There's Nothing Wrong with Love | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Built to Spill |
Cover: | Theres Nothing Wrong With Love.jpg |
Released: | September 13, 1994 |
Recorded: | May–June 1994 |
Studio: | John & Stu's |
Genre: | |
Length: | 46:48 |
Label: | Up |
Producer: | Phil Ek |
Prev Title: | Ultimate Alternative Wavers |
Prev Year: | 1993 |
Next Title: | Perfect from Now On |
Next Year: | 1997 |
There's Nothing Wrong with Love is the second full-length album released by American indie rock band Built to Spill. There's Nothing Wrong with Love was recorded in May and June 1994, and released September 13, 1994, on the Up Records label. It was produced by Phil Ek. The songs "Car" and "Distopian Dream Girl" were released as singles. Sub Pop reissued the album on vinyl in 2015.[3] This is the only album to feature drummer Andy Capps and the first to feature bassist Brett Nelson.
The album has been considered a concept album based around a general theme of growing up.[4] Among the topics: "[Frontman Doug] Martsch sings about everything from the erotic thrill of touching a girl's thumb during an elementary-school game of seven-up to the hip appeal of David Bowie."[5] "Twin Falls" is named for the Idaho town.[6] "That was the last record when I was able to make music without thinking a lot of people would hear it. It makes a difference. I’d like to think it doesn’t, but it does," Martsch later confided.[7]
The video for "In the Morning" was featured on Beavis and Butt-head. An unlisted final track is a satirical preview of the next Built to Spill album; none of the clips on the track are real Built to Spill songs.
Neil Strauss at the New York Times was positive in his 1995 assessment of the record, commenting: "With jagged layers of guitar, a piecemeal approach to pop music and sharp, introspective lyrics, the second album from this Boise, Idaho, band shined like a sequin on the dirty shirt of indie-rock."[8] Entertainment Weekly Ethan Smith called it "top-shelf songwriting."[9] John Bush at AllMusic wrote, "Beneath the wacky guitar fooling and somewhat nasal vocals, Built to Spill write great love songs, whether its bouncy pop or fragile melodies." In a Pitchfork review, Steve Kandell writes, "Released in 1994, it’s an unassuming, lovely slab of lo-fi fuzz-pop about growing up, and not growing up, in Idaho, with picaresque lyrics about playing seven-up with grade-school crushes, driving nowhere in particular, loneliness, and the childlike wonder of staring up at the stars."[10] Billboard characterized the album as full of "simple, head-bobbing songs."[11] Chris DeVille at Stereogum ranked it the third best album by the band, calling it a "a charmingly sophomoric sophomore release [..] Despite a few moments when the endearing tips over into the obnoxious, There’s Nothing Wrong With Love is the sound of scrappy mountain manchildren toying with their powers, pushing the limits of their form, setting the table for future tours de force."[12] Upon its 2015 reissue, Jillian Mapes at Vulture opined: "The excitement Doug Martsch rings out of childhood anecdotes gone sideways with little more than his completely ordinary voice and his now-imitated guitar-playing (see: “Twin Falls”) is something to cherish, but so are the jangly, distorted rocking-out moments like “Big Dipper,” too."[13]
Christopher Hess at The Austin Chronicle called it a "landmark indie album" in 1999.[14] Mark Richardson, in a retrospective piece for Pitchfork, suggested that Love "has come to define a certain strand of indie rock, leaving a cluster of threads picked up by Modest Mouse, Death Cab for Cutie, and many more." Strauss mentioned it among the "CD's That Still Sound Good Years Later" in a 2004 New York Times ranking.[15] Jon Dolan from Spin ranked it among the best albums of the 1990s: "[it] challenged slacker cynicism with basement-band symphonies that turned his own private Idaho into indie-rock’s last unknown country. [...] There’s Nothing Wrong With Love did for the guitar hero what Kurt Cobain had done for the rock star: subvert ego with touching vulnerability."[7] The album was the first album PUP singer Stefan Babcock learned to play.[16] Pitchfork ranked There's Nothing Wrong with Love No. 24 on its Top 100 Albums of the 90s list.[17]
The band announced a thirtieth anniversary tour of the album in 2024, alongside Yo La Tengo.[18]
All songs written by Built to Spill except where noted.
Built to Spill
Additional musicians