Articles
More magic from Garbage
From JAM! (May 10, 1998)
By Jane Stevenson
Special thanks go to Tom Gilmore for sending me this article.
What do you get when you combine a feisty
Scottish singer who possesses raw talent and
charisma with a studio-savvy trio of one
superproducer and his two friends from Madison,
Wisconsin?
Well, it's a far cry from Garbage, but that's exactly
what this quartet, fronted by the formidable Shirley
Manson, call themselves. Think of them as Blondie meets Hole, for lack of a better comparison.
After making musical magic on their
critically-acclaimed 1995 debut, Manson and the
trio of producer Butch Vig (Nirvana, Smashing
Pumpkins, Sonic Youth, Soul Asylum), Duke
Erikson and Steve Marker are back with one of the
most anticipated albums of the year.
Good thing it's an excellent collection of noisy,
smart pop -- such as the first single, Push It -- with
loads of darkness on other songs such as I Think
I'm Paranoid, When I Grow Up, Medication,
Hammering In My Head, Dumb and Sleep
Together.
Fans will notice that Version 2.0, in stores
Tuesday, isn't that huge of a departure for the
Garbage gang, with more of the same
heavily-textured sounds and dance melodies
bolstered by Manson's deep-voiced croon that's a
cross between Deborah Harry and Chrissie Hynde.
The big difference this time out is the power of the
slower, moodier songs, like The Trick Is To Keep
Breathing and the album-ending You Look So
Fine, which is the prettiest song of the bunch.
The band likes to emphasize the collective nature
of their songwriting, but Manson emerges as the
album's chief lyricist on Version 2.0.
Her confrontational take is evident from the get-go
with the album opener, Temptation Waits, which
begins, "I'll tell you something, I am a wolf but I like
to wear sheep's clothing, I am a bold fire, I am a
vampire, I'm waiting for my moment."
Yikes.
Then there's her more direct approach on Sleep
Together: "If we sleep together, will you like me
better, if we cum together, we'll go down forever."
Garbage plays the Phoenix on May 24 for a show
that sold out in a mere 12 minutes.
I don't think they could be any hotter.