__________________________________________________________
The Smashing Pumpkins
Gish
Virgin
5099990959622
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Disc One
Gish - Remastered
1. I Am One
2. Siva
3. Rhinoceros
4. Bury Me
5. Crush
6. Suffer
7. Snail
8. Tristessa
9. Window Paine
10. Daydream
Original album Produced by Butch Vig and Billy
Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios in beautiful Madison,
Wisconsin
December 1990 - March 1991
Remastered by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering, Portland,
Maine, 2011
© 2011 Virgin Records America, Inc.
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Disc 2
Trippin' Through The Stars
1. Starla (2011 mix)
Produced by Kerry Brown and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Soundworks, Chicago, Spring 1992
Remixed by Kerry Brown and Bjorn Thorsrud
2011 mix previously unreleased
2. Siva (Peel Session)
Produced by Dale Griffin
Recorded at BBC Studios Maida Vale 3, London
September 8, 1991
Released on "Peel Sessions" EP
3. Honeyspider (Reel Time demos / 2011 mix)
Produced by Billy Corgan
Recorded at Reel Time Studios, Chicago
in 1989 by Mark Ignoffo
Remixed by Howard Willing
4. Hippy Trippy (Crush Music Box demo)
Recorded by Billy Corgan, Chicago, 1990
Mixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
5. Snail (live radio performance)
Recorded at VPRO Radio, Hilversum, Netherlands, January
15,1992
Previously unreleased
6. Plume (2011 mix)
Produced by Kerry Brown and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Soundworks, Chicago, Spring 1992
Remixed by Kerry Brown
2011 mix previously unreleased
7. Bury Me (Reel Time demos / 2011 mix)
Produced by Billy Corgan
Recorded at Reel Time Studios, Chicago in 1989 by Mark
Ignoffo
Mixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
8. Daydream (Old House demo)
Recorded by Billy Corgan, Fall 1989
Mixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
9. Tristessa (Sub Pop single / 2011 mix)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison, 1990
Remixed by Butch Vig
2011 mix previously unreleased
10. Girl Named Sandoz (Peel Session)
Produced by Dale Griffin
Recorded at BBC Studios Maida Vale 3, September
8,1991
Released on "Peel Sessions" EP
11. Jesus Is The Sun (Apartment demo)
Recorded by Billy Corgan, 1990
Mixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
12. Blue (Gish sessions demo)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison, 1991
Previously unreleased
13. Smiley (Gish sessions demo)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison, 1991
Previously unreleased
14. I Am One (Reel Time demos / 2011 mix)
Produced by Billy Corgan
Recorded at Reel Time Studios, Chicago
in 1989 by Mark Ignoffo
Remixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
15. Scam (Suffer/ Apartment demo)
Recorded by Billy Corgan, Chicago, 1990
Mixed by Howard Willing
Previously unreleased
16. La Dolly Vita (Sub Pop single / 2011 mix)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison 1990
Remixed by Butch Vig
2011 mix previously unreleased
17. Pulseczar (Gish sessions demo)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison 1990
Released on "Earphoria"
18. Drown (alternate guitar solo)
Produced by Butch Vig and Billy Corgan
Recorded at Smart Studios, Madison, March 1992
Previously unreleased
Mastered by Evren Goknar at Capitol Mastering,
Hollywood, CA, 2011
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Disc Three - dvd
Live at the Metro, 1990
1. introduction
2. i am one
3. snail
4. rhinoceros
5. bury me
6. tristessa
7. window paine
8. razor
9. sookie sookie
10. godzilla
11. crush - acoustic
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"When I listen to Gish," Billy Corgan says today, "what
I hear is a beautiful naivete."
They say you never forget the first time, and even
twenty years later, the 1991 debut album by Smashing
Pumpkins — guitarist and vocalist Corgan, drummer
Jimmy Chamberlin, bassist D'arcy Wretzky and guitarist
James Iha — remains the unforgettable start of a
musical conversation that continues to resonate with
millions of fans all around the world.
