by Kyle Olson   
               
              In an effort to fulfill some bizarre
              need in my life, I purchase a lot of CDs, both old and new. They
              are obsessively cataloged and organized and poured over track by
              track (Seriously, it's obsessive. It involves post-it notes and
              code and excel spreadsheets). It is truly a labor of love (and
              an unhealthy psychological imperative). But, since I am consuming
              so much music, I thought I could use this constant influx for the
              powers of good. Should I come across anything worth sharing (either
              a new release or an old favorite), I will share them with you.
              So you'll love me.
                    
              Galaxie 500 -
                    Peel Sessions (20/20/20) 
                The most memorable Peel
                Sessions, it seems, are the ones where the bands gave the
                audience something new. For instance, Belle and Sebastian had
                an oft-bootlegged 2002 edition where they sloppily (and festively)
    ripped through a host of Christmas songs. It was fun and intimate (though
                not always terribly great). If bands on the Peel Sessions had
                a day to cobble together four tracks, the end product often wouldn't
                be as good as an album recording, but it also wouldn't be a simple
                live performance. It was something special and singular that
                was often squandered on the same old tracks available on the
                bands' albums. There were bands that took the opportunity, however,
                to bring the BBC audience a unique experience: new songs, new
                versions, new arrangements. Galaxie 500 seems to have taken the
                opportunity, during their two appearances, to share their influences
                by interspersing fantastic covers between the songs the covers
                helped inspire. 
     
    Galaxie 500's "Peel Sessions" begins with a cover of the Sex Pistol's "Submission." Whereas
    the original was ostensibly a love song, the sneer with which it was delivered
    gave it a certain violence: the title being both "underwater" in
    love as well as...well....submission. Shown through the lens of Galaxie 500's
    hazy twee shoegaze, the song becomes a sixties garage-pop ode to being helpless
    in love (though to be fair, MOST indie pop songs are about being helpless
    in love). They immediately follow this love-ified punk anthem with a cover
    of minimalist post-punkers Young Marble Giants's track "Final Day." This
    time, they transform the tightly wound original into something that sounds
    like a forgotten Vashti Bunyan track, seeming to soundtrack an idyllic English
    country afternoon with its soothing folksy charms. 
     
    A handful of original tracks follow, as well as cover of Buffy Sainte-Marie,
    and it's all unbelievably good. It seems completely remarkable that these
    songs, recorded by a band that broke up over 15 years ago, don't sound dated
    in the slightest. Lead singer/guitarist Dean Wareham strums away through
    these languorous and slow pop tracks, letting the reverb pedal do its work.
    Manageable levels of feedback create backdrops of narcotic bliss for Dean
    (and co-vocalist Naomi Yang) to croon over, giving pop kids of the world
    aural parkas to wrap themselves in. These songs are emotional enough for
    twee romantics to relate to, and the music has this lovely, comforting quality
    despite the guitar-drone. Galaxie 500 are like a version of the Velvet Underground
    that you wouldn't be nervous to introduce to your mom. (Unless your mom is
    a heroin addict, in which case she'd probably want to be the real thing). 
     
    Closing out the set is perhaps the highlight of the album. They've taken
    the wonderful Jonathan Richman's song "Don't Let Our Youth Go to Waste," and
    completely made it their own. Transforming the originally a capella track
    into a guitar-soaked anthem to the youth energy that is at the heart of pop
    music, Galaxie 500 gives listeners a place to get lost in for it's seven-minute
    duration. And at the end of that seven minutes, the listener has absolutely
    no choice but to hit play on the stereo and enjoy all eight songs all over
    again. With a collection of tracks like this, the chief criticism of the
    album is that it isn't twice as long. Lord knows people would want to hear
    it. 
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