Bubble & Scrape is the fourth studio album by the American indie rock band Sebadoh, released on April 26, 1993, by Sub Pop Records.[1] Recorded primarily at Cellar Sound and Slaughterhouse studios, the album features 17 tracks and runs for approximately 46 minutes, blending lo-fi aesthetics with more structured songwriting.[1] It was the final Sebadoh release to include contributions from founding drummer Eric Gaffney before his departure later that year.[2]Sebadoh formed in 1988 in Northampton, Massachusetts, by Lou Barlow and Eric Gaffney as an outlet for lo-fi, four-track home recordings following Barlow's exit from Dinosaur Jr.[2] Bassist Jason Loewenstein joined the lineup prior to the band's third album, Sebadoh III (1991), establishing the core trio responsible for Bubble & Scrape.[2] The album's production involved engineer Bob Weston and additional contributors like Seana Carmody on vocals, with the band handling most instrumentation—including guitars, bass, drums, and keyboards—among themselves.[3] Tracks such as "Soul and Fire" (written by Barlow) and "Elixir Is Zog" (by Gaffney) highlight the diverse songwriting styles within the group, from introspective pop to experimental noise.[4]Critically, Bubble & Scrape is regarded as a pivotal work in 1990s indie rock, bridging Sebadoh's raw, DIY roots with more accessible melodies and serving as an essential entry point to the band's catalog.[4] It received strong acclaim upon release and has endured as a classic, with a 2008 deluxe edition adding bonus material like demos and live tracks to underscore its influence.[4] The album's themes often explore personal turmoil, relationships, and emotional vulnerability, reflecting the "slacker rock" ethos of the era while demonstrating the band's evolution toward cohesion.[5]
Background
Prior albums and lineup
Sebadoh originated in 1988 as a lo-fi recording project initiated by Lou Barlow, formerly the bassist of Dinosaur Jr., and drummer Eric Gaffney, in Northampton, Massachusetts. The duo focused on home-recorded demos using four-track recorders, capturing raw, experimental indie rock with acoustic elements and noise influences. Their initial releases emphasized this DIY aesthetic, setting the foundation for the band's evolution into a more structured ensemble.[2]The band's earliest material appeared on Weed Forestin', originally self-released by Barlow as a cassette in 1987 under the name Sentridoh, containing 22 tracks of homemade recordings incorporating tape loops and field recordings. It was later reissued in 1990 on Homestead Records. This was followed by The Freed Man, released in 1989 on Homestead Records as a compilation of early cassette recordings. It featured 32 short tracks blending folk-tinged acoustics, spoken-word interludes, and noisy improvisations, largely performed by Barlow and Gaffney without additional musicians. This debut LP exemplified Sebadoh's nascent lo-fi style and garnered attention within the underground indie scene for its unpolished intimacy.[6]These early efforts were combined on the 1990 CD The Freed Weed by Sub Pop, highlighting Barlow's introspective lyrics and Gaffney's percussive contributions, though production remained deliberately rough.By 1991, with the addition of multi-instrumentalist Jason Loewenstein—who joined after contributing percussion to Weed Forestin'—Sebadoh transitioned to a trio format. Their third album, Sebadoh III, released on Homestead Records, marked this shift with 27 tracks that balanced lo-fi minimalism and fuller band arrangements. Loewenstein's involvement brought bass lines and additional vocals, allowing Barlow to focus on guitar and songcraft, while Gaffney handled drums; the album's eclectic mix of pop hooks, punk energy, and acoustic vulnerability received critical praise for refining the band's sound without losing its raw edge.This trio lineup—Lou Barlow on vocals and guitar, Eric Gaffney on drums and vocals, and Jason Loewenstein on bass, guitar, and vocals—remained intact for Bubble & Scrape, having solidified through the prior albums' creative tensions and collaborative growth. The addition of Loewenstein provided a democratic structure, with each member contributing songs and handling multiple instruments, which influenced the band's shift toward more polished indie rock. No major lineup changes occurred between Sebadoh III and Bubble & Scrape, though internal dynamics, including Gaffney's increasing focus on his own projects, foreshadowed his departure after the 1993 release.[3]
