

Formed in Chicago, IL in 1988, The Smashing Pumpkins released their heralded debut album Gish in 1991 and found mainstream success with 1993's 4x multi-platinum Siamese Dream and 1995's 10x multi-platinum Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. Following the release of Adore, Machina/The Machines of God, and Machina II/The Friends & Enemies of Modern Music, the group's original lineup disbanded in 2000. Singer/guitarist Billy Corgan reformed the group in 2005, enlisting various collaborators for Zeitgeist, Teargarden by Kaleidyscope, Oceania, and Monuments to an Elegy. In June of 2018, The Smashing Pumpkins released their new single "Solara" ahead of their monumental Shiny And Oh So Bright Tour. The track was the first song in over 18 years to feature founding members Billy Corgan, James Iha, and Jimmy Chamberlin, alongside longtime guitarist Jeff Schroeder and offered the first glimpse of music from the newly reformed lineup. In September of 2018, the band formally announced their forthcoming 10th studio album SHINY AND OH SO BRIGHT, VOL. 1 / LP: NO PAST. NO FUTURE. NO SUN. and shared its second single "Silvery Sometimes (Ghosts)". Recorded at Shangri La Studios with legendary producer Rick Rubin, LP is due for release on November 16th, 2018 via Martha's Music under license to Napalm Records. With over 30 million albums sold to date, the GRAMMYR, MTV VMA, and American Music Award winning band remains one of the most influential bands in history. Review: A return to form - Some really great songs. Not as heavy as some Pumpkins albums , but Jimmy Chamberlain back on drums makes it an infinitely better album than it would have been had he not been back in the fold . Nice production too. Review: You'll ADORE this - Despite its' short running time (31 minutes) these songs show the band in all their glory, melodic riffs and Billy Corgan's searing vocals. The original line up with a set of songs that enhance their reputation - give it a few listens , it's over too soon.
M**.
A return to form
Some really great songs. Not as heavy as some Pumpkins albums , but Jimmy Chamberlain back on drums makes it an infinitely better album than it would have been had he not been back in the fold . Nice production too.
M**S
You'll ADORE this
Despite its' short running time (31 minutes) these songs show the band in all their glory, melodic riffs and Billy Corgan's searing vocals. The original line up with a set of songs that enhance their reputation - give it a few listens , it's over too soon.
S**E
...a very good record indeed.
About a week ago, I started to write a review of Shiny and oh so bright, the first Pumpkins album since Zeitgeist to feature the talents of drummer extraordinaire, Jimmy Chamberlin; and the first album since Machina (from all the way back in 2000), to feature James Iha. Expectations were correspondingly high and I must admit that my first reaction was one of disappointment. I wrote my review, endeavouring to achieve balance, but I couldn't get it across the finish line. Part of the problem was that, with each subsequent listen, different elements popped out, demanding attention and different songs became firm favourites. It was maddening and, in the end, I scrapped it all and put the CD to one side. It was as well I did. After a week of not listening, I got sick of various songs floating through my head and came to the cheerful conclusion that the new album, as so many Pumpkins albums have been, is a grower and one that rewards patience over instant gratification. It may not reach the giddy heights of Siamese Dream, or indulge in the rampant excesses of Mellon Collie, but it is a far better album than can easily be gauged with one or two listens. Opening with knights of Malta, you'd be forgiven for thinking Billy had truly lost the plot once and for all. An epic introduction with too-loud keyboards and a nagging melody, its closest relative would be one of the many ballads permeating Chinese Democracy. Shudder at such a comparison if you will, but Knights of Malta is Billy at his most grandstanding and yet... and yet, underneath it all, Jimmy Chamberlin's still-startling ability behind the kit drives it all forward with ferocious precision. And yet... where a solo should be, James Iha's backwards-phased guitar proves seductive in its oblique simplicity. It's not what I expected or wanted, and yet it proves to be a very strong opening indeed, worming its way under the skin with insidious ease. Similarly, Silvery sometimes (ghosts) takes its time to really introduce itself. Driven by Jimmy's taut beat, it's classic Pumpkins in the vein of try try try and, with Billy sounding in better voice than some time, not to mention James' spidery guitar figures, it is likely to sit high in the pantheon of great Pumpkins' tracks as fans increasingly succumb to its myriad charms. Still keeping things light, Billy guides us into the wide-eyed wonder of Travels, the work of a man who, for all his experiences in the industry, still maintains a touch of the innocence that lay at the heart of Gish all those years ago. The first half comes to a sudden and blisteringly exciting end with Solara. Proof that the band have lost none of their ability to set the adrenalin coursing through the veins, it opens with a tough, chugging refrain, nailed by Jimmy's incisive percussion, before Billy launches an all-out riff assault. It's