Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 09/23/2008
Between 1992 and 2007,
Golden Smog, the engagingly shambolic
alt country stupor-group featuring members of
the Jayhawks,
Wilco,
Soul Asylum, and
Run Westy Run, cut two EPs and three full-length albums. That may not seem like much of a catalog from which to draw a "Greatest Hits" album, but
Stay Golden, Smog: The Best of Golden Smog, The Rykodisc Years doesn't even dig that deep.
Stay Golden, Smog gathers eight of the fourteen songs from the
Smog's first full album, 1995's
Down by the Old Mainstream, and eight of the fifteen tunes from the follow-up, 1998's
Weird Tales. As the title would suggest,
Golden Smog's two most recent efforts, released by
Lost Highway Records, aren't represented here, and their debut EP, 1992's
On Golden Smog -- originally released on a small Minneapolis indie label and later reissued by
Rykodisc -- is ignored. At this writing, the entire
Golden Smog catalog is in print, and all of this begs the question: what exactly is the point of this album? There's no arguing that there's plenty of fine music on this collection;
Golden Smog may have started as a drunken goof among a handful of friends, but there was an undeniable chemistry between the participants, and with the likes of
Jeff Tweedy,
Gary Louris,
Dan Murphy,
Marc Perlman,
Kraig Johnson, and
Jody Stephens on board, it's no surprise that this disc features some really fine songs played by friends who know how to make them work in the studio. Unlike most side projects,
Golden Smog was capable of coming up with material worthy of the members' day jobs (such as
"Won't Be Coming Home," "To Call My Own," and
"Pecan Pie"), and to bait the hook for completists, this set tosses in two unreleased tracks, a rough early take of
"Until You Came Along," and a cover of
Brian Wilson's
"Love and Mercy." But as an overview of
Golden Smog's career thus far,
Stay Golden, Smog leaves too much by the sidelines to do the trick, and since
Down by the Old Mainstream and
Weird Tales are in print and available at mid-line price, this disc isn't even especially cost effective. In short, only the most casual observers or superfans desperate for the two unreleased songs need concern themselves with this.
~Mark Deming, All Music Guide