Conception and songwriting
Following the release of their breakthrough album Sebadoh III in 1991, Sebadoh entered the creation of Bubble & Scrape amid internal tensions and a desire to refine their lo-fi origins into more structured indie rock arrangements.[4] The band's songwriting process remained democratic and individualistic, with each core member—Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein—composing tracks independently before bringing them to the group for arrangement and recording.[7] This approach preserved Sebadoh's ethos of shared creative input, though it highlighted diverging styles: Barlow's melodic introspection, Gaffney's experimental impulses, and Loewenstein's raw energy.[4]Lou Barlow contributed seven songs, emphasizing romantic and confessional themes delivered through catchy, folk-inflected melodies. Tracks like "Soul and Fire" and "Two Years Two Days" exemplified his tuneful style, often evolving from sappy demos into polished takes during sessions.[4] In reflections on the reissue, Barlow critiqued his own performances, describing his vocals and guitar tones as "thin" and "horrible," while viewing the album overall as a mere "teaser" for a more ambitious, unrealized follow-up record.[7]Eric Gaffney provided five tracks, accounting for roughly one-third of the album, which he largely improvised on the spot using a whammy pedal for effects, without a preconceived concept.[8] His contributions, such as the avant-garde "Elixir is Zog" and the psychedelic "Emma Get Wild," incorporated piano-guitar exchanges, harmonica, and bluesy experimentation, often recorded solo at Fort Apache Studios from DAT tapes. Gaffney also originated the album's title, Bubble & Scrape, and supplied childhood photos for the artwork, though he later expressed dissatisfaction, noting the mastering felt improper.[7] Some of his parts were captured in Berlin during a bout of illness, with one track sped up in post-production against his preference.[8]Jason Loewenstein rounded out the songwriting with four songs, including the rough-hewn pop standout "Happily Divided" and the driving "Sister," which added a gritty balance to the album's dynamics. In liner notes for the deluxe reissue, Loewenstein recalled a challenging process marred by heavy THC use, humorously attributing foggy memories to it, yet emphasized the record as a moment of fragile unity amid Gaffney's waning involvement.[7] This collaborative yet autonomous method underscored Bubble & Scrape as Sebadoh's last album with Gaffney's full songwriting input, bridging their raw early work to a more accessible sound.[4]
Recording and production
Studio sessions
Bubble & Scrape marked Sebadoh's transition from lo-fi, four-track home recordings to a more polished professional studio environment, allowing for fuller arrangements and longer tracks while retaining the band's raw indie rock edge.[4]The bulk of the album was recorded at Slaughterhouse Studios in Hadley, Massachusetts (near Northampton), handling tracks 3 through 17, with additional sessions at The Cellar Sound Studio in Fishkill, New York for track 16 and Don’t Come On Monday in Berlin, Germany, for select tracks (6, 8, 10, and 15) in November 1992.[9] Mixing occurred primarily at Slaughterhouse for tracks 3–17, with tracks 1 and 2 handled at The Cellar Sound Studio; the album was sequenced at Fort Apache Studios in Cambridge, Massachusetts by Tim O’Heir and mastered at Nimbus.[9]Engineering duties were split among Brian Fellows and Paul McNamara, who handled tracks 1–4, 9, 11, 14, and 17, while Bob Weston engineered tracks 5, 7, 12, 13, and 16, contributing to the album's relatively cleaner production values compared to prior releases.[9] Band members Eric Gaffney and Jason Loewenstein mixed tracks 3–17, with Weston assisting on tracks 1 and 2.[9]The sessions were marked by internal tensions, particularly between Gaffney and Lou Barlow, which influenced the recording approach; Gaffney often preferred to record his parts in isolation rather than as a full live band, limiting collaborative interplay.[7] Reflecting on the process in the 2008 deluxe edition liner notes, Barlow described the album as "a teaser for a much better record that never happened," lamenting unfulfilled potential amid the group's dynamics, while Loewenstein quipped about hazy memories, noting, "THC is not a memory enhancing drug is it?"[7] These sessions represented the last time Gaffney contributed compositions to a Sebadohalbum, capturing a pivotal, if fraught, moment in the band's evolution.[7]