the thunderclap that follows the lightning and, in just four-and-a-half minutes, all the tangential departures in which the Pumpkins have engaged are left in the dust as a chemistry long-thought lost explodes vividly into life. Opening side two, Alienation, which starts out its life mired in hazy synth and eerie piano, shows that the spirit of the much-underrated adore is alive and well. A beautifully understated piece of music, it once again sees Billy's more expansive tendencies tempered with startlingly good effect. In contrast, Marchin' on is built around a chrome-plated riff that just seems to keep building until it hits a point where your heart is racing in time to Jimmy's increasingly frantic drums. As exciting as anything Billy has ever put his name to, it is bound to be a live favourite and it floors the listener with a breakdown that makes you want to leap to your feet. With the end of the album looming, Billy offers a lullaby in the form of with sympathy, a track that could easily sit on Mellon collie, before the band round out the disc with the fiery seek and you shall destroy, a mid-paced track that takes its time to reach its violent peak without once losing sight of its central, gloriously shiny melody. The pumpkins have had more than their fair share of ups and downs over the years, and even this album found itself mired in controversy thanks to the remarkably open conflict that erupted between the band and their former bassist, D'arcy. Such conflict could have signalled disaster, derailing the reunion before it even hit the tracks and yet somehow the band have triumphed, as they so often have, in adversity. Although the music is not instant, if the listener is prepared to spend some time in the album's company, they'll find themselves swept away by a set of songs that are powerful, coherent and which, in many ways, offer a neat summation of the Pumpkins' work from Gish to Machina. An unexpected delight, Shiny and oh so bright neatly subverts all expectations and emerges as a very good record indeed.
R**B
A Must for Fans
Great new release from Pumpkins! Would like to have heard live but tickets overpriced! Some cracking tracks. Echo of past glory!!
C**S
My first band to hear
Almost 2 decades since the original lineup played together create a awesome album A fan from the beginning welldone
D**E
MOR, overly produced, modern alternative. Not smashing pumpkins of old.
I was really looking forward to this having dug out my old SP back catalogue recently and even purchased some of the recent records I didn’t bother with at the time. All I can say is....meh.....it’s a bit MOR and a little bit dull. Nothing really grabs you. I read somewhere that it was a return to the 90’s sound.....it really isn’t. It’s modern, heavily processed, overly produced alternative rock. It isn’t bad but it’s certainly not great. Billy’s voice seems to be even more whiny now too. If you’re a fan give it a go, just don’t expect to be blown away.
M**S
Great New Album
Really good new album from the full Smashing Pumpkins band. Love Solara and Marchin On. Well worth a purchase
Z**)
Great but not 'shockinkingly' great from the fabulously reformed Pumpkins
The Pumpkins have always been one of my fave bands. I'm a huge fan of Machina and Meloncholie in particular....two of the best albums ever. Period. As such that means I really like Shiny straight away as it is near to this eras feel overall... Knights of Malta is this band's lightest most newly evolved polarizing moment on the record and a welcome greeting from the relaunch of this oft polarising act. It sets the lighter pondering upbeat overall rythm of this ep sized album. The singles and their videos from months before deftly touch on the pop grunge sensibilities Pumpkins always had. Silvery Sometimes is almost the baby of Melancholy and Machina....a cleaner vibrant sound grips each track and dare I say it for me it is the band at their most heavy/light hearted and easy/hard listening. Travels continues this vein in a slow tempo manner and is a good track but for me the most dare I say middle aged sounding.. .... Speaking as a middle aged man....Solar is more like it, a heavier track that is instantly in the realm of Smashing Pumpkins dressing up as rock star heroes.....preaching specific/generalised anger to the masses.....lovely beats. Alienation, my fave track on the record, is a contemporary masterpiece....lyrically hinting at modern life reliance on mass communication at the expense of humanity.....spot on and on the right side of mourning.... With lovely delicate use of piano and pace... Marching On steps on the toes of the mediocre Zeitgeist album from 10 years agi. A little forgettable but suites the feel and does not outstay it's welcome due to the nifty base and strident drummage..... With Sympathy is gorgeous and extremely touching...and once more sounding like where they left off in 2000 before things for me got a bit forgettable.....Seek and You Shall Destroy is a nice ending. I'm reminded of The Hives almost there. To summize...this record augers well for their next effort which I presume will be a full album....but I'd like them to theatrically and sonically shock us without us realising it's happening a bit more....after all that's what the Pumpkins are really great at....lovely must own for fans old and new.
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