Honky (album)

Honky is the ninth studio album by Melvins, which was released in 1997 through Amphetamine Reptile Records. It is widely considered to be the band's most experimental album. Their first studio album after being dropped from Atlantic, it contains a mixture of traditional Melvins-sounding rock, experiments with drones and soundscapes, and some rather uncharacteristic electronic pieces. A video was made for "Mombius Hibachi". The final track, "In the Freaktose the Bugs are Dying", concludes with more than 25 minutes of silence.

Honky
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 5, 1997
RecordedFebruary 12–17, 1997
GenreSludge metal, experimental rock
Length70:53 (45:43 without lacuna)
LabelAmphetamine Reptile
ProducerThe Melvins, Joe Barresi
Melvins chronology
Stag
(1996)
Honky
(1997)
Singles 1–12
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
NME1/10[2]

Background

In an interview, Buzz Osborne said that album cost $3000 to make, three days rehearsal, and six days recording. The project was an attempt to plug the gap after the major release of the previous album Stag under Atlantic label. Joe Barresi was the engineer on the album.

The album's 8-minute plus opening track "They All Must Be Slaughtered" features co-lead vocals from Kat Bjelland of Babes in Toyland.

This is the last album to feature bassist Mark Deutrom.

In January 2011, Melvins played a series of four shows at Club Spaceland. A special handmade digipak edition of album was sold there, limited to 50 copies. This version had a typo in the album title, spelling it "Honkey".

Vinyl version

A vinyl version was also released by Amphetamine Reptile Records in a limited amount. The vinyl version splits the song "Air Breather Deep in the Arms of Morphius" into two parts due to limitations of the vinyl sides. Also the final song "In the Freaktose The Bugs Are Dying" omits the 25 minutes of silence.

Track listing

All songs written by The Melvins.

No.TitleLength
1."They All Must Be Slaughtered"8:17
2."Mombius Hibachi"1:58
3."Lovely Butterfly"2:10
4."Pitfalls in Serving Warrants"3:36
5."Air Breather Deep in the Arms of Morphius"12:12
6."Laughing with Lucifer at Satan's Sideshow"2:16
7."HOW --++--"3:26
8."Harry Lauder's Walking Stick Tree"3:17
9."Grin"4:11
10."In the Freaktose the Bugs Are Dying" (4:20 without lacuna)29:23

Personnel

with

Additional personnel

gollark: > The primary benefit promised by elliptic curve cryptography is a smaller key size, reducing storage and transmission requirements[6], i.e. that an elliptic curve group could provide the same level of security afforded by an RSA-based system with a large modulus and correspondingly larger key: for example, a 256-bit elliptic curve public key should provide comparable security to a 3072-bit RSA public key. - wikipedia
gollark: For RSA, though.
gollark: Er, 32 bytes.
gollark: I may have slightly lost the copy on my computer, hold on.
gollark: Just the build numbers.

References

  1. "Honky - Melvins". AllMusic.
  2. Beaumont, Mark (June 7, 1997). "The Melvins - Honky". NME. Archived from the original on August 17, 2000. Retrieved November 3, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.