The Pod is the second studio album by American rock band Ween.[3][4] It was released on September 20, 1991, by Shimmy-Disc.
The Pod | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 20, 1991[1] | |||
Recorded | January–October 1990 | |||
Studio | The Pod (Solebury Township, Pennsylvania) | |||
Genre |
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Length | 76:40 | |||
Label | Shimmy-Disc | |||
Producer | Andrew Weiss | |||
Ween chronology | ||||
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The album was recorded from January to October 1990, at the Pod on Van Sant Road in Solebury Township, Pennsylvania.[5] Recording concluded one month prior to the release of their debut on November 16th.[6] The album was derived from two tapes titled the Bilboa tape and the Big Timmy Wasserman tape. Both tapes contain not only demo versions of songs on the album, but many outtakes not used on any album or tracks used on future albums.[citation needed] All of the songs have a muddy quality to them, due to being recorded on a Tascam four-track cassette recorder, and many of the vocals are manipulated in strange ways.[3]
The album contains bizarre lyrical content, often attributed to the fact that Dean and Gene both came down with cases of mononucleosis during the recording of the album, as well as their alleged relationship with huffing Scotchgard according to Ween lore. However, when their fans began huffing Scotchgard, it was refuted by Gene Ween and Dean Ween themselves as being "the most slime-bag thing we could think of."[7]
Robyn Hitchcock is credited with "musical inspiration" for the track "Alone",[8] which borrows elements from his song "Bones in the Ground".[citation needed]
The album takes its name from the band's apartment where the album was recorded, which the band nicknamed "The Pod".[9] The album's cover art is a takeoff of the 1975 The Best of Leonard Cohen cover; Ween simply positioned a photo of part-time bassist Mean Ween's head (wearing a "nitrous oxide powered bong" which is sometimes mistaken for a "Scotchgard bong") over Cohen's cover art, and altered the title text and other graphics.[3] The copy of the Leonard Cohen record that Ween used had purportedly belonged to Dean Ween's mother.[citation needed]
From the Shimmy-Disc CD:
The Pod produced three music videos. "Pollo Asado", "Captain Fantasy", and "Pork Roll Egg and Cheese" were included on a VHS music video compilation titled Shimmy-Disc Video Volume 3.[10][better source needed] Shimmy-Disc Video was a series of VHS tapes created by Shimmy Disc containing music videos from artists who were signed to the label. These tapes were never remastered or re-released, nor were the music videos.
Shimmy-Disc released a vinyl version of The Pod in 1991. It was also remastered and reissued by Elektra Records in 1995, after the relative success of Ween albums such as Pure Guava (1992) and Chocolate and Cheese (1994).[3]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [11] |
Robert Christgau | [12] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [13] |
MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | [14] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [15] |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 5/10[16] |
In 1993, the album was named one of the 20 best albums of 1992 by Spin.[17] Trouser Press wrote: "Less inflamed and inspired than the first album (blame, perhaps, the five cans of Scotchguard the band claims to have inhaled), The Pod lurches, howls, fuzzes and strums through sloppy creations that are mostly one hit short of a high."[18] Aphex Twin named it one of his 10 favorite albums of all time (making it one of two Ween albums on the list, the other being Pure Guava).[19] In a 1999 review of the album, The Stranger called it "excellent" and wrote that "someday, classical music students will write dissertations on The Pod."[20] Kerrang! wrote that "the electrified production on tracks like 'Dr. Rock' and 'Sketches of Winkle' is utterly unhinged, while the barking, aimless pace of 'The Stallion' (either part, really) feels like the sweaty blatherings of the most poisonous of drunks."[21]
All tracks are written by Ween.