Producers and engineering
Bubble & Scrape was self-produced by the band's core members—Lou Barlow, Jason Loewenstein, and Eric Gaffney—marking their first full studio album without reliance on four-track home recordings. This approach allowed for greater sonic clarity while preserving the raw, democratic ethos of Sebadoh's earlier work, where individual song contributions were integrated collectively. The absence of an external producer emphasized the trio's collaborative control over the album's sound, blending Barlow's introspective folk-punk leanings with Gaffney's noisier inclinations and Loewenstein's rhythmic drive.[9][4]Engineering duties were split across multiple studios and personnel to accommodate the band's touring schedule and creative process. Brian Fellows and Paul McNamara engineered tracks 1–4, 9, 11, 14, and 17 at The Cellar Sound Studio in Fishkill, New York, capturing a cleaner, more polished texture for these selections. Bob Weston, known for his work with Shellac and other indie acts, handled engineering on tracks 5, 7, 12, 13, and 16 at Slaughterhouse in Hadley, Massachusetts (near Northampton), contributing to the album's punchier, less lo-fi moments that highlighted its transition toward mainstream indie rock production values. Additional engineering for tracks 6, 8, 10, and 15 occurred at Don’t Come On Monday studio in Berlin during November 1992, reflecting the band's international movements during recording. Tim O'Heir sequenced the tracks at Fort Apache Studios in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[9][4]Mixing further underscored the band's hands-on involvement, with Gaffney and Loewenstein overseeing tracks 3–17 to maintain an intimate, unpolished feel amid the upgraded facilities. Weston mixed the opening tracks 1 ("Soul and Fire") and 2 ("Two Years Two Days"), providing a dynamic contrast that set a more expansive tone from the outset. This hybrid engineering and mixing process resulted in an album that balanced Sebadoh's signature emotional vulnerability with improved fidelity, influencing their subsequent releases like Bakesale.[9]
Musical style
Genre and sound
Bubble & Scrape is classified within the indie rock genre, with prominent lo-fi production aesthetics characteristic of early 1990s American alternative music.[4][10] The album also incorporates elements of slacker rock and noise rock, reflecting the band's evolution from raw, experimental sound collages to more structured compositions.[7] This shift marked Sebadoh's departure from four-track home recordings toward professional studio arrangements, featuring longer tracks, clearer mixes, and balanced instrumentation while retaining an intimate, unpolished edge.[4]The sound is defined by its diversity, driven by contributions from the three principal songwriters: Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein. Barlow's tracks emphasize melodic, emotionally direct indie rock and folk influences, as heard in the preternaturally catchy "Soul and Fire", which showcases plangent guitar tones and sing-song choruses exploring romantic turmoil.[4][7] In contrast, Gaffney's songs introduce experimental noise rock and post-punk elements, blending psychedelic blues, surf-guitar riffs, and improvisatory chaos, exemplified by the raucous "Telecosmic Alchemy" with its harmonica and piano exchanges.[7] Loewenstein adds folk-pop accessibility and anthemic builds, such as in "Sister", contributing to the album's dynamic range from tender, depressive ballads to aggressive squalls.[4][10]Overall, the album's lo-fi indie-rock foundation allows for raw emotional expression and inventive variety, avoiding the uniformity of more polished contemporaries and highlighting Sebadoh's collaborative ethos.[10] This blend of accessibility and avant-garde flair positions Bubble & Scrape as a pivotal document in 1990s U.S. indie rock, bridging underground experimentation with broader appeal.[4]