In retrospect, Gish can clearly be heard as a
groundbreaking album in the history of what would soon
become more much widely known as alternative rock. Gish
was, after all, the promising debut of a band that would
help alternative rock quickly become part of a new,
grungier mainstream. But back in the beginning, Gish was
simply the memorable opening salvo by a band from
Chicago that really didn't fit in anywhere in the rock
world — that is, until bands like Smashing
Pumpkins helped changed the rock world once and for
all.
To hear Corgan tell it now, Smashing Pumpkins came by
their beautiful naivete naturally. "We'd had very little
exposure to the national stage," he explains. "There's
no way that if we had been exposed to all of what was
going on in New York and L.A. earlier, we would have
made Gish. This is one of those weird albums that sounds
like it came from some guy who crawls up out of the
basement holding a record in his hands proudly — a
little like the first time we heard Dinosaur Jr. You
think, 'who the hell is this? And where did that come
from?'"
According to Corgan, the album originally came from
Smashing Pumpkins' early vow of poverty. "The roots of
Gish are the fact that the band had a policy then that
nobody made any money from the shows, so we could save
up to record," he explains. "It was amazing that
everyone agreed to it because none of us had any money
back then. So by 1989 we had collected a couple grand
from playing club gigs. A guy named Mark Ignoffo, who
lived in the neighborhood near where I worked at the
used record store, had just graduated studio-engineering
school. It turned out he had set up a studio in his
parents' basement, so in 1989 we took that saved money
and made an album — even though we had no one to
make an album for. There was absolutely nobody
interested in our band. So we just made an album-plus
worth of material hoping somebody would become
interested. And if you listen to that material, it
sounds very much like Gish turned out."
Smashing Pumpkins made a few copies of songs from these
basement tapes, and gave one tape to Joe Shanahan, the
owner of the Metro club in Chicago. "I didn't hear back
from Joe for a month, and I remember thinking 'that's
not a very good sign,"Corgan remembers. "But then after
a month, Joe told me, 'I can't get this thing out of my
car stereo.' Joe said he wanted to send the songs to
some people he knew in Los Angeles. That's how we got
our first managers — Andy Gershon and Raymond
Coffer who at the time were managing The Cocteau Twins
and Love and Rockets, both of whom we were fans of.
Ultimately this led to us getting signed — though
true to form, we did that by taking a weird path
too."
After releasing their first-ever single "I Am One" on
Chicago's tiny Limited Potential label, the Pumpkins
tried to get signed to the famed independent Seattle
label Sub Pop, already the early home to Nirvana and
Soundgarden. "They could have had us for nothing and a
song, but of course, Sub Pop weren't really interested
in us at all," Corgan says. "But they threw us the bone
of doing a Sub Pop Single of the Month. That's when
Virgin — now EMI — stepped forward and said
they wanted to sign us. Sub Pop came back offering us an
album deal, but by then it was too late."
The Smashing Pumpkins signed to Virgin with the
stipulation that they could release a debut on Caroline
Records first. "We didn't want the trap door to open if
the first record didn't sell well," explains Corgan.
"Our idea wasn't to conquer the world. Our idea was to
put together a good first record on an independent, then
tour our rear ends off, and get our act together. That
way by the time we made our second record for a major
label, we'd be a better band and have a bigger
opportunity. Then we'd be ready to try and climb the
holy mountain."
One man who did a great deal to make The Smashing
Pumpkins better was producer Butch Vig, who met the band
when he was behind the boards for the band's Sub Pop
Single of the Month "Tristessa" backed with "La Dolly
Vita." Vig had been recommended by Mike Potential of
Limited Potential. "Then I heard a record Butch did with
Die Kreuzen, and I thought the kick drum sounded
fantastic for an indie record," says Corgan. "That did
the trick. Jimmy's such a powerful drummer, and I
figured this guy could capture what Jimmy was doing.
Then I found out Butch had been in the band Firetown, so
I felt like this guy knew what he was doing."
