Sonic Nurse

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Sonic Nurse
Studio album by Sonic Youth
Released June 8, 2004
Recorded July 2003 – February 2004 at Echo Canyon, New York City
Genre Alternative rock
Length 62:48
Label Geffen / Interscope
Producer Sonic Youth
Sonic Youth chronology

In the Fishtank 9
(2002)
Sonic Nurse
(2004)
SYR6: Koncertas Stan Brakhage Prisiminimui
(2005)
Singles from Sonic Nurse
  1. "Kim Gordon and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream"
    Released: 2003
  2. "Unmade Bed"
    Released: 2004

Sonic Nurse is the 13th album by Sonic Youth, released on June 7, 2004. The cover art was made by renowned artist Richard Prince from his Nurse Paintings series. Furthermore, one of Prince's photographic creations in this series is entitled "Dude Ranch Nurse" which is also the name of a song on this record.

"Pattern Recognition" is based on the 2003 William Gibson novel of the same name. They have used Gibson's work as influence before, notably on a few tracks from Daydream Nation.

"Kim Gordon and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream" was previously released as "Mariah Carey and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream" on the first Narnack Buddy Series 7".

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 77/100[1]
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [2]
Chicago Tribune (positive)[3]
Robert Christgau A−[4]
Entertainment Weekly A−[5]
The Guardian [6]
Pitchfork Media (8.5/10)[7]
PopMatters [1][8]
Mark Prindle [9]
Rolling Stone [10]
Tiny Mix Tapes [11]

The album so far has a score of 77 out of 100 from Metacritic based on "generally favorable reviews".[1] No Ripcord gave the album all ten stars and said it "could be the best guitar rock album since, well, Murray Street."[12] Drowned in Sound gave it all five stars and said the album was "the closest to creating a landmark on parallel with ‘Daydream Nation’ they’ve come since that particular record's nameday in ‘88, and in it’s dense textures it maybe signals the extinction of the antediluvian No Wave idyll; a Robert Zimmerman trip that somehow got mixed up with Joni Mitchell, Black Flag and a conceptualist oddball."[13] In his Consumer Guide, Robert Christgau gave the album an A− and said, "This unusually songful set is well up among their late good ones, its dissonances a lingua franca deployed less atmospherically than has been their recent practice."[4] While working for Blender, Christgau gave the same album four stars out of five and called it "[Sonic Youth's] most songful release since the major-label hellos Goo and Dirty, and by most standards their best since 1988's pivotal Daydream Nation."[14] Filter gave the album a score of 90% and called it "a gorgeous, bona fide gem."[15] Stylus Magazine gave it a B+ and said that the album, "if not proof of a band bursting with fresh ideas, is at least fresh-sounding."[16]

Prefix Magazine gave it a favorable review and said, "With Sonic Nurse, it's truly possible to see 2000's excruciatingly indulgent NYC Ghosts and Flowers as a speed bump on an otherwise smooth decade of record-making. Their last, 2002's bittersweet Murray Street, was a return to form, and the epic Sonic Nurse will only supply more evidence for Sonic Youth's canonization."[17] The Austin Chronicle gave it a score of four stars out of five and said, "Every song but one falls fully developed in the five- to seven-minute ballpark, brimming with enough dissonant wizardry, smart vocal imagery, and tonal shades of rock to fly the freak flag like no aging rockers ever have."[18] Yahoo! Music UK gave the album eight stars out of ten and said, "What emerges is Sonic Youth at complete ease with themselves and their music, operating simultaneously at the peak of their powers and with a powerful, audacious restraint."[19] Under the Radar also gave it eight stars out of ten and said the album "might capture something of indie rock's recent taste for emotional epics."[1] Uncut likewise gave the album four stars out of five and stated: "The Youth sound rejuvenated."[20] Dusted Magazine gave it a favorable review and said that "The songs, despite being mostly over five minutes long, are all to the point without feeling meandering.... The balance between noise and melody is right, with each emerging and vanishing at just the right point."[21] The A.V. Club also gave it a favorable review and said the album "compiles a laid-back hour of elaborate plucking and rhythm from five veteran musicians who reserve musical violence and poetic anger for when it feels most appropriate."[22] The Village Voice likewise gave it a favorable review and said the album "percolates the same melancholy satisfaction and nervous maturity, entropy and growth, in and out--but with an urgency and impulsiveness that risks upsetting the balance."[23] E! Online gave the album a B and called it "a cure for what ails the airwaves."[1] NME gave it a score of seven out of ten and said the album "sounds like a brilliant album by a lesser band."[1]

Other reviews are pretty average or mixed: Q gave the album three stars out of five and said it "finds [Sonic Youth] revelling in bursts of noise and awkwardness, but more surprisingly perhaps, taking as much comfort in sweet melody."[24] Mojo also gave the album three stars out of five and said it was not "a classic rock record. And it's not a classic Sonic Youth record. It's an excursion, into corners weird and corners familiar."[1] Alternative Press likewise gave the album three stars out of five and said it was "better than 90 percent of new rock, but with younger combos like Lightning Bolt and Liars stealing their thunder, these well-meaning vets come off as old and in the way."[1] Spin, however, gave it a score of five out of ten and called it "A strangely enervated Sonic Youth record, one that exchanges Murray Street's golden-years vigor for a sad sense of duty."[25]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Sonic Youth. 
No. TitleLyricsVocals Length
1. "Pattern Recognition"  GordonGordon 6:33
2. "Unmade Bed"  MooreMoore 3:53
3. "Dripping Dream"  MooreMoore 7:46
4. "Kim Gordon and the Arthur Doyle Hand Cream"  Sonic YouthGordon 4:51
5. "Stones"  MooreMoore 7:06
6. "Dude Ranch Nurse"  GordonGordon 5:44
7. "New Hampshire"  MooreMoore 5:12
8. "Paper Cup Exit"  RanaldoRanaldo, background vocals Moore 5:55
9. "I Love You Golden Blue"  GordonGordon 7:02
10. "Peace Attack"  MooreMoore 6:10

Bonus tracks

No. Title Length
11. "Kim Chords" (UK & Japan bonus track) 5:59
12. "Beautiful Plateau" (Japan bonus track) 3:08

Album charts

Year Album Chart Position
2004 Sonic Nurse Norwegian Albums Chart 21
Belgium Albums Chart 23
French Albums Chart 41
Italian Albums Chart 50
Irish Albums Chart 53
US Billboard Top 200 64
German Albums Chart 89

Personnel

References

External links

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