CHOOSE YOUR COUNTRY:  UK   US 

Brighten the Corners: Nicene Creedance Edition

Product Details | Similar Products | Customer Reviews
Brighten the Corners: Nicene Creedance EditionArtist: Pavement
List Price: £15.99
Our Price: £10.98
You Save:
£5.01 (31%)

Availability:
Usually dispatched within 24 hours

View more information about Brighten the Corners: Nicene Creedance Edition at Amazon
 See larger photo
 Email this CD to a friend

Product Details:

   Release Date: 08 December 2008
   Record Label: Domino
   Rating:
   Sales Rank: 588

Look for similar items by category:

 Music > Pop > Bestsellers
 Rock > Indie Rock & Punk > Bestsellers
 Music > Indie > Bestsellers
 Music > Indie > Lo-Fi

Customers who bought this item also bought:

 Wowee Zowee: Sordid Sentinels Edition
by Pavement
 Terror Twilight
by Pavement

Customer Reviews:

  Pavement's best gets the treat. (27 December 2008)
These Pavement double-disc deluxe editions that are being released by Matador every 2 years are among the best reissues that I know. The gorgeous packaging, the brilliant design work, the massive booklets stuffed with interesting liner notes and photos, and the tons of extra-tracks set a new standard to the so-called deluxe editions. Brighten The Corners: Nicene Creedence Edition (love the weird sub-titles!) maintains the level.

This is my favourite Pavement album and ever since these deluxe-editions started coming out I had been waiting for its turn.
Brighten The Corners is Pavement's strongest and most consistent album. All these are good "proper" songs. There is no fooling around with thrown away ideas or silly jams. I understand that those are natural ingredients of the Pavement sound, but Wowee Zowee surely needed a bit more editing and quality control. And don't get it wrong, this is far from shinny and polished, this is still 100% low-fi indie rock as according to Pavement. The band still indulges here and there but overall things are much more in control.

Highlights include the college rock hit 'Stereo' with its bumpy bass line and explosive chorus, the catchy 'Shady Lane' and - a personal favourite and my favourite Scott Kannberg song - the chiming urgent 'Date with IKEA' with its byrdsian guitar all over. The album has a double grand finale with two slow-moving ballads 'Starlings Of The Slipstream' and 'Fin' that feature extended epic guitar abuse by Malkmus with loads of feedback and over-bent strings.

Of the 30-plus bonus tracks you can expect the usual treat. Excellent, interesting, funny, pointless, we get a bit of everything. But there are some standout tracks. The embryonic 'The Hexx', then called 'And Then', is as much powerful as it is underdeveloped. The instrumental 'Beautiful As A Batterfly', 'Westie Can Drum', 'Harness Your Hopes', 'Destroy Mater Dei', 'The Classical'.... are all great additions to this album.

The 50-page booklet features a long essay that deals more with the importance of nonsense lyrics in rock songs and, particularly, in Pavement. It's a very interesting text that runs for several pages until it arrives at Brighten The Corners just at closing time. But I miss a bit of historic context in the liner notes - the recording process, what the band was going through.

For the first time in these re-issues, there are no words by Stephen Malkmus or any of the band members or people involved on the making of the record. This brings back the idea that this album is so under-appreciated, probably even by the band - something that really puzzles me.

  Nicene Creedance Extras (18 December 2008)
This is not my favourite album by Pavement but this deluxe edition has some brilliant extra tracks. Notably the rocking No Tan Lines and Harness Your Hopes a song like a distillation of the Pavement essence. Also the harmonica powered Roll With the Wind is a corker.

  Well, MY corners have been brightened... (17 August 2007)
This is a terrific album. I'd kind of forgotten how much I liked Pavement until seeing the "Slow Century" DVD recently. I'd continued following Stephen Malkus - I love his first solo album and I saw him with the Jicks twice, and those gigs were fantastic. I've heard the other two Malkmus and the Jicks albums, but I don't have them yet. They haven't immediately caught my imagination, except the song, "It Kills" which is fantastic.

