The Smashing Pumpkins' career-defining, multi-platinum selling
masterpiece Mellon Collie & The Infinite Sadness has been
remastered and made available as an expanded 5CD+DVD deluxe set.
The set includes the original album remastered, plus 64 bonus
tracks of previously unreleased material or alternate versions of
Mellon Collie era songs, and DVD featuring the live show filmed
at the Brixton Academy, London (1996) and bonus performances from
Rockpalast (1996). Also included in the deluxe lift-top box are
two books containing personal notes, lyrics, new collage artwork
plus a Decoupage kit for creating scenes from the Mellon Collie
universe.
Press Reviews
Classic Rock – Jan 2013 – 7/10
“Billy Corgan’s ambitions reached their zenith with this swollen
double album.”
Q – Jan 2013 - ****
“A blissful blip that produced one of the ‘90s’ finest rock
albums.”
BBC Review
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Billy Corgan doesn’t do small gestures. The Smashing Pumpkins’
ringleader – and the circus analogy is apt given this band's
history – desired a debut that’d find its place amongst the
greats. But although 1991’s Gish was certainly bold, it was
1993’s Siamese Dream that elevated his band to the global stage.
And how to follow up one prog-pop-rock odyssey? With another
twice as long, naturally. Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness:
the title’s clunky, but it’s got nothing on the contents. Split
into ‘Dawn to Dusk’ and ‘Twilight to Starlight’ discs, its 28
tracks are actually the result of a substantial editing process,
the band having recorded over 50 for potential inclusion.
Which goes some way to explaining the epic scale of this reissue.
Amongst its 64 extras are a strings-free Tonight, Tonight and an
acoustic version of Thru the Eyes of Ruby. These rough(er) mixes
and skeletal(ish) sketches are interesting ins – but only a
true fan will resist the lure of the skip button.
Corgan argued 1995’s double-disc effort wasn’t a concept album,
but there’s certainly a thematic back, which the frontman
summarised as a farewell to his youth. The impudence of a title
like F*** You (An Ode to No One) can only come from regression
into teenage angst.
Stylistically, Mellon Collie is all over the place.
Building-razing rockers rub shoulders with piano ballads,
heartfelt confessionals with overblown bombast. It showcases this
band at both its best and worst; and such is the variety that no
two fans are likely to have the exact same favourite tracks.
Lead single Bullet With Butterfly Wings is raw and rugged; while
the woozy, romantic Lily (My One and Only) is a track of real
tenderness. The charming 1979, the final song recorded for this
album, almost didn’t make the cut at all – which would have been
madness, as it’s brilliant.
Stumbleine is a bare-d voice-and-guitar piece, but the ugly
squall of X.Y.U. threatens to pop one’s speakers irreparably. The
electronic thuds of Beautiful, meanwhile, foreshadow the digital
design of 1998’s follow-up LP, Adore. The best track remains
Tonight, Tonight – with its string section present, it’s almost
untouchably perfect.
Mellon Collie is no masterpiece, but its ambition is clearer than
anything else Corgan has ever been involved with. It’s the
grandest of Pumpkins gestures, expensive and infuriating and
inspirational – and just occasionally capable of tossing the
listener around like a ragdoll.
--Mike Diver
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