Guided By Voices
Tonics & Twisted Chasers (color)
ON LIMITED TRANSLUCENT ORANGE VINYL!!! Originally released in 1996 as a limited fan-club pressing for Rockathon, Guided
By Voices' Tonics And Twisted Chasers has always existed as an anomaly in Robert Pollard's vast discography. In many
ways, the album serves as the tail of a creative comet that in just two years included the "classic line-up" trilogy of
Bee Thousand, Alien Lanes, Under the Bushes, Under the Stars and countless singles that crammed endless hooks in their
grooves. In the intervening space, Tonics And Twisted Chasers has taken on a mythic status. It's arguably Pollard's
strangest, gnarliest, most enlightened record and also the fans first chance to see the stitches that bind his galaxy of
songs. It's like peering at the caliber inside a watch, responsible for making the whole enterprise tick.
This nineteen-song collaboration with guitarist Tobin Sprout could be interpreted as spontaneous sketches, late-night
improvisations, ideas that blossomed later in the timeline ("Knock 'Em Flyin'" and "Key Losers"), but as with anything
in Pollard's orbit, its intention is clear when heard as a cohesive whole. The Pollard tenet that "less is more" is on
full display here. The songs rarely creep past ninety seconds and coalesce much like Pollard's collage-styled visual
art. Arena anthems in miniature ("158 Years Of Beautiful Sex") bash up against eerie piano laments ("Universal Nurse
Finger") without any time to breathe, acoustic lullabies that sound like a Midwestern summer's twilight ("Look It's
Baseball") segue into monochromatic post-rock ("Maxwell Jump"). The euphoric joy and obtuse melancholy in Pollard's
voice is so palpable on the album's standout, "Dayton, Ohio 19 Something & 5" (which has since become a live staple),
that it's impossible to find a more autobiographical yarn in his catalog.
The album's closest analog is 1993's Vampire On Titus, as it contains that album's prickly, dark and shimmering
obfuscation that only reveals its beauty after repeated listens. Tonics And Twisted Chasers maintains the lore because
the melodies are so strong. Using a primitive drum machine, Radio Shack effects, minimal instrumentation and the DIY
spirit that guided them in the first place, Pollard and Sprout constructed a masterpiece of pop that could only come
from a basement in north Dayton, Ohio. Anyone in that hallowed era who happened upon it, kept it as a secret.
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
06-09-2024
Label
Item-nr
1311188
EAN
0000000000000
Availability
Not in stock