Smashing Pumpkins: Shiny And Oh So Bright vol. 1/LP: No Past. No Future. No Sun.

With a deliciously pretentious title, Shiny And Oh So Bright vol. 1/LP: No Past. No Future. No Sun., Billy Corgan and company (Pumpkins co-founders James Iha, and Jimmy Chamberlin, as well as longtime guitarist Jeff Schroeder) are all back together, for the first time since 2000’s Machina II/The Friends & Enemies of Modern Music. Corgan has continued to put out music under the Pumpkins moniker since, including 2016’s Monuments to an Elegy, but Chamberlin and Iha have resurrected the Pumpkin’s distinctive sound, a dreamlike and hard-edged grind that Corgan’s post-Machina bandmates were never quite able to recreate. (Original bassist D’arcy Wretzky claimed she was not invited to the reunion; Corgan has said that she refused to return)
The album’s second single “Silvery Sometimes (Ghosts)” is the Pumpkins we know and love, oh, how we love them. Open-road drumming and guitars falling in line, dreamy keyboards and Corgan’s nasally promise. It’s beautiful. It hurts the way “Perfect” hurt, the way “1979” hurt, the rapidly-approaching end of something that was never as glorious as we believe it could have been. “Travels” isn’t nearly as good, but maintains the vibe, a sort of fitting B-Side as our heroes search for their place in the world.
But just as “Silvery Sometimes” is the Pumpkins at their best, the first single, “Solara” is the Pumpkins at their melodramatic worst – “Tear down the sun/bring down the sun” is sheer mopester poetry recited by the crown prince himself, set against standard-issue industrial backbeats. “She kills the antique clock” on “Marchin’ On” is no better.