Isn't Anything
Isn't Anything is the debut studio album by the Irish-English rock band My Bloody Valentine, released on 21 November 1988 through the independent label Creation Records.[1] The record features the band's classic lineup of Kevin Shields on vocals and guitar, Bilinda Butcher on vocals and guitar, Colm Ó Cíosóig on drums, and Debbie Googe on bass, with the group self-producing the project at Foel Studio in Llanfair Caereinion, Powys, Wales, over a two-week period marked by intense sessions and sleep deprivation.[2][3] Clocking in at 12 tracks and approximately 37 minutes, the album showcases a raw blend of distorted guitars, ethereal vocals, and unconventional song structures that marked a significant evolution from the band's earlier post-punk influences.[4] The sound of Isn't Anything is characterized by its pioneering use of noise pop and dream pop elements, with Kevin Shields' innovative guitar techniques—employing tremolo arms, reverse reverb, and layered distortion—creating a dense, swirling sonic texture that would come to define the emerging shoegaze genre.[5] Standout tracks such as "(When You Wake) You're Still in a Dream," "Lose My Breath," and "Cupid Come" exemplify this approach, combining abrasive noise bursts with melodic hooks and Bilinda Butcher's soft, buried vocals to evoke a sense of disorientation and beauty.[6] Upon release, the album garnered strong critical praise for its bold experimentation and was a commercial success within the independent music scene, reaching number one on the UK Independent Albums Chart and influencing subsequent alternative rock acts. Its legacy endures as a foundational work that revolutionized guitar-based music, paving the way for My Bloody Valentine's later masterpiece Loveless and the broader shoegaze movement.[7]Production
Background
My Bloody Valentine formed in Dublin in 1983, initially as a post-punk outfit influenced by bands like the Birthday Party and the Cramps, with Kevin Shields and Colm Ó Cíosóig as key members alongside lead vocalist Dave Conway.[8][9] The band's early career featured several independent releases, including the 1985 mini-album This Is Your Bloody Valentine and the 1987 full-length Ecstasy, which showcased a gothy, conceptual style marked by dark themes hidden behind childlike aesthetics.[8][9] Conway's departure in 1987, prompted by health issues and a lack of commitment to the band's evolving direction, marked a pivotal shift toward denser, noisier sounds, moving away from their initial post-punk roots.[8][9] With Shields assuming lead vocals—a role he shared with new member Bilinda Butcher—the band experimented with aggressive, physical noise, drawing inspiration from the Jesus and Mary Chain's feedback-drenched noise-pop and Sonic Youth's experimental guitar techniques, which informed the album's raw, distorted aesthetic.[8] This transition positioned them as precursors to the shoegaze genre, blending dreamy melodies with extreme sonic textures.[8] Following a series of unsuccessful releases and lineup changes, My Bloody Valentine signed to Creation Records in early 1988 after impressing label founder Alan McGee during a particularly loud tour performance.[8][9] The signing enabled the release of key EPs such as You Made Me Realise in August 1988, which captured their breakthrough noisy style and built momentum toward a full-length album.[8] Motivated to solidify this innovative sound, the band decided to record Isn't Anything as their debut studio album on the label, aiming to establish a definitive statement in the evolving alternative rock landscape.[8]Recording
The recording of Isn't Anything took place over a two-week period in the summer of 1988 at Foel Studios, a converted barn located in the remote Welsh countryside near Llanfair Caereinion.[10][11] The isolated setting contributed to an intense, immersive environment, described by vocalist and guitarist Bilinda Butcher as "quite a spooky place," with reports of unusual occurrences such as a tape machine spontaneously forming a pyramid shape, adding to the eerie atmosphere.[10] The sessions were marked by extreme conditions, including severe sleep deprivation as the band worked through sleepless nights and odd hours to harness a sense of urgency and raw energy.[10] Guitarist and leader Kevin Shields often slept late into the day before resuming work at night, fostering a dream-like state that influenced the album's hazy, unpolished aesthetic.[10] This rushed workflow emphasized single takes and minimal processing, with Shields insisting on a "purposefully raw" approach that avoided compression, reverb, or extensive overdubs to preserve the band's immediate, experimental impulses.