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Carry the Zero

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Wikipedia article




"'Carry the Zero'" is a song recorded by the American rock band Built to Spill for their fourth studio album, 'Keep It Like a Secret' (1999). It was released as the second single from 'Keep It Like a Secret' in 1999 through Warner Bros. Records. An extended play of the same name was released the same year; it is their first solo EP after the 1995 split EP 'Built to Spill Caustic Resin'.

Background



"Carry the Zero" is perhaps considered the band's most popular song. In "Carry the Zero", Martsch "extends a mathematical metaphor" to depict a disaffected relationship. Brett Anderson at 'The Washington Post' depicted the tune as a "guitar manifesto in three movements." The tune remains a celebrated standard at the band's concerts.

"Carry the Zero" has been popular for a generation of indie musicians: Frances Quinlan covered the song on her 2020 album 'Likewise', while Japanese Breakfast revealed it was the first song she learned on guitar.

Reception



"Carry the Zero" has received wide acclaim from contemporary music critics. David Fricke at 'Rolling Stone' praised the song's "lyric mix of run-on, conversational syntax and curveball wordplay." Pitchfork reviewer Jason Josephes called it "downright pretty," noting that it "merges Cocteau Twins-esque guitars and melody with equal sigh and much more articulate lyrics." The publication later ranked its parent album among the best to come from the Pacific Northwest, with columnist Evan Rytlewski singling out "Zero": "Although Martsch has often written about how the insecurities of youth trail us into adulthood, hes never done so more movingly than on 'Carry the Zero,' six minutes of tough love packaged in a hug." Reyan Ali of 'SF Weekly' called it "a wistful, lonely, rough-around-the-edges tune."

Kevin McFarland of 'The A.V. Club' called it the band's best-ever song: "a dreamy yet surging exploration that displays Martsch at the height of his prowess for infectious melody and arresting solos." Chris DeVille at Stereogum complimented its wistful guitar tone, considering it the point within 'Secret' that the album truly flourishes. Nina Corcoran, writing for 'Consequence', admired its spindly guitar work, suggesting its "symphonic outro" justifies the group's standing as "one of the '90s best guitar rock groups." Christopher Porter at 'The Washington Post' opined that "Martsch is a very good pop songwriter [...] "Carry the Zero" [has a] great core melody." Tom Hughes singled the song out for a piece in 'The Guardian', calling it "a song that can lay claim to one of the best intros and outros in indie rock. Doug Martsch's golden-toned Idaho outfit roll out all their loveliest soaring hooks, striking a perfect balance between weighty rock crunch and sweet, gleaming twinkles."

Track listing



# "Carry the Zero"

# "Sidewalk"

# "Forget Remember When"

# "Now & Then"

# "Kicked It in the Sun" (Live)

# "Big Dipper" (Live)

"Forget Remember When" and "Now & Then" are studio tracks that have been released only on this EP, and as bonus tracks on the double-LP version of 'Live'; the other two studio tracks were originally released on 'Keep It Like a Secret'.

Personnel



;Musicians

*Doug Martsch guitar, vocals, producer

*Brett Nelson bass

*Scott Plouf drums

;Production

* Phil Ek producer, engineer

* Steve Fallone mastering

* Zack Reinig engineer assistant

* Scott Norton, Juan Garcia mixing assistant

* Jeff Smith photography

* Tae Won Yu design, art direction

References



Category:Built to Spill albums

Category:1999 debut EPs

Category:Warner Records EPs

Category:1999 songs

Category:1999 singles

Category:Albums produced by Phil Ek


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