In 1990, The Smashing Pumpkins drove to Madison,
Wisconsin for two days to cut the Sub Pop single, and
were quickly impressed. "The great thing about Butch was
like Pro Tools before Pro Tools perfection. He really
stressed sonics and good singing. Before Butch, I didn't
understand even the concept of what it meant to sing in
tune. I mean that literally. Butch insisted on getting
it right so the band sounded super tight. But I find all
great producers have a similar quality. Beyond their
talent, they're someone you like hanging out with after
a twelve-hour day. You're still laughing with them.
Butch is a very warm person, and we knew him before he
became 'Butch Vig.' He's also got this Midwestern
quality of playing it all down. He doesn't act like one
of the great rock producers of all time — which he
is."
Recording Gish was done in spurts. "We would drive up to
Madison for four days at a time — or six days at a
time. We had no money, so Jimmy and I were staying with
some really nice college girls who let us stay in their
house for free. That gave us a little more money for the
record. The studio was $500 a day, and that was with
Butch included. If my memory serves me correctly, it
took us 41 days to record the album and seventeen days
to mix."
In the high profile and sometimes traumatic years that
would follow, The Smashing Pumpkins would prove to be a
highly volatile group. But as Corgan says today, "The
thing that distinguishes Gish for me was how incredibly
supportive the band was of the vision I had. That was a
leap of faith then — because even though we were
drawing good crowds and getting a good reaction, you'd
only have to walk outside the club to find someone who
thought we were too loud, or too this or that. There
were people who said my voice was too weird, and yet the
band was incredibly supportive of me."
That said, The Smashing Pumpkins was never the coziest
of rock bands. "I think what made the Pumpkins special
was that we weren't a rock & roll gang," says
Corgan. "We were four completely different people. And
even though James and D'arcy were a couple at the time,
they were totally different personalities too —
like Lucy and Desi from TV. It was clear, if we weren't
a band, we would not all be hanging out much. But we
were a band at heart. One thing I like to distinguish is
that there was only one mention of us in the Chicago
press before Gish came out. We would play the Metro and
draw 800 people, but no one in the media noticed. We
were totally ignored. Fortuitously, we fell between the
cracks then, but eventually made a place for ourselves.
No one else got us, but we did."
And right from the release of Gish, fans got Smashing
Pumpkins too — more than the band itself even
dared to imagine. "Our expectations then were definitely
not to take over the world, but just to take us to the
next level. Our expectations weren't low, but then Gish
somehow ended up being at the time the largest selling
independent album ever. I think it sold 400,000 copies
in its first year. People really liked it, but it also
engendered a big negative reaction. We'd go into a club
and play with the local cool band, and we would be twice
as loud, and Jimmy would be fucking ripping the roof off
the place with his playing. We didn't look like other
bands either. We were too thrift store hippy-looking. At
the same time all these people loved us, others were
throwing bottles and booing. So within the group, we
hung together pretty well through the whole journey of
Gish — and it was a pretty long journey because we
toured behind the album for 14 months."
Ultimately, Corgan is proudest of Gish as an overall
musical effort than as a collection of songs. "The thing
about Gish is that there really aren't a lot of great
songs, it's really more of a dynamic statement. I
wouldn't say there are many great songs but there are a
lot of great ideas that are taking chances."
Finally, as for the album's title, Corgan says, "The
only thing I've ever been able to attribute it to is
that I remember a story my grandmother, who was
born in 1911 and came of age during the silent movie
era, had told me once when I was a kid. She talked about
how stars would do these whistle-stop train tours, and
she remembers going down to the train station, and
Lillian Gish, who was like the #1 movie star in the
world at the time, was there on the back of a train. She
talked about the power of that moment and the impression
it made. Somehow the name Gish stuck somewhere deep in
my mind."
David Wild
September 2011
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Gish - Track By Track
I Am One: A statement of spiritual unity, based on the gnosis
of the holy trinity. Lyrically stripped from an article
I'd read on Bishop Desmond Tutu. Our first single,
re-born here faster, Jack-over-the-candlestick nimble.
Yellow Strat on the left, Black Les Paul on the right.
