Slowdive Pygmalion Demos



What we have on this second disc (the 'Pygmalion Demos'), with only 2 tracks of redundant songs, amounts to nothing less than a fourth, unreleased Slowdive album.a Slowdive album that hems a lot closer to their previous 'dream pop' style, closer to the style. Within less than a year, Slowdive signed to Alan McGee's Creation label and released their debut, a self-titled EP of demos. 'Slowdive' itself was named Single of the Week by Melody Maker. Morningrise, featuring temporary drummer Neil Carter, and Holding Our Breath, with ex-Charlottes member Simon Scott on board, followed as the band's second. Pygmalion Slowdive Alternative 1995 Preview SONG TIME. Demo Version) 9. More by Slowdive. Slowdive 2017 Souvlaki 1993 Just for a Day 1991 Just for a Day 1991 Holding Our Breath. Slowdive Pygmalion Demos & Outtakes. Ambient Guitar (5:54) 02. Watch Me (3:47) 03. Changes (4:57) 04. Prautrock (5:11) 05. Miranda (Love Me) (3:50) 06.

Tomorrow will see the seminal shoegaze outfit Slowdive release their first new album in over two decades. Though derided by much of the music press, who’d become obsessed with Brit-pop by the mid-to-late ​‘90s, Slowdive’s music would ultimately have a great legacy, growing from a cult following to influencing numerous artists in the ​‘00s and beyond.

You can hear that legacy’s foundation in this collection of songs, which I’ve compiled from across Slowdive’s discography to celebrate the new album’s release. Obviously, I’m not including any Slowdive-related projects (e.g., Mojave 3, Monster Movie) or any of the members’ solo recordings — though I am certainly curious to see how the members brought their respective solo styles to bear on Slowdive’s new material. I’m also sticking to official releases, though there are plenty of unreleased demos floating around on YouTube that contain some great material.

Songs are ordered by original release date and track listing.

1. “Avalyn II” (Slowdive EP, 1990)

Slowdive pygmalion demos summary

You have to hand it to Slowdive: it takes gumption to include an eight-minute instrumental full of guitar drones and atmospherics on your first release. But that’s precisely what Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, et al. did. Though released when the band had been together for barely a year, there’s something quite measured and assured in ​“Avalyn II”‘s slow-burn. The way it builds and swells without ever getting out of control sounds like the work of a much more mature outfit, not a bunch of 19 and 20-year-olds.

Interestingly, this first EP received many accolades from the press, with Melody Maker naming it their ​“Single of the Week.” In a few short years, though, that same press would be falling over themselves to mock Slowdive, and shoegaze in general.

2. “She Calls” (Morningrise EP, 1991)

I always feel like this song gets easily overlooked in Slowdive’s discography, even though it’s one of their most intense and gripping songs. ​“She Calls” begins with rolling waves of percussion that threaten to drown the listener, while the guitars crash and roil in the background. Meanwhile, Halstead and Goswell’s harmonies ring out, singing lines like ​“She howls in ecstasy.” And the song’s climax? Let’s just say those final minutes contain the blueprints for everything Sigur Rós has done.

ProjectDemos

A little trivia: ​“She Calls” was originally released on 1991’s Morningrise EP but was later re-released on a promo 7″ with Ride’s excellent ​“Leave Them All Behind” single. That’s how I first discovered the song, and I was shocked and delighted to stumble across a Slowdive 7″ in my local record store’s clearance bin.

3. “Catch the Breeze” (Holding Our Breath EP, 1991)

“Catch the Breeze” was the song that cemented Slowdive’s position as one of my favorite bands of all time. I bought a used cassette copy of Just for a Day after reading a glowing review in Brendon Macaraeg’s (long-defunct, sadly) Dreampop webzine. (If I recall correctly, he compared listening to Slowdive to being in a warm, comforting womb.) Suffice to say, Just for a Day lived up to Macaraeg’s high praise.

I still remember the first time I heard ​“Catch the Breeze“ ​‘s climax. After nearly three minutes of drifting vocals and rainy day textures, the song explodes with Halstead, Goswell, and Christian Savill launching their guitar sounds skywards.

At the time, I still had visions/​delusions of playing in a band — and as soon as this song’s climax hit, I realized that if I could ever make music that made people feel the way I felt during ​“Catch the Breeze,” then I’d be doing something right.

