Complaining about this album being an obvious photocopy of its influences
is a bit like cursing the sky for being blue. Reworking past inspirations
into something else has always been the raison d'être of Bobby Gillespie
and company, after all. But that said, there's no question that Sonic
Flower Groove is one goofy headscratcher of a release, the sound of a
band that didn't quite know exactly what to do yet trying to record a
big-budget (of sorts) debut album and ending up with little more than
a pristine but dull photocopy of Turn! Turn! Turn! While not intrinsically
horrible, it's not intrinsically much of anything else either, and certainly
in light of everything the band did in the following years, it's the most
wistful, fragile, and ultimately boring of its releases. The Byrds worship
evident in earlier songs like "Velocity Girl" was here taken
to ridiculous extremes, and if Jim Beattie wasn't trying to hide his love
for chiming guitars, he wasn't trying to do anything with it either. Songs
like "Gentle Tuesday" and "Imperial" (which benefits
from strings and a more direct vocal) are so obviously straight from the
early Roger McGuinn and company model that one might as well just pretend
that's what's being heard. It's also a bit of a bemusing shock to hear
Gillespie trying to politely and gently sing as opposed to his later dripping
of attitude in every borrowed Jagger sneer, but such are the ways. This
all said, there's a weird way Sonic Flower Groove was prescient -- if
the Stone Roses loved the Byrds too, they loved this phase of Primal Scream
just as much, while jaunty songs like "Treasure Trip" slightly
forecast bits of Brit-pop almost ten years down the line. If there's a
secret highlight, "Love You," with its moody ghost-of-Jesus
& Mary Chain drums underpinning the slow chime, is it.
(by Ned Raggett, AMG)
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