MTV's
Version 2.0 Review
MTV Online - May 1998
It's
pretty risky for a band to choose a name like
"Garbage." It leaves them open to easy pot shots from
journalists and critics who can't resist making cheap puns like
"Garbage stinks!" or "It's time to take this trash
out!" But if the band is well-received, then of course none
of this matters. The press then writes cutesy things like
"Garbage knows the sweet smell of success" or
"Anything but Garbage in this pail." Luckily for the
band, they were well-received when their self-titled debut album
hit the streets, and they were spared the bad puns, just not the
cute ones.
Beyond being well-received, Garbage's first album made a giant
splash in '95, and frontwoman Shirley Manson, the rock-sexy,
red-headed Scot, became a bit of a media darling, though
thankfully without reaching that critical
too-much-of-a-good-thing over-saturation point that can taint
even the most talented artists.
However, I have a confession to make. I was not one of those in a
tizzy about Garbage's debut. I thought they were good, but just
not... great. Most of their songs lacked that extra dimension
that makes music truly extraordinary. I attributed the majority
of their big success to the legitimate vixenish appeal and velour
voice of Shirley Manson. Regardless, many were left to speculate
about where this "forward-thinking" band, as they were
called by some, would go next. The members of Garbage were
definitely feeling the pressure of this expectation.
Well, you can all relax (Garbage included), because their highly-
anticipated sophomore effort, Version 2.0, is better than their
debut. What was merely good is now bordering on great. Where
their debut was a feet-wetting freshman outing, their second
record is more powerful. It is more complex. It has more depth
and musical sophistication. It is exactly what a second version
should be: an improvement upon the first without being a complete
departure. Each track on 2.0 shifts and wends and rocks. These
are big songs with no shortage of beats and grooves; tunes that
are larger-than-life toe tappers ("When I Grow Up"),
hip shakers ("Dumb"), and head boppers ("Sleep
Together"). Garbage has grown up. Their sound has matured
into genuine oomph.
Take the first track, "Temptation Waits." It's a
rock/disco anthem about obsessive love. It begins with Manson
singing to a light dance beat: "I'll tell you something/I
may be a wolf but/I like to wear sheep's clothing." The song
then escalates to the next level with guitar and keyboards, and
then it builds again to a soaring refrain, but it doesn't stop
there. Continuous changing movements make it not only good, but
also interesting. "Temptation Waits" is in itself a
wolf in sheep's clothing. It comes on subdued at first, but opens
up into a memorable, downright danceable, single-bound song.
This type of complexity appears on the entire record, with songs
like the smooth-yet-energetic-rocky "I Think I'm
Paranoid," "Push It" (with its Brian
Wilson-borrowed-with-permission silky refrain, "Don't worry
baby"), and "Wicked Ways." "The Trick Is to
Keep Breathing" and "You Look So Fine" run neck
and neck for the title of most ambient, as well as prettiest song
on the record.
Garbage's Version 2.0 snaps, pops, and rocks. Don't wait to
download.