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Guided By Voices - Sandbox (Glacial Blue Vinyl)
Regular price £29.00 Save £-29.00Product Description
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Even
back
in
1987,
Guided
By
Voices
was
not
content
to
release
just
one
album
in
a
year—Sandbox
was
released
in
the
summer
of
that
year
following
Devil
Between
My
Toes’
appearance
that
February.
Likewise,
in
similar
GBV
style,
the
sound
and
approach
of
the
two
albums
could
not
be
more
different.
Where
Devil
mostly
mines
a
darker,
lo-fi
psychedia,
along
with
several
instrumental
explorations,
Sandbox
is
sunny,
direct,
has
a
bigger,
crunchier
sound,
and
zero
instrumentals.
Where
Devil
has
a
murky
and
impressionistic
black
and
white
photo
of
a
rooster
for
a
cover,
Sandbox
sports
a
full
color
photo
of
the
band
relaxing
on
a
lawn
on
a
sunny
day.
Let’s
also
recall
that
unlike
today,
in
1987
a
full-color
album
jacket
wasn’t
just
a
little
more
expensive
than
a
black
and
white
one,
it
was
way
more
expensive.
Right
up
front,
the
band
was
communicating
that
this
was
a
more
commercially
ambitious
endeavor,
while
behind
the
scenes
they
rented
better
gear
for
a
bigger
sound,
and
tackled
more
sophisticated
arrangements
and
honed
in
on
the
hooks
and
harmonies
of
the
songs.
Of
all
the
band’s
early
self-released
albums,
Sandbox
differs
the
most
from
the
sound
fans
would
later
associate
with
the
group,
which
is
in
itself
a
recommendation.
Nowhere
else
will
you
hear
the
perfectly
rendered
three-part
harmonies
of
“Long
Distance
Man,”
direct
Beatles
quotes,
or
Robert
Pollard
reveling
in
his
southern
Ohio
drawl.
It’s
also
true
that
one
of
the
more
enjoyable
aspects
of
the
record
is
finding
all
the
places
where
the
band’s
future
is
indeed
foreshadowed.
Simply
put,
Guided
By
Voices
just
can’t
help
but
be
a
little
weird,
even
when
attempting
something
like
a
power
pop
album.
At
the
close
of
the
opening
track,
Pollard
announces,
“Ladies
and
gentlemen!
Back
by
popular
demand
for
your
entertainment
and
spiritual
enlightenment...Electric
Jam
Soul
Aquarium!”
a
truly
“wtf
is
happening
here”
moment.
Or
the
stripped
down
gloom
of
“Trap
Soul
Door”—a
track
that
could
be
right
at
home
on
nearly
any
later
GBV
album
wherein
Pollard
intones,
“Just
one
spark
can
start
a
hell
of
a
fire.”
Little
did
he
know
how
true
that
statement
would
become.
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