Anyone who has heard the Foo Fighters track "Watershed" (from the self titled debut) may be familiar with the Flowerhead name, as it includes the lyric "I wanna swim in a watershed, I wanna listen to Flowerhead'. Grohl was in fact referring to this Texas group when he penned the song's lyrics. Flowerhead went on to release a second full length for Zoo, 1995's The People's Fuzz before going on hiatus. You can download Ka-Bloom in its entirety over at the excellent blog, Shiny Grey Monotone.
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Flowerhead - Ka-Bloom (Zoo, 1992)
Sammy - Tales of Great Neck Glory (Geffen, 1996)
After Sammy, Luke Wood went on to become senior vice president of A&R at Dreamworks Records and later Interscope Records, where he has signed and worked with Elliott Smith, Jimmy Eat World, Saves the Day, and AFI as well as more "forgotten treasures"-type bands such as the excellent Blinker the Star and Creeper Lagoon. Hartman went on to form the electro-pop outfit Laptop, whom were briefly signed to Island Records. For those looking to hear Tales of Great Neck Glory, you can download it over at the fantastic blog Outdoor Miner.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Solution a.d. - Happily Ever After (Atlantic, 1996)
Solution a.d. were signed to Atlantic records' subsidiary label, Tag Recordings, and were one of the few bands to stay with Atlantic after Tag folded (along with Fountains of Wayne and The Lemonheads). However, the band's time with Atlantic proved to be short. This quote from frontman Toby Costa from a 1997 article sums up the band's fate: "At first getting signed is a great, great thing. You get money up front, money is invested in you, and it's a thrill to make your first real record for a label. But it all comes down to touring and sales, and there's so much competition that if you don't have a hit right out of the box, you can fall through the cracks."
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Maypole - Product (Sony, 1997)
mastered albums for Tim Finn, The Von Bondies, DJ
Steve Aoki, among others. Tobi Miller has served as producer/engineer for the likes of Korn, Unwritten Law, and his former bandmates The Wallflowers. Chris Frankfort (who also seems to go as Evan Frankfort) has also been behind the boards, working with Pete Yorn, Sugarcult, & Turbonegro, to name a few.
Steve Aoki, among others. Tobi Miller has served as producer/engineer for the likes of Korn, Unwritten Law, and his former bandmates The Wallflowers. Chris Frankfort (who also seems to go as Evan Frankfort) has also been behind the boards, working with Pete Yorn, Sugarcult, & Turbonegro, to name a few.
Drummer Hugh Mangum has contributed to Enemy - the project of Troy Van Leeuwen (Failure, A Perfect Circle, Queens of the Stone Age), and Miiko Watanabe has played in a number of bands including The Martinis and Sugarplum Fairies as toured with Dave Navarro, Gwen Stefani and Tracy Chapman.
Dragmules - 2a (Atlantic, 1995)
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Balloon Guy - The West Coast Shakes (1996, Warner Bros.)
Friday, November 14, 2008
Coward - s/t (Elektra, 1997)
Monday, November 10, 2008
Verbena - Into the Pink (Capitol, 1999)
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Fretblanket - Home Truths from Abroad (Polygram, 1998)
Friday, November 7, 2008
Green Apple Quick Step - New Disaster (Columbia, 1998)
Though Green Apple Quick Step did record a third full length, New Disaster, for Columbia records - the label never put it out. A single that was to appear on the album, "Kid", was featured on the soundtrack to I Know What You Did Last Summer - the music video for which did receive some airplay on MTV at the time (clip included below). A former member of the band has put some of the tracks on a MySpace page for the unreleased record.
Listen @ MySpace
Huffamoose - We've Been Had Again (Interscope, 1997)
Listen @ iLike
Buy @ Amazon
Metal Molly - Surgery For Zebra (Jive, 1996)
Listen @ iLike
Buy @ Amazon
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Wanderlust - Prize (RCA, 1995)
Listen @ iLike or MySpace
Monday, October 27, 2008
Ammonia - Mint 400 (Epic, 1995)
The album's lead single "Drugs" (video included below) received some frequent airplay on MTV here in the states, but the band wasn't able to recreate the success they had achieved in their homeland. Ammonia's second effort, Eleventh Avenue, which was recorded with Dave Fridmann (Mercury Rev, Flaming Lips) and released in 1998, saw the band moving away from the grunge-inspired sounds of their debut and towards a more experimental sound and would serve as the band's last record before disbanding in 1999.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Speaker - Model Citizen (Capricorn, 1997)
Listen @ allmusic
Buy @ Amazon
Sparkler - Wicker Park (1997, Warner Bros.)