[10] Shields took a hands-on role as the primary producer, guiding the process alongside assistance from engineers Dave Anderson (the studio owner and former Amon Düül II bassist), Alex Russell, and Steve Nunn, who handled technical aspects across Foel Studios, Time Square Studios in London, and The Greenhouse.[6][12] The core band lineup consisted of Shields on guitar and vocals, Butcher on guitar and vocals, drummer Colm Ó Cíosóig, and bassist Debbie Googe, with no additional session musicians involved.[6] These constraints, typical of Creation Records' independent ethos, compelled an efficient yet grueling schedule that prioritized spontaneity over refinement.[10]Musical Style
Composition
Isn't Anything consists of 12 tracks spanning approximately 38 minutes, with song structures that frequently blend conventional verse-chorus forms with extended passages of abstract noise and distortion, creating a disorienting yet immersive listening experience.[6] The album's opener, "Soft as Snow (But Warm Inside)," exemplifies this approach as a track that layers woozy, melodic verses over grinding riffs and joint vocals from Kevin Shields and Bilinda Butcher, building to a collapsing invocation of intensity rather than resolution.[13] Similarly, tracks like "All I Need" eschew traditional hooks in favor of immersive, slow-building drones that prioritize atmospheric tension, while faster songs such as "Nothing Much to Lose" incorporate punk-influenced rants with stop-start rhythms and pulsating bass, evoking a sense of chaotic energy.[14][13] The lyrics, primarily written by Shields and co-written by Butcher, explore themes of abstract romance, unfulfilled desire, and sensory overload, often rendered unintelligible through heavy production layering that obscures words beneath walls of sound.[8][15] This approach aligns with the band's intent to evoke disembodied emotional states, as seen in "Soft as Snow (But Warm Inside)," where muffled, dreamlike vocals suggest intimate yearning amid hip-hop-inspired production and hazy riffs, creating a paradoxical warmth in its cold abstraction.[13][8] Other songs delve into risk and distorted reality, such as "Nothing Much to Lose," a frantic outburst on recklessness, and "You Never Should," which layers vocal harmonies to convey fractured longing without clear narrative resolution.[14][13] The album's overall arc progresses from aggressive, noise-driven urgency in early tracks like "Lose My Breath"—with its clanging guitars and raw propulsion—to more ethereal, introspective closers such as "Several Girls Galore," which winds down into fragile, feedback-laced reverie, mirroring a thematic shift from confrontation to subtle dissipation.[14] This structure underscores Shields' Beatles-inspired melodic foundations twisted through experimental noise, fostering androgynous sensuality that prioritizes mood over explicit storytelling.[8][14]Instrumentation and Techniques
Kevin Shields primarily employed Fender Jazzmasters for his guitar parts on Isn't Anything, leveraging the instrument's tremolo arm to manipulate chords and create fluid, bending textures that formed the album's core sonic identity.[16] He achieved the distinctive "glide guitar" effect by routing the signal through a Yamaha SPX90 processor's reverse reverb program, which produced swelling, ethereal swells in response to string velocity, resulting in swirling, hypnotic layers without relying on conventional distortion pedals.[17] Instead, Shields favored direct amplification via Fender transistor amps like the Sidekick, with the tone controls often disengaged to yield a focused, raw edge that emphasized tremolo oscillations over pedal-based overdrive.[17] This approach generated the album's dense, noise-infused guitar walls, as heard in tracks like "Feed Me with Your Kiss," where interlocking glides evoke a sense of perpetual motion.[16] Colm Ó Cíosóig's drumming on Isn't Anything utilized live takes with minimal processing to preserve the natural punch and urgency of the performances, featuring prominent snare patterns that drive the rhythmic backbone amid the sonic chaos.[13] Treatments included subtle gated reverb on key elements like the snare to add spatial depth while retaining raw attack, avoiding heavy compression that might dull the organic dynamics; this is evident in the half-felt, heartbeat-like propulsion of songs such as "(When You Wake) You're Still in a Dream."