The Smashing Pumpkins –
Glass and The Machines of God
(soniclovenoize reconstruction)
Disc One:
1. If There Is A God
2. Cash Car Star
3. The Imploding
Voice
4. Wound
5. The Sacred +
Profane
6. Stand Inside Your
Love
7. Real Love
8. Innosence
9. Let Me Give The
World To You
10. The Crying Tree
of Mercury
11. White Spyder
12. Raindrops +
Sunshowers
13. Glass + The Ghost
Children
14. Go
Disc Two:
1. Glass Theme
2. The Everlasting
Gaze
3. Dross
4. In My Body
5. Speed Kills
6. Lucky 13
7. Heavy Metal
Machine
8. Blue Skies Bring
Tears
9. I of the Mourning
10. Here’s To The
Atom Bomb
11. Try, Try, Try
12. Home
13. This Time
14. With Every Light
This is a reconstruction of the proposed double-concept
album originally meant to be The Smashing Pumpkins’ fifth and final proper
studio album in 1999. Originally
conceived as a rock opera, the concept was dropped because of band member
disintegration and disinterest as well as record label pushback. The album was eventually released as the
massive commercial failure MACHINA/The Machines of God in 2000, with most of
the leftover tracks released posthumously by the band without their label’s
consent as MACHINA II/The Friends & Enemies of Modern Music later than
year. This reconstruction attempts to
cull the best possible sources (including the Machina pre-master and the best
vinyl rip of Machina II), unifying their respective volumes and organize them into a cohesive double album that
follows the Machina storyline. Specific
alternate versions of some tracks were utilized to give the album more of an
organic “live band”-sound as opposed to the overproduced Machina album.
The Smashing Pumpkins were no strangers to turmoil. Firing their drummer Jimmy Chamberlin in 1996
for perpetual drug use, the band made a 180-turn from their patented guitar
sonics that made 1995’s Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness a landmark double
album to an unusual combination of acoustic and electronic for their follow-up,
1998’s Adore. Despite having superior
songwriting and inventive arrangements, the album was less of a success as
their previous efforts. The tour in
support of the album showed the band re-interpreting the soft-spoken material
for a live rock-band, and the eventual re-hiring of Chamberlin in late 1998
showed promise that The Smashing Pumpkins were back to what they did best: loud
fuzzy guitars pared with some of the best drumming of the decade.
By April 1999, the band reconvened for their Arising Tour,
meant to showcase the return of the original lineup. Most of the set featured all new material,
effortlessly written by head-Pumpkin Billy Corgan within the four months
prior. These tunes were part of a larger
song cycle that would fill two CDs of a double-concept album tentatively called
Glass and The Machines of God which concerned a rock star named Glass , his
true love June, their rise and fall and Glass's redemption.
Most notably, the four members of The Smashing Pumpkins were to portray
the characters of the concept album—Glass and his band The Machines of God, who
were literal parodies of the public personas of the four members of The
Smashing Pumpkins themselves —in promotion of the album.
Unfortunately the machine was never switched on. Halfway through recording the album, bass
player D’Arcy Wretzky was dismissed from the band due to alleged erratic
behavior; how could the band portray a convincing parody of themselves without
the key members? The situation worsened
with guitarist James Iha’s increasing ambivalence to the band itself, as well
as a record label unwilling to promote a convoluted double-album follow-up to
the commercial failure Adore. The
solution was to scrap the concept and release the best material as MACHINA/The
Machines of God, much like Lifehouse became Who’s Next 25 years earlier (a
reconstruction also featured on this blog). Machina was even more of a failure than Adore and by the end of the tour
in support of the album, Iha wanted out.
The Smashing Pumpkins played their final show that December. In one final rebellious move against the
record label that had abandoned him, Corgan released the outtakes from the
Machina sessions as a limited edition vinyl release, Machina II, with the
explicit instructions to share and pirate it, making the album one of the first
to be freely distributed on the internet by a major artist.
Reconstructing Glass and The Machines of God is no easy
task. Corgan has been extremely vague
and cryptic about how it would have been constructed, in as much as leaking
false numerical codes allegedly forming track sequences. Point of fact, of the 30-or-so songs
recording during the sessions, Corgan has only divulged the narrative context
of “Blue Skies Bring Tears”, “Speed Kills” and “With Every Light”. Luckily Corgan has leaked a blueprint of the
song cycle itself with a list of 17 of the cycle’s songs, all offering varying
ways the songs could fit into the cycle.
Using this map, as well as song lyric interpretation matched with the
synopsis of the album’s story written in Corgan’s typical superfluous prose, we
are able to chart out a track sequence.
