Last summer, Chad Clark got a third heart. The electric one he’d received in 2008, after a viral infection, had been recalled, and this time doctors were able to secure an organ transplant. Severely immunocompromised, Clark hasn’t performed live much in recent years, but on those rare occasions, his lineup-shifting project, Beauty Pill, has shared stages with avant-garde icons from Laurie Anderson to Arto Lindsay. Open and humble on social media and in interviews, Clark has aged gracefully and miraculously into a role as an art-punk elder. “I’m not a rock star,” he recently told Washington City Paper. “But I don’t really feel like the world has mistreated me the way I felt when I was younger.” 

At the turn of the millennium, Clark’s path might have seemed very different. The former frontman for Smart Went Crazy, a bleak and brainy, Washington, D.C.-based post-hardcore band, he was also a studio whiz who’d worked on local indie-rock heroes the Dismemberment Plan’s breakthrough album, Emergency & I. Beauty Pill bowed in October 2001 with a promising debut EP, The Cigarette Girl From the Future, that embraced psych-pop lushness. Then, a couple of years before Clark’s heart problems started, came the tumultuous era documented on Beauty Pill’s new archival release, Blue Period.

The double-LP compilation acts as a deluxe reissue of Beauty Pill’s ambitious but mostly overlooked debut album, 2004’s The Unsustainable Lifestyle, followed in the track listing by the rougher-hewn 2003 EP, You Are Right to Be Afraid. Both are newly remastered, giving the old recordings fresh heft, and making their first appearance on vinyl. Rounding out the set is a side’s worth of previously unreleased material. While not quite a trove of lost classics, Blue Period swells with intelligence and musical inquisitiveness. It’s a snapshot of a fertile moment, and a signpost for the restless avant-rock perfectionist that Clark has survived to become.

In the early 2000s, plenty of bands were blurring post-hardcore, emo, and indie rock toward unknown vistas, and The Unsustainable Lifestyle would sit comfortably in a Case Logic with contemporaneous releases from Jets to Brazilthe Promise RingRainer MariaPretty Girls Make Graves, or even Death Cab for Cutie. The band takes an atmospheric, Wurtlitzer-haloed approach to indie rock, with vocal duties shared between Clark and two former members, Rachel Burke and Jean Cook. Clark’s nuanced and meticulous production stands out: Notice how the throbbing drums pan from left to right on ethereal opener “Goodnight for Real,” or the blissful tremolo guitar of Burke-led “Such Large Portions!”