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Prick (Melvins album)

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Allmusic[1]

Prick is the sixth studio album by the Melvins, which was released in 1994 through Amphetamine Reptile Records. It has been said that because the Melvins already had a contract with Atlantic Records, Prick was released with the band name in mirror writing, although they really did it just because they wanted to.

The album displays a distinctly experimental quality, with an eclectic selection including field recordings, electronic effects and loops, band jam sessions, a stereotypical drum solo that segues into an archetypal heavy metal guitar solo, and a track that's introduced as "pure digital silence" -- followed by silence for a minute. Singer/guitarist Buzz Osborne has stated that Prick is "a total noise crap record we did strictly for the weirdness factor. Complete and utter nonsense, a total joke."[2]

The band wanted to call the album Kurt Kobain but changed it after Cobain's death to eliminate the possibility of people mistaking it for a tribute record. They implied that Cobain was actually the titular "prick", because he died and therefore forced them to change the album's name.[3]

Track listing

All songs written by The Melvins.

No.TitleLength
1."How About"4:15
2."Rickets"1:20
3."Pick It n' Flick It"1:39
4."Montreal"4:09
5."Chief Ten Beers"6:28
6."Underground"2:19
7."Chalk People"1:16
8."Punch the Lion"3:14
9."Pure Digital Silence"1:32
10."Larry"2:59
11."Roll Another One"14:20

Personnel

Additional personnel

References

  1. ^ Allmusic review
  2. ^ Guitar World (1995). "The Father the Son and the Holy Grunge". Interview. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  3. ^ Brian Walsby (1994). "MASSIVE MELVINS INTERVIEW FROM THE PRE-"STONER WITCH" ERA". Interview. Retrieved 2010-09-02.