Letters from Chutney

Letters from Chutney is the debut album recorded by the Canadian rock band Rainbow Butt Monkeys, now known as Finger Eleven. It features a different sound than Finger Eleven's subsequent albums, with funk and grunge influences. The album is currently out of print, though available for special order. The album produced three singles, all of which had videos released. The name of the album comes from a dog with a missing eye that the band found on the side of the road. They gave it the name Chutney.

Letters from Chutney
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 19, 1995
RecordedMainway Studio, Burlington, Ontario and Metalworks, Toronto, Ontario
GenreGrunge,[1] funk metal
Length49:57
LabelMercury
ProducerJohn Punter and Atilla Turi[2]
Rainbow Butt Monkeys chronology
Letters from Chutney
(1995)
Tip
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Rock Hard[4]

Track listing

All songs by Rainbow Butt Monkeys.

No.TitleLength
1."As Far as I Can Spit"3:56
2."Danananana"4:54
3."Brat"3:57
4."Circles"4:31
5."Spiderprints"4:01
6."Nibber"3:34
7."Dropping"3:41
8."St. Louis"3:15
9."Scrumpy"3:22
10."Cake"4:08
11."Cookin' in the Kitchen"5:22
12."Let's Pretend"5:16

Singles

  • "Circles" (1995)[5]
  • "As Far as I Can Spit" (1996)
  • "Danananana" (1996)

Personnel

Adapted from the liner notes of Letters from Chutney.[6]

Rainbow Butt Monkeys
  • Scott Anderson – vocals
  • James Black – guitar, vocals
  • Rick Jackett – guitar
  • Sean Anderson – bass
  • Rob Gommerman – drums
Production
  • John Punter – engineering, mixing
  • Atilla Turi – engineering
  • L. Stu Young – engineering
  • Sean McKim – engineering, assistant engineer
  • Andre Plante – engineering, assistant engineer
  • Kurtys Kidd – assistant engineer
  • David Tedesco – assistant engineer
  • Bill Kipper – mastering
Artwork
gollark: CC could do with status lights and beeps, though.
gollark: Also, I have to get some debugging information out *entirely* through different beeping noises.
gollark: They don't really have room for internet/wireless cards quite often.
gollark: In my testing it was mostly on-the-dot accurate, but sometimes one coord would be off by a lot and it made a bunch of drones go rogue.
gollark: I actually tried to make that, but it returned inaccurate results sometimes and I have no idea why.

References

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