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Propeller (Guided by Voices album)

Propeller
Guided by voices propeller.jpg
Studio album by Guided by Voices
Released 1992
Recorded 1991–1992
Genre Indie rock
Length 36:07
Label Rockathon Records
Producer Robert Pollard, Mike "Rep" Hummel
Guided by Voices chronology
Same Place The Fly Got Smashed
(1990)Same Place The Fly Got Smashed1990
Propeller
(1992)
Vampire on Titus
(1993)Vampire on Titus1993
One of the original handmade covers, used in the 2005 re-release
One of the original handmade covers, used in the 2005 re-release
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars
Pitchfork Media (9.2/10)

Propeller is the fifth album by Dayton, Ohio indie rock group Guided by Voices.

Conceived initially by Robert Pollard as a farewell album in the face of years of obscurity and mounting debt, the album ended up "propelling" the band to a higher-profile status and influence, affording the band a lasting position in the indie rock canon.

While significant portions were recorded in a professional recording studio (though later to be "lovingly fucked with" by Mike "Rep" Hummel, of Mike Rep and the Quotas), the album is notable for being the first of the band's albums to make extensive use of 4-track cassette and lo-fi recording techniques as an aesthetic unto itself. Songs are frequently punctuated by unexpected blasts of noise, awkward tape edits, sped-up or slowed-down vocal or instrumental parts, and other sonic bric-a-brac. An interesting result of this technique is the intro to the album's opening track, "Over the Neptune/Mesh Gear Fox". What appears to be the sound of a band taking the stage before a throng of thousands of fans chanting "G-B-V! G-B-V!" was actually created by Guided by Voices in the studio (the band had not played live in years, and never to more than a handful of people at the time of recording). Nevertheless, the inclusion of this clip ensured the canonization of the "G-B-V!" chant, heard at essentially every Guided by Voices concert thereafter, and the entire opening sequence was faithfully recreated at the band's final show in 2004.

The cover art also contributed to the album's legend. Initially self-released only in a limited vinyl run of 500, each copy of the album received a unique, handmade cover. Decorated by band members, friends and family with myriad methods such as screen-printing, hand-painting, and affixing various found objects (including an empty six-pack carton of Natural Light) to plain white sleeves, these albums grew in value over the years and as of 2005, were known to have sold for prices in the thousands of dollars. The album was first given a wide release by Scat Records when it was appended to the CD version of GbV's 1993 album Vampire on Titus. Later, both albums were given a standalone CD release.


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