Built to Spill - Perfect from Now On
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
Perfect from Now On
UPC
 
09362464532
Genre
 
Rock & Pop
Sub Genre
 
Alternative
Released
 
01/28/1997
List Price $12.97
Our Price $11.67
You Save $1.30
Track Listing - click icons to preview tracks in Windows Media Player.
1
Windows Media MuzeTune
Randy Described Eternity
2
Windows Media MuzeTune
I Would Hurt a Fly
3
Windows Media MuzeTune
Stop the Show
4
Windows Media MuzeTune
Made up Dreams
5
Windows Media MuzeTune
Velvet Waltz
6
Windows Media MuzeTune
Out of Site
7
Windows Media MuzeTune
Kicked It in the Sun
8
Windows Media MuzeTune
Untrustable/Part 2 (About Someone Else): Untrustable / Part 2 (About Someone Else)
Notes / Reviews

Built To Spill: Doug Martsch (vocals, guitar, Moog, bass); Brett Netson (guitar); John McMahon (cello); Scott Plouf (piano, Moog, drums, percussion); Robert Roth (Mellotron); Brett Nelson (bass, Moog, Optigon); Peter Lansdowne (drums).
Recorded at Avast! Recording Co., Seattle, Washington.
Lyricist: Karena Youtz.
Personnel: Doug Martsch (vocals, guitar); Brett Nelson (guitar, Moog synthesizer); John McMahon (cello); Scott Plouf (piano, Moog synthesizer, drums, percussion); Robert Roth (Mellotron); Peter Lansdowne (drums).
Audio Mixers: Doug Martsch; Phil CK.
Recording information: Avasti Recording Co., Seattle, WA.
Not many groups would take a major-label contract as a cue to put out an album where the shortest song is still a radio-unfriendly five minutes in length. For that listeners can thank their stars that Built to Spill isn't like many groups and Doug Martsch not like many artists. Perfect from Now On manages the amazing trick of being the band's best album to this point, Martsch and company using the opportunities for larger budgets and distribution to create an album at once inspiring and quietly emotional, not the easiest combination to pull off. With drummer Scott Plouf and bassist Brett Nelson as the other core performers, plus second guitarist Brett Netson and cellist John McMahon as key guests, the result is astounding all around. The length of the songs allows the band to create uniquely post-everything mantras, blending psych trances and drones, post-punk airiness and flow, and Martsch's affecting, tender singing and lyrics into a whole. Martsch's high tones and the guitar passion here helped fuel further comparisons to Neil Young -- to pick out one moment, consider the closing minutes of "I Would Hurt a Fly," feedback peeling out over the rhythm and strings -- but the Boise musician is his own man through and through. Selecting standout moments from such a solid disc almost defeats the purpose, but many examples still deserve further notice. "Stop the Show" builds to a dramatic, but not in the least bit hammy, shift from a roaring wash to a quick, clipped pace; Martsch's vocals and further sudden tempo switches are the icing on the cake. "Velvet Waltz" indeed plays at that musical pace, McMahon's playing and Martsch's heartbreaking, lovely lyrics and singing the core of a incredible song. "Untrustable/Part 2 (About Someone Else)" concludes a simply fantastic record. ~ Ned Raggett
Whereas on 1995's BUILT TO SPILL CAUSTIC RESIN EP, Built to Spill main-man Doug Martsch used a couple of silly premises and a Kicking Giant cover to get to the guitar flamethrowas, on PERFECT FROM NOW ON, Martsch and fellow axe-grinder Brett Netson duel on tunes that could've been some of the loveliest, most inventive, three-minute guitar-pop of the '90s. Could've been, that is, without those fantastic duels. Instead, PERFECT FROM NOW ON, the band's major-label debut, strikes a balance between tunesmanship and molten-lava guitar flow.
Martsch, who has surrounded himself with a revolving cast of players for most of Built To Spill's existence, has an unassuming voice, and the lyrics on PERFECT FROM NOW ON hint at insecurities and doubts. There is no such insecurity in the music. Martsch's melodies arrive as unexpectedly as darkened fireflies, flaming brighter as they move forward. His guitar--think Hendrix/Sonic Youth eruptions not typical blues-metal ego tripping--carries these melodies on the lips of a symphonic squall that also incorporates assorted cellos and analog synths. The melodies and guitars and squalls are everywhere; you just never know where they're coming from.

Rolling Stone (2/6/97, p.49) - 3 Stars (out of 5) - "...Built To Spill dip into the psychedelic garden cultivated by guitar-based precursors, from the Beatles to the Flaming Lips....maintains an emphasis on instrumental passages that are short on flash, but long on atmospheric swirl..."
Spin (2/97, p.84) - 8 (out of 10) - "...Martsch's ability to avoid derivativeness,...to keep generating ideas and achieve bigness through the accumulation of small parts [amazes]. Let the pieces of this album sink in and, sure enough, you won't be able to get Martsch's sounds out of your head."
Entertainment Weekly (1/31/97, p.58) - "...Muddling around in a fog of spacey guitar, nasal vocals, and meandering song structures, they seem to stumble on melodies by accident....When the fuzzy guitar lines and pinched vocal whines mysteriously mutate into recognizable songs, the band discovers beauty in excess." - Rating: B+
Alternative Press (4/97, p.65) - 5 (out of 5) - "...Martsch is posessed with a genius for...lyric writing and the ability to create memorable and unusual songs....although its entertaining enough to appeal to a wide audience, PERFECT still contains enough personality to make Martsch's excellent vision uniquely his own."
Melody Maker (5/16/00, p.47) - 3 stars out of 5 - "If Neil Young singing with some sort of Radiohead/Seventies-metallers Rush amalgam appeals, this is the album for you..."
Village Voice (2/24/98) - Ranked #32 in the Village Voice's 1997 Pazz & Jop Critics' Poll.

Details
Performers
 
Producer
 
Engineer
 
Label
 
Warner Bros. Records (Record Label)
Catalog #
 
46453
SPAR Code
 
n/a
Year of Original Release
 
1997
Mono/Stereo
 
Stereo
Studio/Live Performance
 
Studio
Distributor
 
WEA (Distributor)
# of Discs
 
1
Minutes
 
54
Seconds
 
13