iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Sonic Nurse by Sonic Youth, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Sonic Nurse

Sonic Youth

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Picking up where Murray Street's languid experimentalism left off, Sonic Youth's somewhat awkwardly named Sonic Nurse shows that the band still sounds revitalized, and may have even tapped into a more fruitful creative streak than they did on their previous album. Anyone who has stuck with Sonic Youth this long knows more or less what to expect from them, but the group still has the potential to surprise; one of Sonic Nurse's biggest surprises is the return of Kim Gordon. She had a relatively limited presence on NYC Ghosts & Flowers and Murray Street, but she's back in a big way on this album, contributing four tracks; not coincidentally, Gordon's songs are among the strongest on the album. "Pattern Recognition" gets Sonic Nurse off to a strong start and ranks among her best rock songs, falling somewhere between "Kool Thing" and "Bull in the Heather" in its icy-hot appeal. Her quieter songs have just as much impact: "Dude Ranch Nurse" boasts an oddly timeless guitar lick and lyrics ("Let me ride you till you fall/Let's pretend that there's nothing at all") that blur the line between alluring and nihilistic. "I Love You Golden Blue" is another standout, a beautiful but bleak ballad with ghostly vocals that recall Nico at her most fragile. Of course, the rest of the band finds moments to shine: Thurston Moore's "Dripping Dream" begins as absurdist, angular rock (although he still has the ability to make phrases like "We've been searching for the cream dream wax" sound like the coolest thing ever) and stretches out into a beautiful epic, with the interplay of feedback and guitar lines giving it a comet-tail majesty. "Paper Cup Exit," the requisite Lee Ranaldo track, has a sharper-edged mix of noise and melody than most of Sonic Nurse. Another of the album's surprises is how much of its inspiration seems to come from the band's late-'80s/early-'90s material. It's not just that the band slams George W. Bush on the mellow protest song "Peace Attack," just as Dirty's "Youth Against Fascism" railed against the first President Bush, or that they peer into the void of pop culture on "Kim Gordon and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream" as they did on Goo's Karen Carpenter tribute, "Tunic." On songs like "New Hampshire" — which could pass for a lost track from Daydream Nation — Sonic Youth actually sound younger and more enthusiastic than they have in a few albums. All told, this album is probably the band's best balance of pop melodies and avant-leaning structures since Washing Machine; even if it doesn't rank among their most ambitious work, Sonic Nurse sounds like the kind of album Sonic Youth should be making at this point in their career.

Customer Reviews

Jim Rourke has got to go...

Much of this record is excellent. In fact, the songcraft, lyrics, and production are just the right balance for a modern SY record. The only problem is Jim's third guitar. It's just too much. It adds harmony, not dissonance. It adds jammy-ness, not interest. It's too much of a good thing. Other bands can rely on this to get the spinners spinning and the busses burning the incense. Let Jim work the synth, mix in some noise, some hammers for rockin', but good heavens, get him off the ryhthm strings. If this goes on we'll have "Steal Yr Skull" bumper stickers that say, "Who are SY, and why are they following me?" With that tirade aside, this is one heck of a good record. Kim's vocals really shine on this release and I wondered if she'd ever sing this way again. Thurston waxes poetic, but more than makes up for it with driving guitar interplay with Lee. Speaking of Lee, he has only one song as lead vocals on this record. It's a departure from most of his other songs, but if yr familiar with his writing/poetry/film, then PCE will just fill in as soundscape soundtrack to that journey. This paragraph could have come first: Steve Shelley never sounded so good. I think his skin bashing here is as good as rock drumming gets. All hail Steve Shelley. All hail the cruci-fx. He's ruling. His rocker is hammering on every track. He plays quality and soulful syncopation so well you'll want to listen to the skins at 11. A four star record ONLY because Jim has to get off this "unifying the band with a 3rd guitar" role. Forget the unification. Make it riot.

Really Good

One of their top 5 ever. I think Jim O' Rourke's guitar adds another dimension to their sound.

4 and a Half Stars for this Mellow Sonic Youth Album

This is one of my favorite Sonic Youth albums. From the first song to the last, this album delievers a constant vibe and slightly mainstream songs that make the album what it is. Kim Gordon happens to be singing on more than half of the songs on this album...which is unfortunate for my ears. I have almost all of SY's albums, and this is one of the most creative. And by creative, I don't mean the usual noise and jam breaks that SY may take, but I mean the creativity in the witty lyrics and quieter guitar riffs. "Stones" is by far one of the best SY songs ever released. This album is not groundbreaking, but it's sure great to SY standards.

Biography

Formed: 1981 in New York, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Sonic Youth were one of the most unlikely success stories of underground American rock in the '80s. Where contemporaries R.E.M. and Hüsker Dü were fairly conventional in terms of song structure and melody, Sonic Youth began their career by abandoning any pretense of traditional rock & roll conventions. Borrowing heavily from the free-form noise experimentalism of the Velvet Underground and the Stooges, and melding it with a performance art aesthetic borrowed from the New York post-punk avant-garde,...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.