Muchas Gracias: The Best of Kyuss | ||||
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Compilation album by | ||||
Released | November 28, 2000 | |||
Recorded | 1991–1995 | |||
Genre | Stoner rock | |||
Length | 75:13 | |||
Label | Elektra | |||
Producer | Kyuss, Chris Goss, Catherine Enny, Ron Krown, Hutch | |||
Kyuss chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Rolling Stone | [2] |
Muchas Gracias: The Best of Kyuss is a compilation album by American stoner rock band Kyuss, released in 2000 through Elektra Records. Although promoted as a "best of" album, it features mostly rare tracks and B-sides and includes only five tracks from the band's four studio albums. The final four tracks are live recordings from a May 24, 1994 performance in Hamburg, previously released as the Live at Marquee Club EP which was included with the first 3,000 copies of the band's 1994 album Welcome to Sky Valley released in Germany and Australia; the tracks were also included on various editions of the "Demon Cleaner" single that same year.
Writing credits adapted from the album's liner notes. [3]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Originally appears on: | Length |
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1. | "Un Sandpiper" | Josh Homme, Scott Reeder, John Garcia, Alfredo Hernández | "Gardenia" single, 1995 | 8:16 |
2. | "Shine" | Reeder | Split single with Wool, 1996 | 5:55 |
3. | "50 Million Year Trip (Downside Up)" | Brant Bjork | Blues for the Red Sun , 1992 | 5:45 |
4. | "Mudfly" | Homme | "One Inch Man" single, 1995 | 2:26 |
5. | "Demon Cleaner" | Homme | Welcome to Sky Valley , 1994 | 5:20 |
6. | "A Day Early and a Dollar Extra" | Homme | "One Inch Man" single, 1995 | 2:17 |
7. | "I'm Not" | Homme, Garcia | Wretch , 1991 | 4:30 |
8. | "Hurricane" | Homme, Garcia | ...And the Circus Leaves Town , 1995 | 2:42 |
9. | "Flip the Phase" | Homme | "One Inch Man" single, 1995 | 2:16 |
10. | "Fatso Forgotso" | Reeder | "Into the Void" single, 1996 | 8:34 |
11. | "El Rodeo" | Homme, Garcia | ...And the Circus Leaves Town, 1995 | 5:36 |
12. | "Gardenia" (live) | Bjork | Live at the Marquee Club, "Demon Cleaner" single, 1994 | 6:46 |
13. | "Thumb" (live) | Homme, Bjork | Live at the Marquee Club, "Demon Cleaner" single, 1994 | 4:38 |
14. | "Conan Troutman" (live) | Homme | Live at the Marquee Club, "Demon Cleaner" single, 1994 | 2:18 |
15. | "Freedom Run" (live) | Homme, Bjork | Live at the Marquee Club, "Demon Cleaner" single, 1994 | 7:54 |
Total length: | 75:13 |
Tracks 12–15 recorded May 24, 1994, at the Marquee Club in Hamburg, Germany.
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes. [3]
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Kyuss was an American stoner rock band formed in Palm Desert, California, in 1987, and considered one of the pioneers of the genre. After disbanding in 1995, a number of band members have gone on to form or play in several notable bands including Queens of the Stone Age, Screaming Trees, Fu Manchu, Dwarves, Eagles of Death Metal, Mondo Generator, Hermano, Unida, Slo Burn and Them Crooked Vultures.
Queens of the Stone Age is the debut studio album by American rock band Queens of the Stone Age, released by Loosegroove Records on September 22, 1998. It was primarily written and recorded in April 1998 by founding member Josh Homme and his former Kyuss bandmate Alfredo Hernández, with Hernández playing drums and Homme singing and playing the rest of the instruments. Homme also produced the album alongside Joe Barresi. Bassist Nick Oliveri, also a former member of Kyuss, would join the band by the time of the album's release. Queens of the Stone Age received generally positive reviews from critics, who placed it in the stoner rock genre and drew comparisons to krautrock bands such as Neu! and Can, as well as to Kyuss and other metal bands.
Blues for the Red Sun is the second studio album by American rock band Kyuss, released in 1992. While the album received mainly favorable reviews, it fared poorly commercially, selling only 39,000 units. It has since become a very influential album within the stoner rock genre. It was the last Kyuss album to feature bassist Nick Oliveri, who was replaced by Scott Reeder shortly after recording had been completed. The album is dedicated to Oliveri's father who died in a car accident in 1991.
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...And the Circus Leaves Town is the fourth and final studio album by American stoner rock band Kyuss, released on July 11, 1995, nearly a year before their breakup. Drummer Alfredo Hernández replaced Brant Bjork, who left Kyuss in 1993. The album features a tighter and more straightforward sound, both in songwriting and production, than the band's preceding efforts. The album was not as commercially or critically successful as the previous Blues for the Red Sun and Welcome to Sky Valley. Critic Dean Brown attributes this partly to a lack of promotion and the band's breakup, but also notes that the album "deserves to be cherished as much as the two molten hot records that came right before it." A video was released for "One Inch Man", the album's only official single.
Welcome to Sky Valley is the third studio album by American rock band Kyuss. It was released on June 28, 1994, through Elektra and Chameleon Records.
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Stoner rock, also known as stoner metal or stoner doom, is a rock music fusion genre that combines elements of doom metal with psychedelic rock and acid rock. The genre emerged during the early 1990s and was pioneered foremost by Kyuss and Sleep.
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Gamma Ray is the debut EP by Gamma Ray, a musical project by former Kyuss guitarist Josh Homme, released in 1996 by Man's Ruin Records. After the breakup of Kyuss in 1995, Homme recorded the Gamma Ray material in Seattle with producer Chris Goss, bassist Van Conner, and drummer Victor Indrizzo. Former Kyuss singer John Garcia contributed backing vocals to the track "Born to Hula". After the release of the EP, Homme received a cease and desist order because the name Gamma Ray was already in use by a German power metal band. He changed the name of the project to Queens of the Stone Age, and both of the Gamma Ray tracks were re-released the following year by Man's Ruin on the Kyuss / Queens of the Stone Age split EP, which featured some of the final studio recordings by Kyuss and debuted the "Queens of the Stone Age" moniker for Homme's new project. The split EP also included a third track from the Gamma Ray recording sessions, "Spiders and Vinegaroons".
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