Where You Been | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Dinosaur Jr. |
Cover: | Dinosaur Jr. Where You Been.jpg |
Released: | February 9, 1993 |
Recorded: | 1992 |
Length: | 47:38 |
Label: | Blanco y Negro/Sire |
Producer: | J Mascis |
Prev Title: | Fossils |
Prev Year: | 1991 |
Next Title: | Without a Sound |
Next Year: | 1994 |
Where You Been is the fifth official studio album by Dinosaur Jr., released on February 9, 1993.[1]
The song "Start Choppin'" was their biggest hit, reaching number 3 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart in the U.S., and the Top 20 of the UK Singles Chart. This was drummer Murph's last recording with J Mascis until 2007's Beyond.
This was the only Dinosaur Jr. album between 1988's Bug and 2007's Beyond to be recorded entirely with a full band. During Dinosaur Jr.'s major label years, Mascis performed most of the instruments himself on record.
The album peaked with 263,000 units sold in the US.[2]
Where You Been was the first album recorded by Dinosaur Jr.'s new line-up, after the largely J Mascis-recorded Green Mind. This line-up consisted of Mascis, long-time drummer Murph, and new bassist Mike Johnson. Mascis explained on an interview with 120 Minutes, "It's the first time we've felt like a band for maybe six years, or something. [Johnson] adds a lot, just having someone that I can get along with musically and personally. It just makes the record better having all the people there contributing something, rather than the last one."[3]
Where You Been was Dinosaur Jr.'s greatest commercial success up to that point, reaching number 50 in the US and number 10 in the UK. Mascis reacted at the time, "We're just making records and, I mean, every one sold more than the last one. Whatever happens, we'll deal with it then."
In a later interview, drummer Murph recalled the album positively, saying "Out of the records I played on, I think of Where You Been very fondly." Hüsker Dü frontman Bob Mould spoke positively of the album, commenting, "I've heard Where You Been, their new album. It's brilliant, amazing — it's even got strings. They've stopped sounding the way they did on Bug, but they've built on the same basic premise and kept those very recognisable guitar sounds. I don't know if they make a conscious effort to change, but I suppose they'd be really bored by now if they always sounded the same."[4]
The album was released to very positive reviews. AllMusic's Ned Raggett called the album "occasionally moody and dark but otherwise [...] more rough fun. [...] [I]t's a puréed blast of punk, classic rock, and more. It may be business as usual, but it's good business just the same, whether it's the gentle "Not the Same," on which Mascis does his best Neil Young impersonation, or the stuttering feedback snorts and rips on "Hide," on which he borrows a bit back from disciple Kevin Shields." The tracks "Out There", "Start Choppin", "Get Me" and "Goin Home" were chosen as highlights. Michael Azerrad, writing for Rolling Stone, was similarly positive, writing that "their second major-label album [...] recall the shambling lope of Crazy Horse-era Young, as well as hints of minor Seventies icons from Blue Oyster Cult to Humble Pie. The majestic “Get Me” is “Layla” for the distressed-denim set (even the guitar squiggle at the end is pinched from Clapton’s “Let It Rain”)." He singled out the "riff-happy" songs "Start Choppin" and "I Ain't Sayin" as "excellent" (calling the latter "a two-minute gem") and praised Mascis' production choices ("he embellishes the band’s usual all-guitar palette with timpani, chimes and strings") as "a daring move in the sadly conformist world of alternative rock". "Like many of its peers," he concludes, "Dinosaur Jr is a musical cargo cult, turning the detritus of another culture into something that can be used — and maybe even worshiped. For one of the crowning glories of slacker culture, look no further." Greg Kot wrote that what made the album "compelling is Mascis' growth as a songwriter and, apparently, as a person. On previous albums, the singer's relationship with the world outside seemed about as emotionally developed as a 13-year-old's. But on "Where You Been" his wan, dissipated voice conveys a deeper commitment and yearning. [...] All the while, Mascis' army of guitars is placed in service of his breaking heart, and the sound is majestic and moving."
Robert Christgau was less positive, finding that "somehow his axe and his voice sing the same tune, momentarily transmuting his self-pity into simple sadness". He singled out the first two tracks as highlights and gave the album a two-star honorable mention in his '90s Consumer Guide book.[5]
Prefix magazine's Matthew Flander described it as "a classic record from the band, capturing just about every great ’90s song they had aside from “The Wagon” and “Feel the Pain”." He also called the album a possible "one-up" from Mascis to Sebadoh's Bubble & Scrape, writing: "if that was his goal, you can see [...] how he might have tried to beat Barlow at his own game. And maybe there was no clear winner between the two, but we sure lucked out.[6] Stevie Chick of BBC called it a "[l]aconic, guitar-heavy masterpiece from Dinosaur Jr.’s second-wind." "There was something unabashedly classic about Where You Been’s rock," she writes, "deriving not least from Mascis’s copious guitar heroics, layering multiple tracks of scree and howl so the entire album feels like one epic, sky-scraping solo. [...] With his fondness for extended guitar-play, his country-soaked rock crunch, his cracked and sweet vocals, Where You Been identified Mascis as hewn from the same stone as Neil Young before him."[7] The A.V. Club
The Felled Trees Collective, consisting of members from Thrice, Samiam and No Motiv (also featuring appearances from Texas Is the Reason, Knapsack, Beat Union and numerous other bands), covered the album in its entirety on its 20th anniversary. The album was released on the 15th of October 2013 through the Siren Records webstore.[12]
The album received the following accolades:
Magnet | US | Albums of the Year | 20 | |
The Village Voice | US | The 1993 Pazz & Jop Critic's Poll | 40[13] | |
Melody Maker | UK | Melody Maker End Of Year Critic's List - 1993 | 7[14] | |
Select | UK | Albums of the Year | 28[15] | |
Vox | UK | Vox Albums of 1993 | 4[16] |
LAS Magazine | US | 90 Albums of the 90s | 76 | |
Tom Moon | US | 1,000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die | -[17] | |
Stereogum | US | Dinosaur Jr. Albums From Worst To Best | 4[18] | |
Select | UK | The 100 Best Albums of the 90s | 85[19] |
All songs written by J Mascis.
Album - Billboard (North America)
Singles - Billboard (North America)