Boss Hog - Boss Hog

2




Album Details

Title: Boss Hog
Artist: Boss Hog
Release Date: 10/10/1995
Label: Geffen
Album Type(s): Contains explicit content
UPCs: 720642481127, 720642481110, 720642481141
Genre: Rock
Styles: Blues-Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock, Roots Rock, Post-Punk, Indie Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock
Moods: Aggressive, Brash, Confident, Ironic, Irreverent, Rowdy, Sexy, Theatrical, Visceral
Total Copies: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Winn Coma
  2. Sick
  3. Beehive
  4. Ski Bunny
  5. Green Skirt
  6. I Dig You
  7. Try One
  8. What the Fuck
  9. White Sand
  10. I Idolize You
  11. Punkture
  12. Strawberry
  13. Walk In
  14. Texas
  15. Sam

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1995CDGeffen24811

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs


Members who requested this CD also requested:

Album Review

While Jon Spencer spent much of his time in Pussy Galore trying to destroy rock & roll as fans know it, by the time he got the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion rolling, he'd come to the belated conclusion that old-school rock and R&B could be pretty cool after all, and since the history of Boss Hog -- one of Spencer's seemingly infinite number of side projects -- overlaps with Pussy Galore, you get to witness this transformation over the course of their recording career. While Boss Hog's first album was a nearly unlistenable morass of aural sludge, six years later, their self-titled major-label debut turns out to be a very solid album in the same rootsy grit-rock vein as the Blues Explosion's best work. If anything, Christina Martinez, Spencer's partner in crime (and spouse), is a stronger vocal presence on this record, if only because she hasn't developed quite as elaborate a shtick as Spencer -- she just belts it out in a sturdy blues-punk style, unlike Spencer's often amusing but sometimes irritating collection of blues and rockabilly affectations. Boss Hog also displays a far greater willingness to get funky than JSBX; they're not ready to face the Meters in a battle of "on the one," but the best cuts here boast a more sensuous feel for groove than the prime suspects have shown in the past. In short, Boss Hog shows that somewhere down the line Spencer and Martinez learned the importance of getting a groove on, and though that groove is rough, noisy, and ill-tempered, you can still dance to it. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Bill EmmonsEngineer
Cristina MartinezNoise Reduction
Derek SomaruAssistant Engineer
Hollis Queens?
Howie WeinbergMastering
Jens Jürgensen?
Jon SpencerProducer
Michael F. MillsDesign
Michael LavinePhotography
Steve FiskProducer