Both Corgan’s chart and his synopsis are included for reference.
The only issue left is what sources should be used. To avoid the terrible mastering found on
Machina I, I used a rip of the leaked pre-master, featuring a larger dynamic
range as well as subtlety different mixes.
As for the Machina II tracks I used the best possible source, the Virgin
promo rip. I then re-EQd the entire rip
to match the EQ parameters of the tracks that were officially released (since
those few were sourced from a non-vinyl master).
Since we also have a number of alternate versions of many of the songs,
I specifically vied towards the versions of the songs that featured more of an
organic ‘live-band’ and stripped-down arrangement and production, as that was allegedly
how Glass and The Machines of God would have sounded. The bootlegs Machina Acoustic Demos and The Original FEMM Tape were used, they were not the "th13rteen remasters" but original CD rips. Setting a 28-song limit to ensure that this not
become too overblown, a few songs were left on the cutting room floor: “The Age
of Innocence” is excluded from this reconstruction as the song was written and
recorded at the last minute and tagged onto the end of the Machina album, having nothing to do with the song cycle at all; “Slow Dawn”, “Vanity” and “Saturnine”
all seemed too unfinished, skeletal and unneeded to communicate the story; “Soul
Power” was a cover; and “Le Deux Machina” was already an element of “Glass +
The Ghost Children”. By the end, I have
arranged two nearly 60-minute discs of 14 songs each, which seemed to be The
Standard Smashing Pumpkins Album Length.
Disc one beings with Glass establishing his character as a
rather agnostic rock star, leader of The Machines of God, utilizing Corgan’s
acoustic demo of “If There Is A God” which overlaps into the pummeling “Cash
Car Star”; although most reconstructions of this album begin with “Glass
Theme”, I chose this alternate route because this was how the band often
performed the two songs live. It was also
quite reminiscent of the first two tracks from The Smashing Pumpkins’ 1994
b-sides compilation Pisces Iscariot, which always struck me as an extremely
dynamic opening. “The Imploding Voice”
represents ‘The Voice’ of God speaking to Glass through the radio and
instructing him to spread the word of love to the world through his music;
“Wound” is Glass’s reaction to the sudden realization that he is a modern-day
prophet and with “The Sacred + Profane” Glass begins to change the message of
his band’s music with heavenly divination.
The next part of the song cycle involves Glass’s love
interest June and so all of the ‘love songs’ are grouped together—“Stand Inside
Your Love”, “Real Love”, “Innosence” and “Let Me Give The World To You”. Following this, Glass reaches a ‘crossroads’
in trying to balance his hedonistic rock n roll life with June vs. what he
believes as his spiritual duty, articulated in “The Crying Tree of Mercury”,
“White Spyder” (the spyder being a symbol for June’s drug use) and “Raindrops +
Sunshowers.” Following is the standard
Smashing Pumpkins epic 10-mnute track, “Glass + The Ghost Children” in which
the dictaphone middle section now actually makes sense as it specifically deals
with Glass confessing his holy charge to June but fearing he may be instead mad. James Iha’s “Go” has been problematic as it
didn’t seem to fit in with the Machina concept at all, so it is sequenced here
to close disc one, much as his “Take Me Down” closes disc one of Mellon
Collie. Perhaps it is sung from June’s
point of view?
The second disc opens with what Corgan revealed as the ‘live
set’ of the album, in which several songs would be grouped together as a mock
live performance of The Machines of God.
Opening with actual audience ambience from a soundboard tape of their
9/20/2000 performance, Glass has grown cynical from his fans’ perceived
betrayal of ‘rock n roll’ in “Glass Theme” and questions if ‘The Voice’ was
even real in “The Everlasting Gaze” as his own band’s record sales plummet. June becomes alienated from Glass and her
resent is stated in “Dross”, following by increased drug use and a withdrawal
inside herself in “In My Body”. After an
explosive fight, June is killed in a car crash as depicted in “Speed Kills”,
using the ‘live-band’ version from Machina 2.
Glass blames himself and this sends him over the edge in “Lucky 13”, finally deciding to break up the band in “Heavy Metal Machine”.
The night before the final show, Glass has a terrifying
dream as heard in “Blue Skies Bring Tears”: a vision that without God, love,
fans or even a band, he is now completely alone. Here I chose an early arrangement of the song
as performed on the Arising Tour to avoid the overproduced album versions. Abandoning all belongings, Glass takes to the
streets as a beggar, as depicted in “I of the Mourning”, and “Here’s To The
Atom Bomb” (the mellow version from Machina 2).
