
Watch Me Jumpstart, a DVD including an expanded version of the 1996 documentary of the same name directed by Banks Tarver, now also containing extra footage, plus multi-angle live material and all of the band's promotional video clips.
Inspired equally by jangle pop and arty post-punk, Guided by Voices created a series of treblely, hissy indie rock records filled with infectiously brief pop songs that fell somewhere between the British Invasion and prog rock. After recording six self-released albums between 1986 and 1992, the Dayton, OH-based band attracted a handful of fans within the American indie-rock underground. With the 1994 release of Bee Thousand, the group became an unexpected alternative rock sensation, winning positive reviews throughout the mainstream music press and signing a larger distribution deal with Matador Records. Despite all of the attention, the band never changed their aesthetic, continuing to record their albums on cheap four-track tape decks and thereby limiting their potential audience, yet that devotion to lo-fi indie rock helped Guided by Voices maintain a sizable cult during the late '90s.