Instrumentation
Bubble & Scrape features the core trio of Sebadoh—Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein—performing as multi-instrumentalists, with each member contributing on guitar, bass, and drums across various tracks. Barlow primarily handles lead vocals and guitar on his compositions, such as the plangent, clangorous electric guitar lines in "Soul and Fire" and "Two Years Two Days," while also playing bass on select Gaffney-led songs. Loewenstein provides bass on most tracks, along with distorted guitar on tracks like "Elixir Is Zog," emphasizing massive riffs and a raw, indie rock edge. Gaffney anchors the rhythm section with drums on the majority of songs but also plays guitar, bass, keyboards, harp, and incorporates tape cassette bits for experimental textures in his contributions, such as the raucous piano, guitar, and harmonica exchanges in "Telecosmic Alchemy."[9][4][7]The album's sound draws from lo-fi indie rock traditions, utilizing electric and acoustic guitars for dynamic shifts between soft, melodic passages and louder, noise-infused bursts. Percussion elements, including standard drum kits, add to the varied pacing, with Loewenstein and Gaffney switching roles to maintain a loose, collaborative feel. Keyboards and harp appear sporadically to introduce avant-garde flourishes, enhancing the experimental side of tracks like Gaffney's "No Way Out," which blends hardcore energy with rockabilly twang via guitar-driven arrangements. Additional instrumentation, such as piano and harmonica, surfaces in specific songs to broaden the palette beyond the guitar-bass-drums core, reflecting the band's transition from four-track home recordings to more structured studio sessions.[4][9][7]Guest vocals from Seana Carmody on "Think (Let Tomorrow Bee)" provide harmonic contrast, but the album largely relies on the trio's self-sufficient setup, engineered by Brian Fellows, Paul McNamara, and Bob Weston at studios like Slaughterhouse and Cellar Sound. This multi-role approach fosters an intimate, DIY ethos, where cassette tape manipulations and minimal overdubs preserve the raw energy of live interplay, distinguishing Bubble & Scrape from polished contemporaries.[9]
Release and promotion
Initial release
Bubble & Scrape was initially released on April 26, 1993, by the independent label Sub Pop Records in the United States.[1] The album served as Sebadoh's fourth studio release and their final one featuring founding drummer Eric Gaffney, who contributed several compositions before departing the band later that year.[4]The original edition was issued in multiple formats, including compact disc (catalog number SP192b), 12-inch vinyl (SP192), and cassette (SP192a), catering to the indie rock audience of the early 1990s.[3] International distribution followed shortly after, with UK editions handled by Domino Recording Company (WIGLP4 for vinyl, WIGCD4 for CD) and European releases by City Slang (SLANG 029).[3]As a Sub Pop release during the label's post-Nirvana grunge era, Bubble & Scrape benefited from the company's growing reputation but did not achieve significant commercial chart success on mainstream outlets like Billboard, reflecting its niche appeal within the lo-fi and alternative rock scenes.[11] Promotion centered on the band's grassroots touring and the simultaneous release of the "Soul and Fire" EP, which highlighted tracks from the album and underscored Sebadoh's evolving songwriting dynamic between Lou Barlow and Jason Loewenstein.[1]
Singles
"Soul and Fire" was released as the lead single from Bubble & Scrape in March 1993 by Sub Pop Records.[12] Issued in multiple formats including 7-inch vinyl, 12-inch EP, and CD single, it introduced their evolving lo-fi indie rock sound to a broader audience.[12] The track, penned by Lou Barlow, opens the album and delves into the emotional turmoil of romantic infatuation versus rejection, blending acoustic guitar, subtle percussion, and Barlow's vulnerable vocals to create a poignant contrast of intimacy and despair.[13]The single's b-sides showcased the band's raw, experimental edge, featuring an amateur mix of album track "Fantastic Disaster," the brief instrumental "Emma Get Wild," a cover of the Necros' punk song "Reject," a medley of "Flood" and "Ken," and a 1991 live showtape excerpt.[12] These non-album tracks highlighted Sebadoh's DIY ethos, incorporating home recordings and live elements that echoed their earlier cassette-tape origins.[14] No additional singles were commercially released from Bubble & Scrape, though "Soul and Fire" received critical acclaim for its emotional depth and melodic simplicity, often cited as a standout in Barlow's songwriting catalog.[15]
