When Built To Spill wanted to find out what their music sounded like they locked
themselves in Doug Martsch's garage. Without a tentative conclusion or even
a hypothesis the four members began to experiment. Their collaborative efforts
lasted seasons and yielded dozens of hours of ADAT tape. The album You In
Reverse documents the newest branch of Built To Spill's chaotic, yet elegant
evolution.
Doug Martsch formed Built To Spill in 1992. His intention was to sustain a
project that would involve a rotating cast of musicians to record albums and
tour. The first incarnation of Built To Spill included Doug, Brett Netson, and
Ralf (Youtz). Recording in the middle of the night in order to get free studio
time, they assembled 1993's Ultimate Alternative Wavers. For a few years
and a few records band members came and went. In 1996, while recording the album
Perfect From Now On (their Warner Bros. Records debut), Doug found a
rhythm section he could not relinquish: Brett Nelson and Scott Plouf. This line-up
toured and made records with additional guest musicians Brett Netson and Sam
Coomes. In 1999, after the release of Keep It Like A Secret, Jim Roth
joined the band as live co-guitarist.
In the five years since the band's most recent effort Ancient Melodies Of
The Future was released, Built To Spill took an eighteen-month vacation.
When the group returned to work, the line-up included Jim Roth as a core member.
This foursome started jamming and recording their hours-long musical explorations.
According to Doug, they had no idea what kind of music they wanted to make.
You In Reverse arrives as the most collaborative record in the band's
thirteen-year history. To a large extent, each musician wrote his own parts.
Half of the finished material incorporates segments the band wrote together
during jam sessions.
Doug did bring in a few songs ready to go. Tracks like "Liar" and
"Saturday" were "pretty much there" when the band learned
them, while "Goin' Against Your Mind" and "Traces" are full
of riffs discovered during musical research. Doug's private writing process
then allowed him to meld favorite spontaneous moments with composed transitions
and intricate melodies.
With a batch of songs in hand, the goal became to keep the recording simple
and stripped down. The band wanted to retain the impromptu, organic feel of
their jams. Rather than Doug's former reliance on extensive overdubs, the group
tried to capture loose and live moments, letting each individual musician's
talents be more accurately represented. Instead of a broad, atmospheric sweep,
this record sounds natural. It resonates with relationships, the way the band
as a whole responds to music and to each other.
Being the new guy, Jim Roth appreciated this approach. To Jim, they were striving
to see what the band could be, "the four of us. Now we can see the potential.
These new songs are just starting to scratch the surface." Expressing his
connection to music as that of both craftsman and artist, he considers each
composition to be "like a painting or a sculpture, its own thing."
As a discrete creation the record relies on more than good chemistry and Doug's
expansive writing. The band decided to self-produce in order to put themselves
in a new situation. Similar to the generative process, they felt a need to try
something different. "Just to see what would happen," Doug admits,
"I've made enough records to know I could do this. Also, engineers take
pride in their work and would not let it be too fucked up." When they chose
Steve Lobdell's Audible Alchemy studio, they happened upon another element of
the album. "Steve, being the musical person he is, just fell into the role
of co-producer, " Doug says, then recants, "It's not even really produced.
It's cleanly recorded and mixed. It's not slick."
At Audible Alchemy, they wound up chasing a 1960's sound. "Sonically,
" Doug says, "We wanted it to sound like classic rock or soul
a
piece of vinyl." Both Steve and engineer Jacob Hall are audiophiles who
love old records and are into "those sorts of sounds." They used analog
recording equipment and spent hours listening back to tracks for the smallest
nuances. Steve (a member of Faust) also played space echo, guitar, vibes, and
percussion on the record. He understood the songs and their parameters, making
specific and well-considered contributions.
Other guest musicians include Quasi's Sam Coomes on organ and longtime Built
To Spill contributor Brett Netson on guitar. Partway through the making of this
record, Netson officially joined Built To Spill as their fifth member and played
guitar on three of the songs. His mind-melting solo on "Just A Habit"
will remind longtime Built To Spill listeners of the amazing lead guitar tracks
he laid down for Perfect From Now On.
When Doug is asked what he wants people to know about the album, he replies,
"I would rather not manipulate people's opinions about it." Bassist
Brett Nelson thinks this record is "what everybody in the band would want
it to sound like." Brett also mentions "the different styles of songs,
anything from New Wave to Reggae breakdowns." While many influences and
song structures arise and dissolve, none dominates the overall force of the
album.
The songs are haunting rather than catchy. Each musical thought is surprising
and complete. Doug's lyrics hint at politics, but could also be personal. As
usual, the words lining the songs are neither directive nor dogmatic. Rational
thoughts are constantly sacrificed to the metric and melodic needs of each song.
No message blares forth. And yet, it's understood.