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Sebadoh - Smash Your Head On The Punk Ro
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
Smash Your Head On The Punk Ro
UPC
 
09878701762
Genre
 
Rock/Pop
Released
 
1992-10-28
List Price $9.98
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Notes / Reviews

Smash Your Head on the Punk Rock was Sebadoh's Sub Pop debut, released in 1992. It compiles most songs from two EPs, Rocking the Forest and Sebadoh vs. Helmet, while altering the track names and truncating their number. Songs from the original Domino releases absent here include "Gimme Indie Rock", "Ride the Darker Wave", "It's So Hard to Fall in Love" and "Really Insane II" from Rocking the Forest and "Soulmate" from Sebadoh vs. Helmet

Personnel

*Jason Loewenstein - Bass. Drums, Vocals, Guitar

*Lou Barlow - Guitar, Vocals, Bass

*Eric Gaffney - Guitar, Drums, Bass, Synthesizer

*Bob Fay - Drums, Guitar, Vocals

* Recorded by Bob Weston.

Category:Sebadoh albums

Category:1992 compilation albums





This text has been derived from Smash Your Head on the Punk Rock on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0

Artist/Band Information

Sebadoh is an American indie rock band formed in 1986 in Westfield, Massachusetts by Eric Gaffney and Dinosaur Jr bass player Lou Barlow. Along with such bands as Pavement and Guided by Voices, Sebadoh helped pioneer lo-fi music, a style of indie rock characterized by low-fidelity recording techniques, often on four-track machines. The band's early output, such as 1990's Weed Forestin' and 1991's Sebadoh III, was typical of this style, and wavered between Barlow's wry, introspective folk and Gaffney's psychedelic noise-rock experiments.

History

Lou Barlow was the bass player for alternative rock band Dinosaur Jr in the late 1980s. While both Barlow and leader J Mascis wrote songs, Mascis' material dominated the group's output because Barlow was intimidated by the guitarist's songwriting efforts.Azerrad, 2001. p 357 Barlow spent progressively more time recording his own songs at home. Barlow and Gaffney released the Weed Forestin' cassette in 1987 on Homestead Records under the name Sebadoh, which was a nonsense word Barlow often muttered in his recordings.Azerrad, 2001. p. 359. Both Barlow and Gaffney contributed songs to 1988's The Freed Man cassette. Homestead Records head Gerard Cosloy heard the cassette release of The Freed Man and released it as a full-length album on Homestead in 1989. Soon after the cassette's release Barlow was kicked out of Dinosaur Jr. Over time Sebadoh's releases became a way for Barlow to address the issues of control that manifested as the tension in and his ejection from Dinosaur Jr; Barlow said "I got a lot of hatred out just by writing those songs."Azerrad, 2001. p. 373 Jason Loewenstein joined in summer 1989, the first release that he played on being the "Gimme Indie Rock" single in 1991. Only ten 'band' shows were performed throughout Western Mass, Boston, and New York over the period 1989-1990 before the third album Sebadoh III was released.

After touring with fIREHOSE in 1991, they signed to Sub Pop (Domino in the UK and City Slang in Germany) in 1992, and released the two EPs Rocking the Forest and Sebadoh vs. Helmet released just two months apart. These EPs had their track listings truncated and shuffled around and made into the American full-length release Smash Your Head on the Punk Rock. Their fourth full length album Bubble and Scrape was recorded Summer/Fall 1992 and released in April 1993, which sold 10,000 in its first week of release - confirming that the band were now established indie rock favourites.

Sebadoh star background webster hall spot lights.JPG200pxrightthumbConcert at Webster Hall in New York City, 2007

Following 1993's Bubble and Scrape Gaffney left the band. His replacement, Bob Fay, appeared on 1994's Bakesale and the follow-up Harmacy in 1996. Fay was fired before the sessions for The Sebadoh (1999) and replaced by Russ Pollard, a friend of Loewenstein's from Louisville. Following the tour to promote this album, the band went on hiatus, with Barlow concentrating on his other project, the Folk Implosion, and Loewenstein working on material for his debut solo album At Sixes and Sevens, released in 2002. The two reunited to play concerts in late 2003 and the spring of 2004.

In March 2007, the "Sebadoh Classic" lineup of Barlow, Gaffney and Loewenstein went on tour together for the first time in 14 years. This coincided with a new series of reissues which repackaged some of the early albums with extra discs of unreleased tracks. First came a reissue of Sebadoh III, then The Freed Man, and Bubble and Scrape.

The reunion tour continued into 2008, and in May included a live performance of 1993's Bubble and Scrape in its entirety as part of the All Tomorrow's Parties-curated Don't Look Back series at London's Koko venue.

In 2010 Sebadoh will reissue "Bakesale" and "Harmacy", and tour in support.http

Discography

Studio albums / Compilations

*The Freed Man (1989)

*Weed Forestin' (1990)

*The Freed Weed (1990)

*Sebadoh III (1991)

*Smash Your Head on the Punk Rock (1992)

*Bubble and Scrape (1993)

*Bakesale (1994)

*Harmacy (1996)

*The Sebadoh (1999)

References

* Azerrad, Michael. Our Band Could Be Your Life. New York: Little, Brown, 2001. ISBN 0-316-78753-1

Notes





This text has been derived from Sebadoh on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0

Details
Performers
 
Label
 
SUBP
Catalog #
 
70176