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Screaming Life/Fopp [Bonus Track]
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Screaming Life/Fopp [Bonus Track] in Franklin, TN
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
Screaming Life/Fopp [Bonus Track] in Franklin, TN
Current price: $13.99
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Size: CD
While the grunge movement of the early '90s would be remembered for thrift-store flannels and an updating of early punk angst, it's easy to forget that the bands that would go on to become the genre's biggest names in hair metal started developing at the same. Much of what became alternative music started out simply as weird metal. Enter
Soundgarden
with their first two EPs, 1987's
Screaming Life
and 1988's
Fopp
, originally packaged together in 1990 by a soon-to-boom
Sub Pop
. Still a few years away from the downtuned proto-sludge of
Louder Than Love
, and the world-wide grunge rock domination they would encounter throughout the '90s, these EPs and first proper album
Ultramega OK
found the band in a flailing state. Somewhere between their metal roots and the full articulation of the sound they'd realize shortly,
is rooted firmly in generic post-
Sabbath
riffery and
Chris Cornell
's absent-minded howling. Suffering from equally generic production, much of the album comes off as listless or stifled, even though hints of future greatness peek through at times. The bleak and doomy "Nothing to Say" rolls along in a less-refined version of the heaviness they would sharpen on
Badmotorfinger
, and the dissonant guitars and
Misfits
-esque croon of "Hunted Down" also come off as a more naive reading of the band's later sound. Of the two EPs,
is far superior to the embarrassingly ham-fisted faux funk/punk of
. An overly ironic and unfunny original tune lambasting the still-incubating
scene, a
Green River
cover, and two mixes of an ill-fitting
Ohio Players
cover, make
even more fans-only fodder than the at-times-foreshadowing but ultimately mediocre fare of
. [The two-fer was also released with a bonus track, "Swallow My Pride."] ~ Fred Thomas
Soundgarden
with their first two EPs, 1987's
Screaming Life
and 1988's
Fopp
, originally packaged together in 1990 by a soon-to-boom
Sub Pop
. Still a few years away from the downtuned proto-sludge of
Louder Than Love
, and the world-wide grunge rock domination they would encounter throughout the '90s, these EPs and first proper album
Ultramega OK
found the band in a flailing state. Somewhere between their metal roots and the full articulation of the sound they'd realize shortly,
is rooted firmly in generic post-
Sabbath
riffery and
Chris Cornell
's absent-minded howling. Suffering from equally generic production, much of the album comes off as listless or stifled, even though hints of future greatness peek through at times. The bleak and doomy "Nothing to Say" rolls along in a less-refined version of the heaviness they would sharpen on
Badmotorfinger
, and the dissonant guitars and
Misfits
-esque croon of "Hunted Down" also come off as a more naive reading of the band's later sound. Of the two EPs,
is far superior to the embarrassingly ham-fisted faux funk/punk of
. An overly ironic and unfunny original tune lambasting the still-incubating
scene, a
Green River
cover, and two mixes of an ill-fitting
Ohio Players
cover, make
even more fans-only fodder than the at-times-foreshadowing but ultimately mediocre fare of
. [The two-fer was also released with a bonus track, "Swallow My Pride."] ~ Fred Thomas
While the grunge movement of the early '90s would be remembered for thrift-store flannels and an updating of early punk angst, it's easy to forget that the bands that would go on to become the genre's biggest names in hair metal started developing at the same. Much of what became alternative music started out simply as weird metal. Enter
Soundgarden
with their first two EPs, 1987's
Screaming Life
and 1988's
Fopp
, originally packaged together in 1990 by a soon-to-boom
Sub Pop
. Still a few years away from the downtuned proto-sludge of
Louder Than Love
, and the world-wide grunge rock domination they would encounter throughout the '90s, these EPs and first proper album
Ultramega OK
found the band in a flailing state. Somewhere between their metal roots and the full articulation of the sound they'd realize shortly,
is rooted firmly in generic post-
Sabbath
riffery and
Chris Cornell
's absent-minded howling. Suffering from equally generic production, much of the album comes off as listless or stifled, even though hints of future greatness peek through at times. The bleak and doomy "Nothing to Say" rolls along in a less-refined version of the heaviness they would sharpen on
Badmotorfinger
, and the dissonant guitars and
Misfits
-esque croon of "Hunted Down" also come off as a more naive reading of the band's later sound. Of the two EPs,
is far superior to the embarrassingly ham-fisted faux funk/punk of
. An overly ironic and unfunny original tune lambasting the still-incubating
scene, a
Green River
cover, and two mixes of an ill-fitting
Ohio Players
cover, make
even more fans-only fodder than the at-times-foreshadowing but ultimately mediocre fare of
. [The two-fer was also released with a bonus track, "Swallow My Pride."] ~ Fred Thomas
Soundgarden
with their first two EPs, 1987's
Screaming Life
and 1988's
Fopp
, originally packaged together in 1990 by a soon-to-boom
Sub Pop
. Still a few years away from the downtuned proto-sludge of
Louder Than Love
, and the world-wide grunge rock domination they would encounter throughout the '90s, these EPs and first proper album
Ultramega OK
found the band in a flailing state. Somewhere between their metal roots and the full articulation of the sound they'd realize shortly,
is rooted firmly in generic post-
Sabbath
riffery and
Chris Cornell
's absent-minded howling. Suffering from equally generic production, much of the album comes off as listless or stifled, even though hints of future greatness peek through at times. The bleak and doomy "Nothing to Say" rolls along in a less-refined version of the heaviness they would sharpen on
Badmotorfinger
, and the dissonant guitars and
Misfits
-esque croon of "Hunted Down" also come off as a more naive reading of the band's later sound. Of the two EPs,
is far superior to the embarrassingly ham-fisted faux funk/punk of
. An overly ironic and unfunny original tune lambasting the still-incubating
scene, a
Green River
cover, and two mixes of an ill-fitting
Ohio Players
cover, make
even more fans-only fodder than the at-times-foreshadowing but ultimately mediocre fare of
. [The two-fer was also released with a bonus track, "Swallow My Pride."] ~ Fred Thomas