Corgan remains a geniusâbut genius without restraint becomes noise.
Sound: Psychedelic dream-rock meets alt-metal. Review: Before Nevermind , there was Gish . Billy Corgan, James Iha, Dâarcy Wretzky, and Jimmy Chamberlin exploded from Chicago with a debut that married shoegaze swirls to hard rock thunder. Tracks like âRhinocerosâ and âSivaâ show virtuosic restraint, while âI Am Oneâ announces Corganâs Napoleon complex via guitar heroics. Production by Butch Vig is pristine but raw enough to capture a band already too ambitious for their own good. Grade: 8/10 â An underrated cornerstone of early â90s alternative rock. 2. Siamese Dream (1993) Sound: Layered, orchestral guitar rock + confessional angst. Review: The masterpiece. Born from band turmoil and Corganâs depression, this album is a 62-minute catharsis of multi-tracked guitars (âCherub Rock,â âGeek U.S.A.â) and heartbreaking vulnerability (âDisarm,â âMayonaiseâ). Jimmy Chamberlinâs drumming is inhumanly tight; Corganâs vocalsânasal, wounded, messianicâbecame the defining voice of fragile masculinity in grungeâs shadow. Every song is a monument. Grade: 10/10 â No skips. Essential. 3. Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness (1995) Sound: Baroque, metal, electronic, folk, prog â a 28-song universe. Review: The bandâs white whale and generational touchstone. A double album that shouldnât work but does, spanning lullabies (âTonight, Tonightâ), nu-metal prototypes (âBullet with Butterfly Wingsâ), piano dirges (âTo Forgiveâ), and epic space-rock (âThru the Eyes of Rubyâ). Corganâs ambition outpaced his editing, but the highs are celestial. Chamberlin is a jazz-fusion beast. The ballad â1979â became their unlikely pop legacy. Overlong? Yes. Overwhelming? Intentionally. Grade: 9.5/10 â A flawed, glorious behemoth. 4. Adore (1998) Sound: Goth-tinged electronic folk, drum machines, bereft balladry. Review: The gut-punch pivot. After Chamberlin was fired (following touring keyboardistâs overdose) and Corganâs mother died, Adore ditched guitars for synths and drum loops. âAva Adoreâ is icy and seductive; âFor Marthaâ is a raw eulogy. Fans rejected the absence of rock, but time has revealed its bravery. Itâs their most emotionally naked album, but also their most meandering. A cult classic for those who prefer scars to riffs. Grade: 8/10 â Misunderstood then, revered now. 5. Machina/The Machines of God (2000) Sound: Glam-rock, industrial, digital distortion, concept-album murk. Review: A confused masterpiece. Intended as a rock opera about a band led by a messianic figure (Corgan as âZeroâ), Machina has some of their heaviest riffs (âThe Everlasting Gazeâ) and prettiest melodies (âStand Inside Your Loveâ). But the production is brickwalled, the narrative incomprehensible, and the second half loses focus. A victim of label meddling and Corganâs burnout. The eventual reissue Machina II (given away for free online) suggests a better album inside. Grade: 6.5/10 â Noble failure. â The Breakup & Zwan (2000â2004) â The Pumpkins implode. Corgan forms Zwan (one solid album, Mary Star of the Sea ), then goes solo ( TheFutureEmbrace ). Skip here for completionists. 6. Zeitgeist (2007) Sound: Political hard rock, return-to-form posturing. Review: The reunion (Corgan + Chamberlin, new bassist Ginger Reyes) arrives with clenched fists. âDoomsday Clockâ and âTarantulaâ are satisfyingly angry, but the songwriting is one-note. Corganâs lyrics trade vulnerability for vague anti-Bush slogans. Missing Dâarcy and Ihaâs melodic grounding, the album feels like a Corgan solo project with better drumming. Not bad, but forgettable. Grade: 5/10 â Loud but hollow. 7. Oceania (2012) Sound: Neo-prog, streamlined alt-rock, faux- Siamese gloss. Review: Corgan re-forms the band (again) and delivers a âalbum within an albumâ as part of the Teargarden by Kaleidyscope project. Surprisingly coherent. âThe Celestialsâ soars; âPanopticonâ nods to Mellon Collie âs sprawl. For the first time since Adore , Corgan sounds like heâs writing songs, not manifestos. Itâs their best post-reunion workâa modest, focused triumph. Grade: 7.5/10 â The sleeper hit of their late career. 8. Monuments to an Elegy (2014) Sound: Short, synth-rock, Tommy Lee on drums. Review: Brief (33 minutes) and punchy, with Corgan embracing digital textures and pop structures. âBeing Beigeâ is lovely; âOne and Allâ is a riff-monster. But the album feels like sketches, not monuments. Chamberlinâs absence (due to addiction) is feltâTommy Lee is technically fine but lacks swing. Grade: 6/10 â Lightweight but pleasant. 9. Shiny and Oh So Bright, Vol. 1 / LP: No Past. No Future. No Sun. (2018) Sound: Nostalgia-core, reunion of original members (Iha + Chamberlin back). Review: The âclassicâ lineup (minus Dâarcy) returns, but the magic doesnât. âSolaraâ and âSilvery Sometimes (Ghosts)â recycle past glories without urgency. Corganâs voice has deepened and lost its frail edge. Pleasant, competent, and utterly unnecessary. Grade: 5/10 â Fan service with no service. 10. Cyr (2020) Sound: Synth-pop, New Order worship, 20 songs of samey BPM. Review: Corgan goes full disco-goth. Cyr is Adore without the painâvampy, robotic, and monotonous. âThe Colour of Loveâ and âConfessions of a Dopamine Addictâ are catchy, but at 72 minutes, itâs exhausting. The lack of guitar dynamics and Chamberlinâs reduced role make it feel like a Corgan home demo marathon. Grade: 4/10 â Admirably weird, badly edited. 11. Atum: A Rock Opera in Three Acts (2023) Sound: Overproduced, narratively dense, self-referential. Review: A 33-song sequel to Mellon Collie and Machina that nobody asked for. Corgan attempts a grand sci-fi opera about a rock starâs isolation. There are moments of beauty (âBeguiled,â âThe Good in Goodbyeâ) but hours of ponderous synths and declaimed lyrics. Chamberlin is largely on a leash. Itâs the work of an artist with zero editing instinct and total control. Exhausting and occasionally sublime. Grade: 4.5/10 â For completists only. Final Verdict The Smashing Pumpkins are the most frustrating great band of the â90s . Their peak ( Siamese Dream â Mellon Collie ) rivals any band of the era. Their post-2000 output is a cautionary tale of unchecked ego, lost collaborators, and diminishing returns. smashing pumpkins discography in order
Siamese Dream , Mellon Collie , Gish , Adore For deep fans: Oceania , Machina Avoid: Cyr , Atum , Zeitgeist Billy Corgan, James Iha, Dâarcy Wretzky, and Jimmy