First let me say that I think Doug Martsch of Built to Spill is a certified rock guitar genius and if you do not know of his work, you really should. While the facile comparison to Neil Young is frequently deployed because of his singing style (and encouraged by the epic cover of “Cortez the Killer” on 2000’s Live, which clocks in at a massive but fantastic 20+ minutes), his playing also displays flashes of Jeff Beck, Hendrix and Tom Verlaine.
“Wherever You Go” from 2006’s You In Reverse shows BTS and Martsch at their tightest and is a fine representation of their style: slow-winding buildups to intense peaks; swirling multilayered production; cryptic and knowing lyrics; and that searing guitar soaring and punching through it all. With legendarily difficult and technical arrangements, BTS comes across as a jam band with a major difference: there is no noodling. There is only precision and ambition, even when the songs are long and circular. While they may never release another album as Built to Spill and they were never a huge commercial success, I feel strongly that Martsch and his mates will be looked back upon as a high water mark for real instrument Alternative rock in the 90s and early 2000s. Listening to them certainly proves that one well constructed and original song–and even more so, an album of them–is infinitely more satisfying than an iPod full of the pap produced by the latest interchangeable artificially manufactured bands and network karaoke winners. They may not be telegenic but they sure do kick ass. And their heart will wear you down.