Full pan. An unmistakable drum rattle from the
venerable, now closed, Smart Studios in Madison,
Wisconsin. Just an amble down the road from the ominous
state capitol. Laws are made, laws to be broken. I
am one, you are one. Infinite repeat.
Siva: A misspell on Shiva the inhaler,
the loving destroyer. A riff born whilst working away at
the used record store on Broadway, watching humanity
walk by dying. A prototyped blueprint of many that would
follow. A breakthrough; finding the perfect light,
capturing our essence that matches street power against
eternal grace. Laced with LSD visions of making love by
the glow of the streetlight blasting into my room on the
second floor, illuminating the night. Christmas lights
strung along where the pictures should be.
Rhinoceros: Idealism hidden amongst the
ruins of a sentimental smear. Pandas, balloons, ice
cream kids and cones; a knowing girl bats her eyelashes
at you across the fairground. You know her, but you know
she knows. But what is it that she knows about you?
Secrets are held up for instant review, then blasted
across the stratosphere with happy hope. No one is there
to catch your dreams where they fall. Your dreams are
all mustard lies, you see. You must open your eyes now
to what you don't want to see.
Bury Me: Bury me in love. Bury me in
blood. These lines have no connection to a meaning.
Impressions strung along the wires, criss-crossing
chants and chasms. Nothing has any meaning. I am buried
beneath non-meaning. We are lost. Songs like these point
the way; dead ends that are worth coming into blindly
with fatal force. I often forget songs like this exist,
but they are testament to a faith I once had, now
forgotten.
Crush: My future wife sleeps across the
room, it's 3 a.m. I am far too shy to write a song like
this in front of anyone, even her. Her apartment sits
above a restored, historic theatre. The riff is stolen,
but I can never say where it came from. I am shamed by
that, but I make it mine nonetheless. I want to be an
original, without a prior copy. 1 cannot escape that I
am made up of tiny, stitched together pieces. Curtis
Mayfield's poetry inspires the romantic lyric. The whole
world shimmers for all at night. Light dances off the
face of my beloved. I am both in love and crushed by
love. The bells are there to remind me.
Suffer: Existential love is for lovers,
a raga dedicated to being trapped in who you are. A girl
I love once and still hands me a penny whistle, and says
'do you know how to play?' I am the piper, calling in
the morning hues with my simple melody. An apocalypse
comes with my tune, riders now face the dawn. They have
come to behead those who stand along the road, so we run
and hide in the dense jungles instead. They will come
for us anyway. Instead of fighting we will dance around
a fire. We cease to be. Pan plays the flute far better
than I.
Snail: 7 dreams. 7 and 7 is? 7. A girl
I've named 'Flower.' She puts the sun on her tongue,
tastes the stars like snowflakes. Tine height of who we
would have been if we didn't always need to have more,
and more, and then some more. The last of the innocents
here. The drums are cut in one take, in a flurry of
savant madness. His nose is broken, busted open in
chivalry of cause. A siren calls to a snail who moves
far too slow. But no one can catch him, so he moves fast
enough 1 suppose. An electric guitar is held in front of
the amp on fire until the glue shakes loose from the
wood, and the tubes light up into phosphorescent blue.
Hearts explode into diamonds, spades, clubs, and hollow
rings.
Tristessa: Lifted from author Jack
Kerouac's book of the same name, written, I think, about
a Spanish prostitute. I sec myself not as a whore but as
a mirrored reflection in the feminine creative mind. I
will await the artist within to come out to play. I call
out her name longingly, coyly. Maybe I know that the
artist in me is indeed meant to be a whore? Our second
single this was, re-recorded to try to clarity an
earlier version. In the trade-off something vital gets
lost. 1 won't even bother to try to make it better, a
shrug of ambivalence. 1 have already moved on from
her.
Window Paine: Coming down off the long
trip now. It's almost over people. There is still one
more vista to reach, one last dive into the deep.
