Select BMI website version:

Desktop

Mobile

Not all content available in mobile version

About Broadcast Music, Inc.

BMI collects license fees on behalf of songwriters, composers and music publishers and distributes them as royalties to those members whose works have been performed.

Join BMI

Get paid when your music gets played.

Get a BMI License

Enter your business type below.

Examples: Bars & Restaurants, Local Government Entities (LGE), Fitness Clubs, Symphony Orchestra, TV, Radio

New Media

Examples: Website, Mobile

Close Broadcast Music, Inc., a global leader in rights management, collects license fees from businesses that use music, which it distributes as royalties to songwriters, composers & music publishers.
 
Vol. 5, 2.12
  • Photo:   Wrinkle Neck Mules Wrinkle Neck Mules
  • Photo: Ammar  Malik Ammar Malik
  • Photo: Songwriter Business News
  • Photo: Rodriguez Rodriguez
  • Photo: Michael  Bacon Michael Bacon
  • Photo: Shawn K.  Clement Shawn K. Clement
  • Photo: Dafnis  Prieto Dafnis Prieto
  • Photo: {name_first} {name_last} {name_band} Three Good Reasons To Love Your Songs
  • Photo: From the Archives
Photo

The Smashing Pumpkins Return To Form

By Jon Matsumoto

Apr 30 2000
Facebook Twitter


The Smashing Pumpkins might be the closest thing to a living, breathing soap opera as you're likely to find in rock & roll.

One of the top bands in the world thanks in large part to two hit albums (1993's Siamese Dream and 1995's Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness), the Pumpkin's hit hard times in the summer of 1996. Touring keyboardist Jonathan Melvoin was found dead of a drug overdose the morning the group was scheduled to headline New York's Madison Square Garden, and drummer Jimmy Chamberlin was subsequently tossed out of the band for drug use.

Appropriately enough, Pumpkins' leader and creative beacon Billy Corgan proceeded to fashion the unit's artiest and darkest sounding album. Sometimes employing a drum machine, the commercially disappointing Adore album was dismissed by fans and critics alike. Rumors loomed that Corgan was contemplating breaking up the band.

But instead of cashing in his chips, the Pumpkins' mercurial headman decided to forge ahead with the group he founded in 1989. It was a wise choice, as the Chicago-bred brigade's latest album, MACHINA/the Machines of God, represents a dynamic, catchy return to form for the group.

This once dysfunctional family also seems quite functional these days. In a surprise move, an apparently clean and sober Chamberlin was reinstated into the group. His high energy, dexterous drumming is a key reason why MACHINA rates so highly. Former Hole bassist Melissa Auf Der Maur also replaced longtime member D'Arcy Wretzky, who earlier this year was arrested in Chicago for allegedly buying crack cocaine. (The foursome also includes guitarist James Iha.)

Even Corgan, once known for his petulance and arrogance, has seemingly achieved a new level of inner calm and spirituality that's partly reflected in his new music.

"I think it's hard to travel the world, meet so many people, and go to places where people could care less about Mariah Carey and our world of pop and rock, without finding some sort of humility," Corgan told a writer recently. "And I don't mean humility in a kind of I'm-not-worthy way, but humility in a deeper respect for life and what goes on."

 

Read next

Subscribe now and we'll email you when
new MusicWorld issues become available!