The Deal: Another Pavement reissue brightens the legacy.

The Good: In some quarters, BTC is considered past the apex of Pavement’s career arc, but even if you buy into that, this is still remarkably epic shit. The original 12 Mitch Easter-produced cuts show Stephen Malkmus and crew solidifying all the aspects of the rock canon they’d already remade in their own fractured “I’m of several minds” aesthetic: the hop-along pop of “Shady Lane” evaporating into early Floyd space-out, folk recorder bookending Sonic Youth feedback in “Transport Is Arranged,” the Byrds-meet-Dinosaur Jr. guitar workout of “Date w/IKEA,” to name but a few. And not many other lyricists could describe a crumbling relationship as imaginatively (and succinctly) as Malkmus does on “Type Slowly” – “One of us is a cigar stand/and one of us is a lovely blue incandescent guillotine.” What makes these Matador reissues top-notch are the voluminous extras, and this set, the fourth, has the best yet (cf. Scott Kanneberg’s “Winner of the …,” the recast revved-up twang of “Slowly Typed,” the Thin Lizzy-like “Roll With the Wind,” the just-as-good-as-the-original version of Echo & the Bunnymen’s “The Killing Moon,” etcetera). Disc One includes six b-sides and two previously unreleased outtakes, and Disc Two’s 24 tracks feature a goldmine of 15 previously unreleased in-studio-sessions songs, compilation cuts and outtakes.

The Bad: Two or three outtakes may not be essential, but B-list Pavement is better than most A-lists.

The Verdict: They rewrote the rock template in ingenious ways, but this might be the most accessible place to start for neophytes.

John Schacht has been writing about music since the Baroque era. He's interviewed everybody from Stevie Ray Vaughan (total dick) to Panda Bear (nice enough). He teaches a UNCC course called "Pop Culture...

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