4. Primal (Just for a Day, 1991)

Slowdive’s early releases showed a penchant for being somber and dramatic, and ​“Primal” is a perfect example. Just for a Day’s final song starts off dreamily enough, with Halstead and Goswell singing/​sighing ​“Today, I watched the colors fade” amidst shimmering guitar notes and cello strains. But in its final moments, the song takes a sudden turn towards darker, more ominous territory.

From the halfway point on, ​“Primal” begins collapsing in on itself; the chiming guitars, cello notes, and Goswell’s untethered vocals merge into a slow, stately spiral — and in the process, they become something primal (npi), evoking wild oceans and storm-filled skies.

Over the years, I’ve seen various remarks about The Cure’s influence on Slowdive. I can definitely hear that here, moreso than perhaps anywhere else in Slowdive’s oeuvre. In its final moments, ​“Primal” achieves the same sweeping, grandiose melancholy that flows throughout Disintegration.

5. “Souvlaki Space Station” (Outside Your Room EP, 1993)

As its name implies, ​“Souvlaki Space Station” is Slowdive at their spaciest. The entire song is drenched in reverb and delay, giving it a dub vibe — and reflecting Neil Halstead’s growing interest in electronic/​ambient music at the time — while some slide guitar streaks high overhead as if seeking escape velocity.

However, dark emotions lurk behind the spacey vibes. As pointed out in Pitchfork’s excellent Souvlaki documentary, Halstead and Goswell’s relationship had fallen apart right around the time of the Souvlaki sessions, making it something of a breakup album. Goswell’s voice takes center stage here, and though she’s buried under layers of sound, the few lyrical bits that do come through — e.g., ​“Curse your soul/​I don’t wanna know you” — give the celestial sounds a bitter edge.

(As an added bonus, check out Violens’ ​“Space Around the Feel Station” mash-up of ​“Souvlaki Space Station” and Washed Out’s ​“Feel It All Around.” The two songs sound as if they were made to be mashed together.)

6. 40 Days” (Souvlaki, 1993)

When people talk about the poppier direction that Slowdive adopted on Souvlaki, no doubt they’re thinking about ​“Alison.” And while ​“Alison” is certainly a great song, I’ve come to prefer ​“40 Days.” It rockets right out of gate, takes the same atmospherics and guitar sounds heard on the band’s earliest EPs, and weds them to better songwriting and cleaner production.

Even though ​“40 Days” starts off in a fairly aggressive manner — for Slowdive, anyway — it’s still, at heart, a melancholy, atmospheric, mope-filled ballad. A lot of that has to do with the band’s guitar sound here, which is as gorgeous and crystalline as you could want. The final minute or so is particularly lovely, with Halstead hazily singing ​“I said I love the way that you smile” while the guitars swirl and spiral around him.

SlowdiveSlowdive

7. “Melon Yellow” (Souvlaki, 1993)

It shouldn’t be too surprising that drugs figured into Souvlaki’s recording process. Halstead described working with Brian Eno as one of the ​“most surreal stoned experiences” of his life and various band members have admitted to smoking lots of weed in the studio. All that is to say that one can easily imagine the band creating ​“Melon Yellow” — with its mellow pace, reverbed drums, and lazily strummed guitars — while high out of their minds.

But as drugged out as ​“Melon Yellow” sounds, it’s still gorgeous — especially as the guitars flare out like a golden sunset behind Halstead and Goswell as they sing ​“So long, so long/It’s just a way to love you.” One certainly doesn’t need to be high themselves to enjoy the song; Slowdive’s music proves intoxicating enough all by itself.

8. “Dagger” (Souvlaki, 1993)

As I mentioned before, Souvlaki was recorded in the midst of Halstead and Goswell’s break-up. When you know that bit of info, it’s impossible to hear certain songs on Souvlaki as anything but attempts to deal with the fall-out. ​“Dagger” is the best example of this. One of the starkest songs in Slowdive’s discography — it’s just Halstead, an acoustic guitar, and some piano — ​“Dagger” finds Halstead singing about a ​“sunshine girl” and his own numbness to her pain. It’s pretty obvious who and what he’s singing about, and it ends Souvlaki on a sobering note.

One (legitimate) criticism of the shoegaze genre is that it trades emotional depth for sonic depth; by burying vocals and lyrics behind walls of sound, it more overwhelms listeners than connects with them. But in stripping away the usual shoegaze layers, ​“Dagger” revealed that not only was Halstead writing good songs beneath those layers of sound (and foretelling his later solo career), but that Slowdive’s music effectively walked the line between both emotional and sonic depth.