Reissues
2008 deluxe edition
In 2008, Sebadoh's Bubble & Scrape received a deluxe reissue from Domino Recording Company, marking the album's first expanded edition and its first digital remastering. Released on May 5 in the UK and Europe, and June 17 in the US, the single-disc CD format compiled the original 17-track album alongside 15 bonus tracks, expanding the total runtime to approximately 75 minutes.[16][17][18]The bonus material, drawn from the era's b-sides, outtakes, demos, and live recordings, offered fans deeper access to the band's creative process during a transitional period. Highlights included alternate versions like "Soul and Fire (Acoustic Demo)," live cuts such as a cover of Necros' "Reject," and previously unreleased pieces like "Bouquet for a Siren" and the multi-part "Part 1-4" series featuring contributions from Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein. These additions underscored the album's role as Sebadoh's final release with its original lineup before Gaffney's departure, capturing the raw, improvisational energy of their West Pawlet, Vermont sessions.[4][18][19]The reissue featured new liner notes from band members Barlow, Loewenstein, and Gaffney, reflecting on the chaotic yet innovative recording environment. Mastered at Abbey Road Studios, the remastered audio enhanced the original's lo-fi dynamics without altering its intimate, home-recorded aesthetic. Packaged under Sub Pop's license to Domino, this edition revitalized interest in Bubble & Scrape as a cornerstone of 1990s indie rock, coinciding with anniversary celebrations and full-album live performances.[16][20][7]
In 2008, Sebadoh reunited with Gaffney for the "Don't Look Back" series, performing Bubble & Scrape in its entirety during a UK tour and at festivals like All Tomorrow's Parties and the Pitchfork Music Festival. These shows, including dates at London's Koko on May 7 and Chicago's Union Park in July, revitalized the album's songs with a matured perspective, transforming Gaffney's formerly sprawling compositions into tight, electrifying highlights. The full-album format underscored the record's influence on 1990s indie rock, drawing fans nostalgic for the band's early era.[21][22] The reunion emphasized the enduring appeal of tracks like "Happily Divided" and "Fantastic Disaster" in a live context, bridging the gap between the album's original lo-fi ethos and polished retrospective delivery.
Reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in April 1993, Bubble & Scrape received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised its polished production relative to Sebadoh's earlier lo-fi efforts and highlighted Lou Barlow's songwriting as a standout element.[23] The Los Angeles Times awarded the album three-and-a-half out of four stars, describing it as "organized and clean in Sebadoh terms" and commending Barlow's ability to infuse fuzzy guitars and skewed timing with emotional longing, making the noise more infectious than typical Top 40 fare.[23]Robert Christgau of The Village Voice gave the album a B+ grade, characterizing it as the work of an "angry three-headed wimp on the long hard road to love," with specific nods to tracks like "Soul and Fire" and "Sister" for their heartfelt vulnerability amid the band's chaotic dynamic.[24]Trouser Press echoed this appreciation for the album's urgency, calling it Sebadoh's most compelling release to date with rough-hewn pop gems from Barlow and Jason Loewenstein, such as "Soul and Fire" and "Happily Divided," though noting the internal band tensions that infused Eric Gaffney's disruptive contributions like "Elixir Is Zog."[25] Overall, reviewers viewed Bubble & Scrape as a transitional triumph, balancing the group's experimental slacker rock with more accessible indie structures.