In being alone and with nothing, he realizes that love, God, etc
was there in his heart all along in “Try, Try, Try” (the mellow version found
on the "Untitled" promo CD), “Home” and “This Time”.
The album closes with “With Every Light”, as Corgan had claimed, some
sort of happy ending.
An interesting side note is that within 6 months to a year from
now, Corgan plans to release a remixed and remastered Machina featuring his originally-intended
double-album tracklist as a part of the remastered series of The Smashing
Pumpkins’ discography. Will it appear
and sound as I have offered here? That
is anyone’s guess, and I am curious to see how close I am to his vision. But keep in mind Billy Corgan’s penchant for
historical revision, as well as the recent fan dissatisfaction with the
remasters’ quality control issues. Whether
this reconstruction is truly what the artist intended, it will always be here
as an 'album that never was' just in case the real deal is crushed underneath Corgan’s own heavy metal
machine.
Sources used:
Rotten Apples/Judas O (2001 Virgin Records)
The Original F.E.M.M. Tape
(bootleg 2003)
MACHINA/the machines of God (pre-master, 1999)
MACHINA II/friends and enemies of modern music (Virgin Records-sourced
needledrop, 2001)
Machina Acoustic Demos (bootleg)
Untitled (Virgin promo CD 2001)
flac --> wav --> editing in SONAR and Audacity-->
flac encoding via TLH lv8
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included
*md5, artwork and tracknotes included
Thanks for this, just listened to the whole thing: great, great work you did !
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI will look into those!
DeleteAlthough the Jethro Tull album, the entire Chateau Disaster tapes are going to be released in one month on the A Passion Play Deluxe, and it will be released in the correct tracklist I would have done anyways. So I'm not sure what I could do with that!
It'll be interesting to see how this compares to the reissue that's planned:
ReplyDeletehttp://consequenceofsound.net/2014/05/billy-corgan-to-reissue-smashing-pumpkins-machina-in-its-original-form/
Thank you very much for this. I intend to listen to it tomorrow. This is one of my favorite bands ever.
ReplyDeleteI cannot wait for the Machina reissue.. and I love what you did here. great fun.
ReplyDeleteI'm extremely interested in hearing the raw premaster, but I can't seem to find it out there for the life of me, e.g. all mediafire and megaupload links are dead off of the netphoria forums and others I've checked. If you could give me a place to get it from, or even put it up yourself that would be absolutely amazing! You did a really amazing job on this reconstruction just like SFTBH, although I'm curious to why you intentionally left the mix quiet instead of amplifying everything to take up the full spectrum. Either way, hit me up with anything you can! Cheers mate!
ReplyDeleteI'm not much into the "loud at any volume" aesthetic, so I did not normalize/amplify the volume. When in doubt, turn it up! ;)
DeleteAfter reading I had to download and listen. I think you've done it man, I think you have done the original story that was ment to be told! I'm a huge Smashing Pumpkins fan, Machina is my favorite album by them XD. I tried to make a playlist of the original list Billy Corgan had it made sense but it didn't at the same time. So this album you made is so worth it man! You are awesome for making it! :D
ReplyDeleteI saw in the sources too, the pre-master of Machina? O.o I tried looking for it everywhere I couldn't find it, because I noticed how The Sacred + Profane started differently. Is there any chance on sending me the pre-master perchance? That would be awesome if you could :)
Anyway, this is just pure awesome man! Glad to see another Machina fan! :)
Hi! I just discovered your blog this evening while waiting for computer things to finish. As big a Pumpkins fan as I am, I had no idea that "Machina" was scaled down from Billy's original vision. I've been listening to your reconstruction for the last 40 minutes or so (I'm on "Let Me Give The World To You" as I type this), and I have to say... this thing flows SO MUCH BETTER! Kudos to you and your attention to detail. I was looking at a long night of suffering, but now I've got an old favorite in a new skin to keep me company for a while. Thanks for all your hard work!
ReplyDeleteAwesome work! Thank you SO much! I can't wait to listen, and the only question I have is where 'Pale Scales' fits in to the whole picture. Was it meant only for live performance or was it part of GATMOG as an album? THANK YOU!!!
ReplyDeleteYeah it seemed to be just an instrumental introduction for the tour, much like "Glimpses" was on the 1997 mini-tour.
DeleteI'm going to download it. SP is one of my favorites :)
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDeleteThis is such an awesome effort, thank you very much. If you don't mind I mean to translate this to Spanish in my very own blog, with proper links to your web page and cheers to your name. If you're ok with it, of course.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeletesoniclovenoize - excellent work. I'm just listening to this whole album front to back and I'm thoroughly enjoying it. This is how Machina should have been presented to the masses, not what the studio pushed out. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteGood effort at normalizing the disparate sound of the source material.