9. “In Mind” (5 EP, 1993)

While Slowdive was recording Souvlaki, Halstead grew increasingly interested in ambient and electronic music like Aphex Twin and drum and bass. Subsequently, Souvlaki’s North American release came with two extra songs — ​“Good Day Sunshine” and ​“Missing You” — that blended Slowdive’s shoegaze sound with drum machines and sequencers, to surprisingly good effect.

However, I’d argue that ​“In Mind” is the pinnacle of Slowdive’s electronica experiments. Whereas other songs sought to blend Slowdive’s usual elements with drum machines, etc., ​“In Mind” is a complete reformulation of Slowdive’s signature sound in electronic form. There’s ​‘nary a guitar to be heard on the song (or so it seems); instead, Goswell’s ethereal voice sighs and drifts over a shifting synthscape and pulsing, skittering rhythms. Even so, ​“In Mind” still has the same emotional affect as a ​“normal” Slowdive song.

“In Mind” was also remixed by Bandulu and Reload. Bandulu’s remix turned the song into an eerie, percolating acid joint while Reload stretched the song into ten-and-a-half minutes of ambient techno.

10. “Rutti” (Pygmalion, 1995)

“Rutti“ ​‘s opening strains no doubt threw many Slowdive fans for a loop. While the song was still very atmospheric, gone were the swirling layers of guitars and vocals. In their place were hazy, seemingly random guitar strums, jazz-y percussion, a loping bassline, and Halstead singing lyrics like ​“Into the light of mine/​Inside I fall… I see the soul of you/It’s just a life.”

It was less Cocteau Twins and My Bloody Valentine and more Laughing Stock-era Talk Talk — and it signaled a massive shift in Slowdive’s sound towards minimalism and abstraction. Not surprisingly, the fickle British music press hated Pygmalion; one reviewer called it ​“yet more career suicide.” However, just as time has vindicated Talk Talk’s unorthodox sounds, so too has it been kind to ​“Rutti” (and Pygmalion as a whole), particularly in light of post-rock’s emergence in the ​‘00s.

11. “Blue Skied an’ Clear” (Pygmalion, 1995)

I was torn between including ​“Crazy for You” or ​“Blue Skied an’ Clear” on this list. Both are excellent songs in their own right, but I ultimately went with ​“Blue Skied an’ Clear” because I think it has a few more interesting elements. It contains many of the same sonic elements as ​“Rutti” but uses them in a more active and engaged manner, while also bringing in additional vocal layers, some organ, and other studio wizardry.

Slowdive Pygmalion Demos Music

The result is a song that you feel like you can just fall back into, and let it warmly envelope you while waiting for the refrain — in which the guitars start ringing onwards and upwards until they merge with Goswell’s angelic voice — to take you to a whole new level of bliss.

12. “All of Us” (Pygmalion, 1995)

Just as Souvlaki ended on a subdued note with ​“Dagger,” Pygmalion ended on a subdued note with ​“All of Us.” Accompanied by delicately picked guitar and wistful string arrangements, Halstead sings cryptic lyrics like ​“This whole life is all of us/​This whole dream is all of me,” his echoing voice taking on a ghostly quality. The song as a whole has a hushed air about it, as if Halstead finished it in the wee hours of the morning whilst alone in the studio.

After Pygmalion’s release, Halstead, Goswell, and new drummer Ian McCutcheon would re-emerge as the folk/country-influenced Mojave 3, guitarist Christian Savill would start Monster Movie, and previous drummer Simon Scott (who left after Souvlaki) would release a number of solo ambient albums. And so, Pygmalion was Slowdive’s swan song for the last two decades.

It seems only fitting that a swan song end on a moment as haunting as ​“All of Us.”

Read more aboutSlowdive.
If you enjoy reading Opus and want to support my writing, become a subscriber for $5/month or $50/year.
Subscribe Today

Related Entries

By February 1995, when their third album Pygmalion crept out to absolutely zero fanfare, Slowdive were already a ghost of a band. Briefly hailed at the start of the 90s as the most blissful/ ravishing/ awe-inspiring example yet of the post-MBV sound that derisively became known as ‘shoegaze’, their star had long since dimmed.

As grunge and then Britpop dominated the music press and defined the increasingly corporate ‘indie’ scene, Slowdive were marked for death as the epitome of Home Counties, middle class, namby-pamby aural wallpaper, with Richey Manic professing to “hate Slowdive more than Hitler.” Cool Britannia was getting ready to swing, and Slowdive were most definitely not invited.