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Strap on That Jammy Pac" | 3:03 |
2. | "Dr. Rock" | 3:11 |
3. | "Frank" | 3:46 |
4. | "Sorry Charlie" | 3:51 |
5. | "The Stallion (Pt. 1)" | 2:51 |
6. | "Pollo Asado" | 2:45 |
7. | "Right to the Ways and the Rules of the World" | 5:05 |
8. | "Captain Fantasy" | 3:19 |
9. | "Demon Sweat" | 4:11 |
10. | "Molly" | 4:49 |
11. | "Can U Taste the Waste?" | 1:39 |
12. | "Don't Sweat It" | 4:02 |
13. | "Awesome Sound" | 2:22 |
14. | "Laura" | 4:37 |
15. | "Boing" | 1:33 |
16. | "Mononucleosis" | 3:01 |
17. | "Oh My Dear (Falling in Love)" | 1:57 |
18. | "Sketches of Winkle" | 2:44 |
19. | "Alone" | 3:12 |
20. | "Moving Away" | 3:06 |
21. | "She Fucks Me" | 3:59 |
22. | "Pork Roll Egg and Cheese" | 3:02 |
23. | "The Stallion (Pt. 2)" | 4:35 |
Total length: | 1:16:40 |
Date | Venue | Notes |
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Leg One | ||
September 7th, 1991 | Mill Hill Park, Trenton, NJ, USA | Trenton Avant Garde Festival |
September 16th, 1991 | The Space at Chase, New York, NY, USA | |
October 4th, 1991 | City Gardens, Trenton, NJ, USA | With Claude Coleman Jr and Kramer as backing.[23] |
October 12th, 1991 | Wetlands Preserve, New York, NY, USA | |
October 30th, 1991 | VPRO Radio Studio, Hilversum, Netherlands | |
Melkweg, Amsterdam, Netherlands | ||
October 31st, 1991 | Vera, Groningen, Netherlands | |
November 1st, 1991 | Effenaar, Eindhoven, Netherlands | |
Leg Two | ||
December 6th, 1991 | Eisner and Lubin Auditorium, New York, NY, USA | |
December 31st, 1991 | City Gardens, Trenton, NJ, USA | |
January 8th, 1992 | Kendall Hall, Trenton, NJ, USA | WTSR Radio Session. Ed Wilson on guitar[24] |
January 17th, 1992 | Court Tavern, New Brunswick, NJ, USA | |
February 15th, 1992 | The Underworld, London, England | With Claude Coleman Jr and Kramer as backing.[25][26][27][28][29] |
February 16th, 1992 | The Princess Charlotte, Leicester, England | |
February 17th, 1992 | Riverside, Newcastle, England | |
February 18th, 1992 | Edwards No 8, Birmingham, England | |
February 19th, 1992 | Duchess of York Pub, Leeds, England | |
February 20th, 1992 | Maida Vale Studios, London, England | John Peel session. Claude Coleman Jr on drums and Kramer on bass[30] |
The Cathouse, Glasgow, Scotland | With Claude Coleman Jr and Kramer as backing.[31][32] | |
February 21st, 1992 | The Venue, London, England | |
March 1st, 1992 | The Middle East, Cambridge, MA, USA | |
March 4th, 1992 | Euclid Tavern, Cleveland, OH, USA | |
March 5th, 1992 | The Blind Pig, Ann Arbor, MI, USA | |
March 6th, 1992 | Staches, Columbus, OH, USA | Excerpts released on Ween At The Cat's Cradle DVD. |
March 7th, 1992 | Lounge Ax, Chicago, IL, USA | |
March 8th, 1992 | Uptown Lounge, Minneapolis, MN, USA | |
March 11th, 1992 | Jelly Club, Austin, TX, USA | |
March 12th, 1992 | Club Clearview, Dallas, TX, USA | |
March 14th, 1992 | Cicero's, St. Louis, MO, USA | Excerpt released on Paintin' The Town Brown. |
March 16th, 1992 | Cat's Cradle, Chapel Hill, NC, USA | |
March 17th, 1992 | Twisters, Richmond, VA, USA | |
March 18th, 1992 | JC Dobbs, Philadelphia, PA, USA | |
Leg Three | ||
May 1st, 1992 | Commons Cafe, Portland, OR, USA | |
May 2nd, 1992 | Off Ramp, Seattle, WA, USA | |
May 4th, 1992 | Kennel Club, San Francisco, CA, USA | |
May 6th, 1992 | The Shark Club, Las Vegas, NV, USA | |
May 7th, 1992 | Club Lingerie, Los Angeles, CA, USA | |
May 8th, 1992 | Jabberjaw, Los Angeles, CA, USA | |
May 9th, 1992 | Winter's, San Diego, CA, USA | |
May 21st, 1992 | Maxwell's, Hoboken, NJ, USA | |
May 22nd, 1992 | 9:30 Club, Washington, DC, USA | |
May 23rd, 1992 | City Gardens, Trenton, NJ, USA | |
June 18th, 1992 | Marquee Nightclub, New York, NY, USA |
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