[13] Debbie Googe's bass lines were intentionally submerged in the overall mix to contribute to the album's thick, immersive density, often blending fuzzily with the guitars to form a monolithic low-end foundation rather than standing out as a distinct element.[18] Vocals by Shields and Bilinda Butcher were captured without comping multiple takes into a single performance, instead relying on full-song recordings layered naturally to achieve an ethereal, chorus-like haze through sheer multiplicity rather than artificial effects.[19] No reverb, delay, compression, or pitch correction such as Auto-Tune was applied, preserving the intimate, breathy quality that allowed the voices to weave ambiguously into the instrumentation, as in the traded lines of "No More Sorry."[19] This unadorned method highlighted subtle imperfections, enhancing the album's dreamlike intimacy. The production philosophy centered on high-volume studio monitoring, approaching 120 dB, to intuitively blend the disparate elements into a cohesive wall of sound, where separation gave way to holistic immersion.[17] This loud-playback approach, combined with experimental noise manipulations like reverse reverb and tremolo interplay, pioneered noise pop aesthetics that blurred boundaries between melody and abstraction, laying foundational techniques for the shoegaze genre.[16]Release
Initial Release
Isn't Anything was released on 21 November 1988 by Creation Records in the United Kingdom.[20] The album was distributed in the United States by Sire Records in 1989.[21] Available formats included vinyl LP, cassette, and CD.[6] A limited edition of the vinyl LP included a bonus 7-inch single featuring the instrumental track "Instrumental No. 2," distributed with the first 5,000 copies.[22] The album's artwork, consisting of abstract and blurred photographic imagery, was designed by Joe Dilworth.[23] Promotional efforts featured the lead single "Feed Me with Your Kiss," released on 31 October 1988, which peaked at number 6 on the UK Independent Singles Chart.[24] The release was marketed as a noisy counterpoint to mainstream rock sounds, bolstered by a supporting UK tour that included performances at the Hammersmith Clarendon.Reissues
In 1993, Creation Records issued a reissue of Isn't Anything.[6] A Japanese CD edition followed in 1996.[6] Domino Records followed with a 2012 double-vinyl remaster, which included bonus tracks and was praised for preserving the album's intense sonic density while revealing finer details.[25] The album re-entered the UK charts at number 22 in 2021, driven by increased streaming activity and anniversary promotions tied to the Domino reissues.[26] Digital versions have been available on platforms such as Spotify since the 2010s, facilitating broader accessibility.[27] In 2022, MBV Records released a heavyweight vinyl variant, prioritizing analog fidelity to capture the original recording's warmth and texture.[28]Reception
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release in November 1988, Isn't Anything garnered enthusiastic praise from the UK music press for its bold shift toward noisy, experimental rock, marking My Bloody Valentine's emergence as innovators in the indie scene. Melody Maker placed the album third in its year-end list of the best albums of 1988, hailing it as "a raving nymphomania and sonic assault" that captured the era's underground energy.[29] The same publication described its tracks as "swoon-songs, oblivious, languorous vocals and out-of-focus guitars which are like being taken to the brink of consciousness and held there," emphasizing the blend of ethereal melodies and abrasive guitar textures.[30] Critic Simon Reynolds, writing in his 1990 book Blissed Out: The Raptures of Rock, highlighted the album's evolution from earlier dream pop influences, describing the guitars as "rampant, clamorous, craving, grazed, engorged, honeyed, horny, somehow extremely oral, somehow obscurely irritable."[31] In the US, where the album saw release in 1989 via Relativity Records, it received attention in the indie rock scene. Despite some noting its challenging qualities, fan reception in indie circles was robust, propelling Isn't Anything to number one on the UK Independent Albums Chart and elevating Creation Records' profile as a hub for cutting-edge alternative music. The lead single "Feed Me with Your Kiss," released in October 1988, was particularly lauded for its raw energy and swirling guitars, helping drive the album's momentum in indie charts and underscoring My Bloody Valentine's growing influence.[32]Retrospective Assessments