Slowdive Pygmalion Demos Full

There’s a pretty heavy irony of course that it was their own label, Creation, which had done much to create this toxic environment for the band. They may have fired the shoegaze starting gun with MBV’s epochal Isn’t Anything, and Ride’s Nowhere had given Creation their first top 20 album – but Alan McGee was forever keen to break out of the indie ghetto.

Acts such as Primal Scream and Sugar nudged them closer to the mainstream, but it was the signing of Oasis in 1993 that changed everything. From being a label that had nurtured all manner of artful, and often rather fey, talent in its early days, Creation became the cheerleader for a nostalgic brand of brash, unit-shifting guitar pop that had little truck with notions of subtlety or experimentation.

McGee had evidently soon tired of Slowdive – the fact they were regularly ridiculed in the press can’t have endeared them to a man constantly chasing the next big, or at the very least, cool thing. It wasn’t as if Slowdive had just been treading water – 1993’s Souvlaki had stronger songs than their Just For A Day debut and featured a collaboration with Brian Eno. And as has been pointed out previously on this site, Slowdive were one of the first guitar bands to successfully integrate ambient techno into their sound on the 5EP. But Creation’s red-rimmed eyes were now focused exclusively on the charts, and McGee told Slowdive that their next LP had to be much more pop…

Pygmalion is most definitely not a pop record. Creation sat on the album for almost a year before putting it out, then dropped the band a week after its release. Given the UK’s general antipathy towards them, it’s perhaps not a surprise that Slowdive ceased to exist soon after.

So what kind of record is Pygmalion, and why are we talking about it 25 years on? It’s clear that the 5EP, with its electronica underpinning, had a big impact on Slowdive’s way of working. But instead of pursuing a chilled techno sound, they went in the opposite direction, stripping back their wall of noise to reveal its shimmering, ghostly outline underneath. In doing so, they created a minimalist post rock masterpiece that may have struggled to be heard in 1995 – blotted out by both the brouhaha of Britpop and the baggage of their own reputation – but sounds today like a visionary blueprint for generations of bands to come.

Ten-minute opening track ‘Rutti’ acts as a mission statement for the whole album. It starts with just a soft downstroke of guitar, answered a moment later by a few murmured notes. The atmosphere is hushed, unhurried, contemplative. The pattern repeats, this time accompanied by the boyish yet resonant voice of Neil Halstead, Slowdive’s main songwriter and driving force (though in this context, that description seems a little out of place). He seems to be describing or reaching for a state of Zen introspection: “Into the light of mine / Inside I fall.” This sense of ‘losing today’, of ‘going blank again’ and being ‘loveless’, is a common thread for many of the original shoegaze bands – but where previously this escape from the world had come wrapped in a cocoon of sound and fury, here there’s a retreat into silence and the space between the notes.

The idea of space is absolutely key to Pygmalion. A popular early metaphor used to describe the effects-drenched music of the shoegaze bands was a “cathedral of sound” i.e. something that is simultaneously imposing and numinous. It’s easy to see why this notion quickly became much mocked, particularly in a culture where over-reaching or, God forbid, appearing pretentious is viewed with deep suspicion. However, if Slowdive had previously sculpted a Gaudí-esque edifice from their pedal boards, Pygmalion puts us inside its walls, the echoing reverb on Halstead’s voice and guitar creating a sense of physical space that feels both massive yet strangely intimate. We’re in the room with him, but the lights are off, and it’s impossible to get a handle on its dimensions. It’s womb-like and oceanic at the same time.

What’s also apparent from these first few minutes of ‘Rutti’ is that Halstead was listening to latter period Talk Talk during the making this album. While it’s commonplace now for musicians to pay homage to Mark Hollis and laud Spirit Of Eden and Laughing Stock as timeless works of art, those albums had slipped under the radar by the early 90s. Bark Psychosis may have been the first band to openly acknowledge their influence, particularly on the wonderful ‘Scum’, but Pygmalion is arguably the first album to really internalise the discipline of Hollis’ extreme ‘less is more’ philosophy: “Before you play two notes, learn how to play one note.”

