Sonic Youth and the Business of Keeping a Dead Band Alive

A decade after their break-up, the experimental rock legends are back with a new album of rarities and a bounty of live recordings.

The band Sonic Youth circa 1986
Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, Lee Ranaldo, Steve Shelley, and Kim Gordon circa 1986 (Photo by Frans Schellekens/Redferns)

Sonic Youth formed in 1981, but their legacy as we know it today really started to get written five years later, when the band became a flagship act on SST Records—then the premier label in the American underground—and released the art-punk masterwork EVOL. It was also the era when drummer Steve Shelley joined the group, adding a more propulsive rhythmic thrust that would guide the band’s music for decades to come. And it marked the moment when Sonic Youth received the ultimate validation that they were reaching a wider audience: They discovered the first bootleg bearing their name.

“We were not happy to see it,” guitarist Lee Ranaldo recounts during a recent Zoom call with Shelley. But it wasn’t the existence of the illicit live recording that bothered them—after all, Ranaldo came of age as a tape-trading Deadhead—but the fact that it was leaked into the marketplace in a semi-official capacity by their own UK manager at the time, without the band’s knowledge. “We were totally blindsided,” Shelley adds.

Nearly 40 years later, Ranaldo and Shelley acknowledge the record in question, Walls Have Ears, has acquired a mythic status in Sonic Youth lore, capturing that crucial transitory period where the group’s no-wave roots blossomed into a more expansive avant-rock vision. And as Sonic Youth’s popularity continued to rise from the late-’80s onward, the bootlegs continued to proliferate. But rather than see them a nuisance, the group embraced these unofficial recordings as valuable documentation of a band constantly in flux.

“We always made it clear to venues that people coming in with tape recorders were OK by us and that they shouldn’t be harassed in any way,” Ranaldo says. “We’d just ask for our own copies.”

Now, after decades of accumulation, Sonic Youth have been turning their private archive into a public good. In 2020, the group launched a Bandcamp page, which has been overflowing with all manner of authorized bootlegs ever since. And this month sees the release of the first official Sonic Youth record in over 10 years, In/Out/In, a compilation of largely unheard, mostly instrumental pieces recorded during the 2000s. For a band that’s been dormant for over a decade, Sonic Youth are pretty busy. And they’re showing how a defunct group can still actively engage with their fans, expand their footprint, and continue to exert a positive influence, even when the prospect of a proper reunion seems evermore remote.

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