In subsequent decades, Isn't Anything has been reevaluated as a seminal work that laid the groundwork for shoegaze and noise-pop. Pitchfork's 2012 review of the album's reissue gave it a perfect 10/10 rating, hailing it as an essential document that crystallized My Bloody Valentine's unique dynamic of bruising distortion and child-like coos, where much of the band's shoegaze influence originated rather than on their later album Loveless. AllMusic awarded it 5 out of 5 stars, describing it as the most lucid and expansive articulation of the band's sound to date, pioneering noise through innovative guitar textures, dreamy melodies, and an overwhelming sense of mystery.[14][12] The album's lasting impact is evident in its placements on influential "best of" lists. NME ranked Isn't Anything at number 187 on their 2013 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, recognizing its role in alternative rock's evolution. Rolling Stone has nodded to its influence in broader discussions of 1980s alternative records, underscoring its contribution to distorted, immersive soundscapes that shaped the genre.[33][9] Critical retrospectives have emphasized the album's textural depth over traditional hooks. In a 2013 analysis for The Quietus, Ned Raggett credited Isn't Anything with advancing rock's sonic boundaries through its raw experimentation, positioning it as a pivotal shift from the band's earlier work. A 2018 anniversary piece in Treble described it as a visionary effort that defined shoegaze's core aesthetic of layered noise and emotional abstraction. The Guardian's 2021 coverage of the band's enduring legacy highlighted the album's 33rd anniversary by noting its timeless appeal amid shoegaze's modern revival, where its innovative production continues to inspire new listeners.[13][34][8] Modern streaming data reflects this reevaluation, with My Bloody Valentine accumulating over 418 million Spotify streams as of November 2025, though Isn't Anything was removed from the platform earlier in the year, following a 2021 return of the full catalog to streaming services amid the shoegaze resurgence.[35][36]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions
Upon its release in November 1988, Isn't Anything topped the UK Independent Albums Chart, marking My Bloody Valentine's breakthrough in the indie music scene.[29] The album achieved its highest position on the main UK Albums Chart with a peak of number 22 during a 2021 reissue, spending two weeks in the top 100.[26] Internationally, a 2012 Japanese reissue entered the Oricon Albums Chart at number 29.[37]| Chart (1988–2021) | Peak Position | Year |
|---|---|---|
| UK Independent Albums | 1 | 1988 |
| UK Albums | 22 | 2021 |
| Japan (Oricon Albums) | 29 | 2012 |
Sales
Upon its initial release in 1988, Isn't Anything achieved modest commercial success, largely within UK indie markets. The album received no certifications from the RIAA or BPI, reflecting its limited mainstream penetration at the time.[39] Streaming platforms further amplified its reach, with the album surpassing 33 million plays on Spotify as of November 2025.[40] The album's early sales were constrained by scant mainstream radio airplay, confining its audience to niche alternative circles. Subsequent growth stemmed from its foundational role in shoegaze, amplified by the genre's 2010s revival and ties to the band's more commercially successful follow-up, Loveless.[41][42]Credits
Track Listing
All music written by Kevin Shields, with lyrics by Kevin Shields, Bilinda Butcher, and Colm Ó Cíosóig; published by Creation Songs (BMI).[6] The album features 12 original tracks with a total duration of approximately 37 minutes; the track order remains consistent across all formats.[6][2] On the original vinyl release, the tracks are divided between Side A and Side B as follows:| No. | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Side A | |||
| 1 | "Soft as Snow (But Warm Inside)" | 2:21 | music: Shields; lyrics: Ó Cíosóig, Shields |
| 2 | "Lose My Breath" | 3:37 | music: Shields; lyrics: Butcher |
| 3 | "Cupid Come" | 4:29 | music: Shields; lyrics: Butcher |
| 4 | "(When You Wake) You're Still in a Dream" | 3:18 | music: Shields; lyrics: Ó Cíosóig |
| 5 | "No More Sorry" | 2:42 | music: Shields; lyrics: Butcher |
| 6 | "All I Need" | 3:38 | Shields |
| Side B | |||
| 7 | "Feed Me with Your Kiss" | 3:54 | Shields |
| 8 | "(You Never Should)" | 3:11 | Shields |
| 9 | "Nothing Much to Lose" | 3:20 | Shields |
| 10 | "I Can See Now" | 2:42 | Shields |
| 11 | "(You Made Me Realise)" | 4:02 | Shields |
| 12 | "Slow" | 3:06 | Shields |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Instrumental No. 1" | 1:15 |
| 2 | "Instrumental No. 2" | 2:23 |