You can really hear this as the track gradually progresses. A shaker gives the first hint of a rhythm, then a second guitar entwines with the first, playing a simple descending figure, the kind that anybody might play on casually picking up the instrument. Yet it sounds utterly pure and correct, as though played for the first time, fresh as spring rain. It’s this prelapsarian vibe, at the core of those Talk Talk albums, that Slowdive also succeed in conjuring here. The guitars are joined by the stealthy padding of a bass, then the muffled heartbeat of drums and metal wash of cymbals. The track processes gracefully and patiently to its conclusion, wending its way through an unspoiled Edenic landscape.

Pygmalion isn’t just an exercise in soporific solipsism though. ‘Crazy For Love’ comes swathed in the type of sonic derangement suggested by its title, the reverb on Halstead’s voice now sounding vaguely threatening as he repeats the words over and over, feedback looming in and out of the mix. Yet at the heart of the song is another simple guitar figure, looped endlessly and without interruption, twinkling madly in the background. You can’t imagine many other bands countenancing the dogged persistence of this singular element, yet Slowdive are clearly hearing music in a different way to their peers at this point – like other tracks here, it embraces the possibilities of sequencing and sampling while most other guitar bands are circling around the meat and potatoes revisionism of Oasis.

‘Miranda’ exemplifies Pygmalion’s other main vibe, that of an eerie dislocation, the listener again pulled away from the world, but this time into a disquieting nether zone. Against a woozy pattern of circular picking, Rachel Goswell’s voice is beatific but bleary, her words reverbed beyond comprehension as a tremulous siren calls down from high above (in fact, a sample of Dead Can Dance’s Lisa Gerrard from ‘The Wind That Shakes The Barley’). It’s like a haunted vision of the afterlife, as is the space age medieval balladry of ‘J’s Heaven’, another spacious acoustic setting with unadorned guitar lines, Halstead and Goswell’s voices combining in ecstatic androgyny.

‘Trellisaze’ exists even further out in some strange dub limbo, eccentrically propelled by the manipulated ticking of a grandfather clock – an idea probably borrowed from Global Communication’s ‘Ob-Selon Mi-Nos’, GC having remixed ‘In Mind’ from the 5EP – and a time code leaking out of the digital shadows. And the deconstructed Utopian psychedelia of ‘Blue Skied An’ Clear’ makes the Talk Talk connection even plainer, sounding like an unconscious rewriting of ‘I Believe In You’, complete with choir boy backing.

[]

Listening back to Pygmalion in 2020, it seems more than a little harsh that such a luminous and perfectly-formed album was so resolutely dismissed on its release. But the fact that it didn’t fit with the prevailing narrative of the times is captured in John Harris’s NME review, where, despite conceding that “large swathes of Pygmalion are endowed with a real allure,” he describes the album as “career suicide” because “disc jockeys and TV programmers will yelp, ‘I can’t do anything with this’” – in other words, if you can’t get past the gatekeepers, you’re destined to sell “absolutely fart all”. So much for art if you can’t shift units.

Even as Pygmalion was carelessly being laid to rest, Slowdive’s labelmates (and ex-shoegazers) the Boo Radleys were stamping on its unmarked grave with the maniacally sunny and soon to be ubiquitous ‘Wake Up Boo!’, the most played record on UK radio in 1995. This was how you did it… But we know how that story ended. While the Britpop episode did produce some memorable and occasionally great music, the flag-waving and money-grubbing aspects of it still stick in the craw. Self-congratulatory and senselessly over-confident, it was a fitting soundtrack for the ‘end of history’ that we were supposedly living through. Who needs quiet music at a party?

However, Pygmalion didn’t completely sink without trace on its initial release. The faint ripples it sent out were picked up by fans including Mogwai’s Stuart Braithwaite and Low’s Alan Sparhawk – it’s likely that Pygmalion’s calm, meditative melodicism had an impact on the early sound of both these bands, and in doing so helped gently kick-start the second wave of guitar-oriented post rock. And shoegaze itself, long free of the negative connotations previously attached to it, has again become a legitimate genre and source of inspiration, with everybody from Sigur Rós to Tame Impala trying on its sonic aesthetic. Much to their surprise, it’s even enabled Slowdive to reform, playing to new generations of fans, many of whom weren’t even born when the band were initially active.

Pygmalion is an album that was simply out of time. It doesn’t feel dated. It’s for what comes after the end of history, the period of uncertainty, anger and despair that we’re currently trying to deal with. It offers solace and a space for reflection in a fractious, hyper-accelerated world. After all, it’s little wonder if our desire to ‘lose today’ doesn’t sometimes become overwhelming.