Search - Meat Puppets :: Golden Lies

Golden Lies
Meat Puppets
Golden Lies
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1

Five years after the release of No Joke!, the Meat Puppets return with Golden Lies and a new Austin-based cast under the direction of guitarist and singer Curt Kirkwood. The five years have been dreadful by most accounts, ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Meat Puppets
Title: Golden Lies
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Atlantic / Wea
Original Release Date: 9/26/2000
Release Date: 9/26/2000
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock, Metal
Style: Hardcore & Punk
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 075678340222

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Five years after the release of No Joke!, the Meat Puppets return with Golden Lies and a new Austin-based cast under the direction of guitarist and singer Curt Kirkwood. The five years have been dreadful by most accounts, with bassist-cofounder (and Curt's brother) Cris devastated by acute, prolonged heroin addiction and the death by overdose of his wife--a story too detailed and sordid to deliver here. So Curt's back with additional guitarist Kyle Ellison, bassist Andrew Duplantis, and drummer Shandon Sahm, and the band is as steeped in desert-scorched psychedelia as they were in their early-'90s London Records days. And though it's hard to chart growth with a band that started their career with the brilliance of Meat Puppets II, Kirkwood shows not only the warpy ambition he crowned fans with in the mid-1980s but also a knack for using the studio as instrumental in creating a depth befitting the band that many have cited as one of American punk's greats. Kirkwood's laconic, deadpan voice matches wits with his and Ellison's thicker, artfully compressed, guitar attack. There are rave-ups ("Take Off Your Clothes"), deep-listening background dynamics, and even a very odd mottle of pop and choked-vocal guitar buzz on "Push the Button." Easily as good as any of the London-era Meat Puppets material, Golden Lies sounds like the dawn of a new meaty era. --Andrew Bartlett

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CD Reviews

Meat Puppets Golden Lies
will mccord | Tennessee | 12/11/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I have read reviews that are negative about this CD because Bostrum and brother Kirkwood are no longer in the band, reviews that claim it is not the 'real' Meat Puppets. I have been a fan of the Puppets since the the mid 80's and I have got to tell you, this is 'real'. I haven't been this impressed with a new release from the Puppets since Monsters. As I listen, I find myself smiling with amusement and enthusiasm at the direction this album takes the Meat Puppets. It is different, but all so familiar. Just goes to show that the person steering this band in all it's different creative directions all along was Curt Kirkwood. Do yourself a favor and buy it!"
MP Version 2.0-A version worth keeping
Lee Schiller | Philadelphia, PA United States | 09/29/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Sometimes the misery and healing that comes with five years of personal struggle can rejuvenate. Other times it can send one onto a downward path to despair and self destructiveness. In the case of the resurrected Meat Puppets, it has done the former. Curt Kirkwood's songs look to the past and the future for their inspiration but never lose sight of the road once traveled. Tarantula resembles the song structure of Huevos with its fretboard work, and Push The Button harkens to the earlier threesome. But the must listen to songs on this recording are the revealing and beautiful Endless Wave and the dark and lovely Pieces of Me. Unfortunately, the single Armed And Stupid may be the worst track here with its dull radio ready hooks resembling Scum from No Joke. But there are enough reasons to recommend this release to long time fans and introduce this band to the uninitiated."
Curt Kirkwood still knows how to rock
Pen Name? | 04/08/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"For me, this is the Meat Puppet's best effort since leaving SST, slightly edging out Too High To Die. Endless Wave is every bit as good as Backwater, and would deserve to have reached the same success. If you are into the Meat Puppets last couple of albums, I can't see how you wouldn't get into this one. The new band is excellent and should be accepted on their own terms. The lyrics feature the same style of absurdities and anomalies mixed with existential pondering which has been commonplace to the band since they began using real words. Don't be stubborn! Believe in the Lies!"