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There's Nothing Wrong With Love

Built to Spill

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iTunes Review

Wistful: it seems an odd word to describe anything penned by Boise’s scruffiest guitar hero. But Doug Martsch’s band Built to Spill show a charmingly childlike side on 1994’s There’s Nothing Wrong with Love, their last independent-label release. With simple, straightforward lyrics that trace a Brontosaurus constellation in the sky (“Big Dipper”); recall gym class parachutes and games of 7-Up (“Twin Falls”); and explore the inner life of a baby in the womb (“Cleo”), Martsch seems to be looking not forward, but back. The effect may be nostalgic, but it’s anything but sweet. As in childhood, emotions run raw and close to the surface: “Christmas, Twin Falls Idaho’s/ Her oldest memory/ She was only two/ It’s the first time she felt blue.” Musically, Love is less noise-driven than what was to come, with shorter songs and melodies hooky enough to hum in the shower. But the mature band’s splintered song structures and quirky chord progressions are already evident; tunes start and stop suddenly, time signatures change without warning, and string arrangements shimmer in unlikely places. Still, it might be easy enough to write this off as Pavement-esque indie pop were it not for Martsch’s effects-laden guitar. By turns soaring and spacious, jagged and gnarled, it paints soundscapes as lovely—and as bleak—as the Idaho sky.

Customer Reviews

My Life With Built to Spill or "Why This Album Is A Classic".

In 1992, I walked into Skinnies in Norfolk, VA, to buy a CD. I don't even remember what it was that I came in to buy. When I got to the counter, the owner was pricing a stack of new CDs he'd just gotten in. Buried in the stack was "Ultimate Alternative Wavers" by Built to Spill. I took it out and added it to my purchases. As he was ringing me up, he said: "If you don't mind me asking, why are you buying this?". I knew the Treepeople, Doug Martsch's first band, and my brother lived in Boise, so I was familiar with the band through him. This is what I told the owner. He wasn't asking because he thought they "sucked"; he was asking, because as a record-store owner he knows a lot about what's going on in music. And he didn't know this band. This seems amusing to me, because of the success BTS has acheived. They play in NYC every year, three shows in a row, sometimes four, and they quickly sell out each gig. Their fans are rabid and dedicated. And their shows are mesmerizing. While the record I purchased at Skinnies was a bit hit and miss, their next album, "There's Nothing Wrong With Love" was a knock-out punch. I have listened to this album consistently for the last 12 years. I cannot say that for any other record I own, except maybe Neil Young. I am not going to bother to describe the strengths of this record, because each song stands so strong on its on as a pop-song gem, that it isn't needed. The great thing about Doug Martsch's song-writing is that he seems to find melodies in unusual places. And those melodies are dangerously infective. Try not singing "Big Dipper" to yourself in the shower after you've heard it a couple of times. This is the alt-world's "Revolver" or "Pet Sounds". I truly believe that. I think Built to Spill and Doug Martsch's body of work will be looked on one day with the reverence we give a Bob Dylan or Johnny Cash or Neil Young. I certainly put him up there.

built to spill open your thoughts

...such a lovely band from sweet sweet boise, idaho and very important to listen to in my opinion. this album is perhaps my favorite maybe because it's so soft and raw. "car" is romantic. "cleo" is reflective and a little somber. "some" and "stab" are pure frusterated charm. built to spill's music is an experience. you have to give it a chance to develop within.

This is a great start...

This album is a great place for people looking to get into Built to Spill. "Car" is a masterpiece with its anthem-like choruses. "Twin Falls" is another great song. These songs are shorter and more focused than some other albums, making it very accessible. Definitely worth having.

Biography

Formed: 1992 in Boise, ID

Genre: Alternative

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

Built to Spill were one of the most popular indie rock acts of the '90s, finding the middle ground between postmodern, Pavement-style pop and the loose, spacious jamming of Neil Young. From the outset, the band was a vehicle for singer/songwriter/guitarist Doug Martsch, who revived the concept of the indie guitar hero just as Dinosaur Jr.'s J Mascis — another important influence — was beginning to fade from the limelight. On record, Martsch the arranger crafted intricate,...
Full Bio

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