88.php
0

Comments

No comments yet. :(
Reason for report
Description