Pistons start to sputter, the wings start to sag, nose
points straight down. The window to my heart is opened
up with lysergic acid and strychnine. Alchemy pries open
now what a crowbar cannot. We are in the ethers now.
With no oxygen, the ends fray and even the pleasantries
are over. It's a rude conclusion to draw. An awakening.
The trip doesn't end, it just stops.
Daydream: An oath in neon blue. One
last simple thought to share. The other voice sings the
song because the voice is prettier, more cold and far
away. It's a beautiful dream but we know it ain't gonna
happen; who are we fooling here? Still, it's nice to hum
along. A husband and wife descend from the heavens to
play the last little coda. They do not wear white. Our
first encounter with the other way.
I'm Going Crazy: Recorded live in the
control room of Smart. We gather around the microphone,
laughing and giggling at how stupid the song is. Who
writes this shit? A false chord is fretted in mockery,
the strange sound of the impending breakdown. It's too
late to pull up, we are over the brink, there is no
going back. They are coming to take me away ha! To be
one, you must be crazy. To be crazy, you must be
everyone. Bagpipes filter softly into the room, as a
marching band strolls lazily past, smoking their last
cigarette. Parade is over friends. Go home.
Billy Corgan
September 2011
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Reissue Produced by Billy Corgan and Kerry Brown
Reissue Co-Produced by Dennis Wolfe, Michael Murphy and
David K. Tedds
Legal Saviour - Jill Berliner
Reissue Design / Layout - Noel Waggener
Cover photos - Robert Knapp
Inner photos courtesy of Billy Corgan, Jimmy Chamberlin
and Robert Knapp
Postcard Photos © Billy Corgan
Fender and Kodak trademarks appear courtesy of Fender
Musical Instruments
Corporation and Eastman Kodak Company
The Smashing Pumpkins:
Billy Corgan - guitar, vocals
James Iha - guitar
D'arcy - bass, vocals on "Daydream"
Jimmy Chamberlin - drums
_________________________________________________________
DVD Credits:
Filmed at The
Metro, Chicago, II, 8/25/90
Archival footage provided by
ThePulseChicago.com
"Crush" filmed in Billy's living room, Chicago, IL
7/27/93
Courtesy of Martha's Music, LLC
In association with Miles Hye Inc.
Introduction by Joe Shanahan
Introduction Produced by JBTV / Jerry Bryant TV, Inc.
Executive Producers: Jerry Bryant and Christian
Picciolini
Director: Christian Picciolini
Director of Photography: Jerry Bryant
Camera Operator, Lighting Director and Audio Engineer:
Tim Rusin
Editors: Aidan Brczonick, Paul LoPiccolo,Tim Rusin
DVD Authored by Monkeyshark
Menu Animation by Alpha Dogs
© 2011 Miles Hye, Inc. under license to Martha's
Music, LLC
All songs by Billy Corgan (Cinderful Music, BMI)
except:
"I Am One" and "Plume" by Billy Corgan and James Iha
(Cinderful Music, BMI /Cellophane Star Music, BMI),
"Girl Named Sandoz" by Briggs, Burdon, Jenkins, McCulloch
& Weider
(Carbert Music Inc. / Little A Music / Unichappell Music
Inc. BMI, PRS Publ.)
"Sookie Sookie" by Donald Covay and Stephen Lee Cropper
(Cotillion Music Inc. /Irving Music Inc. BMI)
"Godzilla" by Donald Roeser (Sony / ATV Tunes LLC
ASCAP)
Compilation ® 2011 Virgin Records America, Inc.
Audiovisual © 2011 Martha's Music,
I I.C. Artwork © 2011 Virgin Records America, Inc.
5099990959622
Tracks 1,6 & 16 © 2011 Virgin Records America,
Inc
Tracks 3,4,5,7, 8,11,12,13,14,15 & 17
© 2011 Martha's Music, LLC
Tracks 2 & 10 © 1992 BBC Music under
exclusive license to EMI Records Ltd.
Track 9 courtesy of Sub Pop Records and
Martha's Music, LLC
Track 18 courtesy of Warner Bros. Entertainment
Inc.