Anyway, "Brighten The Corners" was the first Pavement record I ever got, having seen them live in 1997. I also think it's (probably) their best. "Crooked Rain Crooked Rain" is a little patchy in quality, and while "Terror Twilight" is wonderful for the most part, it is a little overproduced, and does possess one or two clunky tracks. So while "Brighten the Corners" is more polished than "Crooked Rain", it is its imperfections that raise it above the quality of "Twilight".

When I first heard it it was the first tracks that really stood out for me: "Stereo" - with the wonderful line, "what about the voice of Geddy Lee/ How did it get so high?/ I wonder if he speaks like an ordinary guy" which is answered with, "I know him, and he does!"- "Shady Lane" - with the brilliant, "you've been chosen as an extra in the movie adaptation of the sequel to your life..." - and "Transport Is Arranged" with it's wicked guitar duelling.

As the years have passed, and I've listened to the album more and more, it's the later tracks that continue to surprise and delight me. I still like "Stereo", but the way Malkmus sounds a little uncomfortable when he sings, "Pigs they tend to wiggle when they walk" disturbs me slightly. A small qualm, but it is at the forefront of my mind nevertheless.

I'm glad to have rediscovered Pavement. You should discover or rediscover them too. They still sound fresh, and their arrangements and musicianship is excellent. The way they combine dissonance and off-key singing with some excellent tunes while playing a beautiful mix of lead and rhythm guitar - almost progressive songs but kept generally within the 3 to 4 minute area - is unique. I really do miss them, now I've found them again. Still, at least we still have Malkmus... his Jicks may not be as much fun as Pavement, but they are equally as good in other ways.

  theres no coast of nebraska (17 March 2007)
'whats your favourite pavement album?' is a rhetorical question for me, i mean if push came to shove, i guess ill listen to crooked rain crooked rain the most, but brighten the corners is a cryptic record, that really does seem to change everytime you listen to it. Lyrically its just fantastical-SM's bizzare phrasing is not only highly original but the unpredictability makes every listen seem different. and what a range of songs on offer here! so different, even though the album is bought together by a strange and slightly disturbing undercurrent. I always think of this album as the personality fight we all endure within ourselves, the conflicting emotions that at times make us feel literally insane.
anyways, highlights include- shady lane - transport is arranged-passat dream-starlings in the slipstream-blue hawiian and date with ikea is awsome too.
one of those special albums, that reminds you just how complicated it is to be human sometimes- the comedy, and the tragedy.

  Edges papered, but tenderness remains (26 May 2006)
Coming nearer to the end of their career than the start, 'Brighten the Corners' does seem to encompass most of the facets Pavement have to offer

The opening track, 'Stereo' opens with a strolling bassline, soon overwhelmed with typically vicious guitar feedback. However, the feedback is all a little too consistant, and the production seems a lot more polished than previous albums. Whether this is good or bad is a matter of opinion, however personally I feel that the band have missed a trick here, with the song lacking the edge it should have if the production was left a little more free.

The second track, 'Shady Lane' is a move away from the attacking noise of the opening. It shows Pavement at perhaps their most tenderest, and with that, their most vulnerable.

These first two tracks were both singles, and are a great start to the album

Other highlights include 'We are underused'. The opening riff sounds like something straight out of tetris, but then moves on to Malkmus's lyrics dragging the rest of the band in classic apathetic unison.

'Starlings in the slipstream' Once again shows the softer endearing side to Pavement, but unlike 'Shady Lane' has a darker edge, both lyrically, and in the breakdown midway through.

Overall this album represents some of the best aspects of Pavement, and is perhaps the best of their later albums. However, if it is the Lo-fi edge you are looking for, you may find yourself slightly disappointed. While the shearing guitars, strolling lyrics and distressed structure is all present, it is underneath a sheen of uncharacteristically tidy production



 
 


Books and more books