Crafting some of the best noisy-yet-tuneful guitar rock of the late '80s and early '90s, Chapel Hill quartet
Superchunk were one of the bands responsible for early definitions of indie rock, evolving at the same time but completely separate from the
Nirvana-led, corporate-sponsored grunge explosion. Writing, recording, and releasing all its music independently was all part of the youthful fire that burned brightly in the band during its earliest days and slowly grew from grubby, rough-edged feedback-heavy pop into more intricate, nuanced, and storytelling feedback-heavy pop.
Tossing Seeds gathers together singles and non-album tracks from
Superchunk's blurry beginnings, culminating in 13 nonstop blasts of youthful energy. Single versions of "My Noise" and early-'90s low-rent anthem "Slack Motherfucker" reappear from the band's 1990 debut, joined by similar re-presentations of "Seed Toss" and "Cast Iron" from the 1991
Albini-produced follow-up
No Pocky for Kitty. Even this early on, the band excelled within the limitations imposed by the 7" single, a format that offered a perfect amount of running time and focus for the band's bite-sized chunks of jangly adrenaline. Non-album tracks and covers are some of the more delightful standouts on
Tossing Seeds, among them a pair of
Sebadoh covers (including an especially eruptive reading of the usually maudlin "Brand New Love") as well as a take on English punk group the Flys' "Night Creatures" and a churning version of
the Shangri-Las' girl group classic "Train from Kansas City." As far as original compositions, "Fishing" channels the buzzsaw angst that would be refined into less economical statements on future albums and "Garlic" toys with a more midtempo approach without getting even slightly mellower. Only three years into a lifespan that would prove to span decades and highly complex twists and turns,
Tossing Seeds is
Superchunk's youthful, headstrong, and often jubilant salad days, encapsulated. ~ Fred Thomas