1. Baby, Can You Dig the Light
2. Straight Life, The
3. Where the Flavor Is
4. In the Winner's Circle
5. Our Time Is Now
6. Dyin' for It
7. Inside Job
8. Take It Like a Man
9. Crooked and Wide
10. Sonic Infusion
Reviews:
Following a much-deserved vacation after life at Reprise Records came to a close,Mudhoney is back. Bassist Matt Lukin may have retired, but his replacement,ex-Bloodloss Guy Maddison, is on the money. And all the great 'honey hallmarksare intact and in place: searing rip-it-up Stoogoid ur-punk (the sleazy swing'n' clang of "The Straight Life," a bluesy "Our TimeIs Now," which comes complete with Mark Arm's best Iggy howl in ages);jagged Nuggets fuzz-garage whomp ("Dyin' for It," "InsideJob"); over-the-top paranoidal heavy-psych (eight-minute album overture"Baby Can You Dig the Light" sounds like a Crazy World of Arthur Browninstrumental freakout, while eight-minute closing number "Sonic Infusion"is a cross between Spacemen 3, Hawkwind and the Amboy Dukes). Sprinkled throughoutare liberal doses of piano, horns(!) and even a guest appearance by Wayne Kramer.But it's still 100% Mudhoney.
Four-star review or not, when, in a '98 Rolling Stone review of the band'sReprise swan-song Tomorrow Hit Today, some tastemaker quipped, "We'vecome not to expect too much from Mudhoney, grunge's most gleefully willfulunderachievers," some of us stood up, went to the window and hollered,"I'm mud as honey and I'm not gonna take it any more!" Mudhoneystood for something-call it back-to-punk-roots, whatever-and, dulyinspired, we expected a friggin' lot from 'em; the band not only pre-datedgrunge but outlasted it, too. Meet the new Mud, same as the old Mud? Oh yas,yas, yassir, indeed. That's a good thing, by the way.