ReplyDeleteSome of the song choices are not necessarily what I'd have gone for: I'd go either full band or piano versions from M2 for If There is a God, I get the idea behind using the live version of Speed Kills and Glass' Theme but I'd again go with the M2 versions for cohesion. I understand why you'd decide to leave Age of Innocence off, but to include Go (which has no relation to the album concept) and not include one of the best songs of the Machina era (AoI), I can't agree with. Ditto with Vanity and Slow Dawn, again two excellent songs that don't sound at all unfinished to me and far better than some you put on. Saturnine is an difficult song, recorded originally for Adore and rejigged (like Let Me Give the World to You). The M2 version is meh and poor audio quality so I'd be inclined to leave it off. Obviously I'm less interested in Billy's overarching concept and more in getting a cohesive album consisting of the best songs in the best possible audio quality.
Wow, this is seriously awesome - thank you so much for this! Definitely gonna check out the rest of your blog now. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteThank you, great job. Just wondering, I've heard that the Q101 version is better for M2, and sounds better to my ears also. Any thoughts, views, opinions, observations?
ReplyDeleteIn my opinion (as of right now as I type this) I'd say the Q101 rip does sound a bit better (close the the masters as heard on the official releases) but it is way loud and a little hot; the Virgin rip in contrast is more dynamic and has some headroom, although the sound is a bit subdued.
DeleteAt the time, I must have chosen the Virgin rip over the Q101 because of the loudness. If I were to upgrade this, I'd chose the Q101 instead.
I absolutely love your take on this! I like your narrative as well.
ReplyDeleteBilly announced via Instagram, just a couple days ago, that he signed a label contract to have Machina officially released in its original form!
Hopefully that means he was able to get through the red tape that held him up a few years ago. I'll be curious to see how it compares to your version, but either way I really enjoy what you've done here. Whatever Billy releases, I will likely still come back to yours from time to time.
Hey man, I wanna download the mix but the site isn't working with my anti-virus. Is there another location where I can find this particular mix?
ReplyDeleteJust found your Blog - this is pretty damn epic coming from an old school pumpkinhead, very excited to check this out! I also am excited for your Pink Floyd, Beatles, and particularly the Dylan & The Dead mixes!
ReplyDeleteThe Grateful Dead also have an alleged "Lost Album" that could be cool for you to check out!
always LOVED so much of the output of this period, but i was never satisfied with either album's sequencing. i've been making my own mixes from all of this mess since the original Machina II leaks (one ongoing edit titled Machinations i simply prefer to shuffle), and today i am so glad to have followed a thread from a last.fm comment about the Glass + Ghost Children demo to this page. i am nearly to the end of your mix and it is WONDERFUL. thematically and sonically grouped, the sequence is EXCELLENT. thank you for putting this together!
ReplyDeleteAWESOME WORK!
ReplyDeleteFascinating narrative. Is it possible to transfer this to MEGA? That's the only way I could download it.
ReplyDeleteThis is still my favorite way to listen to Machina. None of the other fan mixes do it for me quite like this one.
ReplyDeleteWhere is the download link for this one?
ReplyDeleteIs there a download link?
ReplyDeleteJust had to wipe my harddrive clean and unfortunately lost this album. Bummed to see that it's not longer hosted for download. I hope you'll be able to share it again some day!
ReplyDeleteI am waiting to see what we get in the Machina box.
DeleteI truly cannot wait for that.
DeleteNO LINK TO DOWNLOAD ?
ReplyDelete7 years ago....
ReplyDeletePeek-a-boo!
ReplyDeleteAny updates on the DL link??
https://mega.nz/folder/EywElRqQ#uSWQxXgcpRmfhz2rEHoFyw
ReplyDeleteThanks for that, but I'm looking for the FLAC version.
DeleteFirst off, this is my absolute favorite way to listen to Machina and Machina II now, so thanks for that.
ReplyDeleteI'm actually looking for your live compilations of Adore and Machina that you posted years ago on Netphoria. Any chance of an upload of those? I'd love to hear them.
There is a possibility for a re-upload? Can't find the link.
ReplyDeleteFLACs
ReplyDeleteDisc 1: https://www88.zippyshare.com/v/S5fMibt8/file.html
Disc 2: https://www88.zippyshare.com/v/kkq4RqDn/file.html
if it gets taken down again, you can listen and download mp3 and flac versions at telegram channel tspatum ( smashing pumpkins atum)
ReplyDeleteis there a chance to get a link for this? my email is zen.baby444@gmail.com
ReplyDelete