Mudhoney
Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (yellow/burnt Orange)
/Gatefold jacket with custom dust sleeves and poster. By going back to basics with Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge,
Mudhoney flipped conventional wisdom. Not for the first time - or the last - they would be vindicated. A month after
release in July 1991, the album entered the UK album chart at Number 34 (five weeks later, Nirvana's Nevermind entered
at 36) and went on to sell 75,000 copies worldwide. A more meaningful measure of success, however, lay in it's
revitalisation of the band, casting a touchstone for the future. The record is a major chapter in Mudhoney's ongoing
story, the moral of which has to be: when in doubt, fudge it. The album began at Music Source Studio, a large space
equipped with a 24-track mixing board - downright futuristic, compared to the 8-track setup that birthed the band's
catalytic 1988 debut, "Touch Me I'm Sick." The Music Source session quickly turned into a false start when the results,
in guitarist Steve Turner's words, "sounded a little too fancy, too clean." Lesson learned, the band went primitive and
got to work at Conrad Uno's 8-track setup at Egg Studio. Named after the cartons pasted on the walls in an optimistic
attempt at sound-proofing, Egg boasted a '60s vintage 8-track Spectra Sonics recording console, originally built for
Stax in Memphis. So it was that, in the spring of 1991, Mudhoney made Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge. The resulting album
is a whirlwind of the band's influences at the time: the fierce '60s garage rock of their Pacific Northwest predecessors
The Sonics and The Lollipop Shoppe, the gnashing post-hardcore of Drunks With Guns, the heavy guitar moods of Neil
Young, the lysergic workouts of Spacemen 3 and Hawkwind, the gloomy existentialism of Zounds, and the satirical ferocity
of '80s hardcore punk. The quartet's special alchemy meant these fond homages never slid into pastiche. Ultimately,
Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge epitomised the best of Mudhoney: here was a band reconnecting with it's purest instincts,
and in the process reinventing itself. This 30th anniversary edition, remastered by Bob Weston at Chicago Mastering
Service, stands as testimony to the creative surge that drove them in this period. The album sessions yielded a clutch
of material that would subsequently appear on B-sides, compilations, and split-singles. This edition includes all those
tracks, and a slew of previously unreleased songs, including the entire five-track Music Source session.
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 2 disk
Release
25-08-2023
Label
Item-nr
1304490
EAN
0098787146431
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
GENERATION GENOCIDE
2
LET IT SLIDE
3
GOOD ENOUGH
4
SOMETHING SO CLEAR
5
THORN
6
INTO THE DRINK
7
BROKEN HANDS
8
WHO YOU DRIVIN' NOW?
9
MOVE OUT
10
SHOOT THE MOON
11
FUZZGUN '91
12
POKIN' AROUND
13
DON'T FADE IV
14
CHECK OUT TIME
15
MARCH TO FUZZ
16
OUNCE OF DECEPTION
17
PAPERBACK LIFE (ALT VERSION)
18
FUZZBUSTER
19
BUSHPUSHER MAN
20
FLOWERS FOR INDUSTRY
21
THORN (1ST ATTEMPT)
22
OVERBLOWN
23
MARCH FROM FUZZ
24
YOU'RE GONE
25
SOMETHING SO CLEAR (24-TRACK DEMO)
26
BUSHPUSHER MAN (24-TRACK DEMO)
27
PAKIN' AROUND (24-TRACK DEMO)
28
CHECK-OUT TIME (24-TRACK DEMO)
29
GENERATION GENOCIDE (24-TRACK DEMO)