Sparkler was formed by L.A. native Rick Parker, formerly a member of Lions & Ghosts, the "college rock" band he led in the late 80s with Michael Lockwood (husband of Lisa Marie Presley and sometimes guitarist for Aimee Mann). After Lions & Ghosts split, Parker released a solo album, Wicked World, for Geffen in 1992 before later starting Sparker. The band's 1997 debut, Wicker Park, was recorded with Keith Cleversley (Mercury Rev, The Flaming Lips) and drew comparisons to Mathew Sweet, Oasis, and Jellyfish with its mix of classic power pop and glam influences (though I think the best comparison might be Spacehog). Interestingly, the list of bands mentioned in Wicker Park's liner notes reads almost like a who's who of similar sounding (and similarly forgotten) 90s LA bands, including Summercamp, Campfire Girls, Agnes Gooch, Super Deluxe, and Gwen Mars. Check out the single "Discover" (video included below) for a good example of Sparkler's brand of hook laden power pop. This would be Sparkler's first and last record, though Parker would later work with artists such as Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and Miranda Lee Richards.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Tripmaster Monkey - Goodbye Race (Sire, 1994)
Tripmaster Monkey formed in 1992 in the Quad Cities of Illinois and Iowa, and released the Faster than Dwight EP on See How! Records the following year. 1994 saw the release of their major label debut full-length, Goodbye Race, on Warner Bros.' Sire label. The album was recorded with Paul Q. Kolderie at the noted Fort Apache studios in Boston, and you can hear the influence of Fort Apache alumni (The Pixies, Dinosaur Jr.) on its sound. The band made the jump from Sire to Elektra for their second (and final) effort, Practice Changes, in 1996. Members of Tripmaster Monkey continue to play music in Chrash Flood and Tenki, both part of the Future Appletree Records family.
Claw Hammer - Hold Your Tongue and Say Apple (Interscope, 1997)
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Dirt Merchants - Scarified (Epic, 1996)
Download @ DirtMerchants.org
Friday, October 10, 2008
Agnes Gooch - Blind (1997, Warner Bros.)
Listen @ iLike
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Red Five - Flash (Interscope, 1996)
Flash was recorded with noted producer Matt Wallace who is probably best known for his work with Faith No More. After their second effort, Wink, was shelved in 1999, Red Five decided to go their separate ways. Their song "Shipwrecked" did, however, turn up in the 2001 movie Orange County, though not actually on the soundtrack release. More recently, front-woman Jenni McElrath has started a new project with husband and former Fluorescein drummer Rocco Bidlovski called Mostly Sunny, which you can check out on MySpace.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Dig - s/t (MCA, 1993)
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Fulflej - Wack-Ass Tuba Riff (Scratchie, 1996)
Listen @ MySpace
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Drill Team - Hope and Dream Explosion (Reprise, 1998)
Most reviews for Hope and Dream Explosion gave the band a hard time for being bland and unoriginal - and I can't say that I disagree (check out the Pitchfork review for an example of this). That said, Drill Team could write a radio-worthy chorus with the best of them. Certainly one of the great should-have-beens of the era.
Buy @ iTunes
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
My Head - Endless Bummer (Capitol, 1996)
Loud Lucy - Breathe (Geffen, 1995)
Listen @ MySpace
Buy @ Amazon
Friday, September 26, 2008
Muzzle - Betty Pickup (Reprise, 1996)
Betty Pickup was produced by Phil Ek, who had worked with many of the more popular indie rock bands from the Northwest like Built to Spill and Modest Mouse - yet the sort of hip lo-fi aesthetic you'd expect from such groups is not present on this slick, polished record. Perhaps a little less polish would have helped the band from falling into the bland territory, which it admittedly does at points. Regardless, songs like the album's lead single, "What A Bore" (video included below), were finely crafted power-pop gems and should have helped bring the band to greater heights than the ranks of obscurity where they
now reside.
Listen @ iLike
Buy @ Amazon or iTunes
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