Retrospective assessments
Upon its 2008 deluxe reissue, Bubble & Scrape received widespread critical acclaim, with reviewers highlighting its role as a pivotal evolution in Sebadoh's sound from raw lo-fi experimentation to more structured indie rock arrangements. Pitchfork awarded the reissue a 9.2 out of 10, praising it as the band's "holistic best" and a key document of 1990s U.S. indie rock, noting how producer Bob Weston's involvement lent reasonable polish without sacrificing the group's emotional rawness or stylistic diversity across contributions from Lou Barlow, Eric Gaffney, and Jason Loewenstein.[4] The reissue's bonus disc, featuring live tracks, B-sides, and demos, further underscored the album's transitional significance, though some critics viewed these extras as uneven.[4]In a 2013 retrospective ranking of Sebadoh's discography, Stereogum placed Bubble & Scrape at number one, lauding its unflinching portrayal of "unbearable emotional tumult" through tracks like Barlow's "Soul and Fire" and "Think (Let Tomorrow Bee)," which captured personal devastation with greater intensity than contemporaries like Joy Division or Nirvana. The album's balance of Barlow's torque-driven introspection, Gaffney's experimental levity in songs such as "Telecosmic Alchemy," and Loewenstein's emerging songwriting was seen as a high-water mark for the band's collaborative dynamic before Gaffney's departure.[26]Other outlets echoed this reevaluation, with Splice Today describing it as Sebadoh's "best and most consistent work," blending indie rock, folk, noise, and post-punk in a way that aged particularly well for Gaffney and Loewenstein's contributions, even as Barlow reflected on it as a "teaser" for unrealized potential. QRO Magazine similarly called it the band's "finest album," often overshadowed by later efforts like Bakesale and Harmacy, but deserving of revisitation for its breadth and the distinct voices of its three songwriters.[7][27]
Track listing
Original track listing
The original track listing for Bubble & Scrape, Sebadoh's fourth studio album released on April 26, 1993, by Sub Pop Records, features 17 tracks spanning approximately 46 minutes. These songs reflect the band's lo-fi indie rock style, with contributions from core members Lou Barlow, Jason Loewenstein, and Eric Gaffney, who handled writing, performance, and production duties across the record.[3][1]The tracks are as follows:
This sequencing appears on the standard U.S. CD and vinyl editions (Sub Pop SP 192/SP 192b).[28][29]
2008 reissue bonus tracks
The 2008 deluxe reissue of Bubble & Scrape, released by Domino Records on May 5, features 15 bonus tracks appended to the original album, expanding it to 32 tracks total. These additions include live recordings, home demos, alternate takes, covers, and B-sides drawn from Sebadoh's sessions and performances around 1992–1993, offering a deeper look into the band's lo-fi indie rock evolution during that period. Among the highlights is a cover of the Necros' punk track "Reject," captured live, alongside raw cassette demos and previously scarce material that showcases contributions from Lou Barlow, Jason Loewenstein, and Eric Gaffney.[4]The bonus tracks comprise six previously unreleased recordings, four from the limited-edition 7-inch single bundled with the original UK LP, and five rare B-sides, reflecting the group's collaborative and experimental approach before Gaffney's departure. Several were recorded in informal settings, such as home cassettes or quick sessions in Berlin and Northampton, emphasizing Sebadoh's DIY ethos.[18]
No.
Title
Writer(s)
Duration
Notes
18
Reject
The Necros
2:23
Live recording at Don’t Come On Monday, Berlin, November 1992
19
Sister
Jason Loewenstein
2:12
-
20
Bouquet for a Siren
Eric Gaffney
2:07
Recorded June 1992
21
Emma Get Wild
Eric Gaffney
0:57
Recorded June 1992
22
Flood / Ken
Jason Loewenstein
2:07
-
23
Messin' Around
Eric Gaffney
1:38
Recorded June 1992
24
Visibly Wasted II
Eric Gaffney
1:31
Recorded in Berlin, November 1992
25
You Are Going Down
-
0:56
-
26
Old Daze
-
1:32
-
27
Part 1 - Lou
-
4:28
Recorded at home on cassette
28
Part 2 - Eric
-
2:09
-
29
Part 3 - Eric
Eric Gaffney
1:45
Mixed at 263 South Street, Northampton, February 1993
30
Part 4 - Jason
-
2:23
-
31
Happily Divided
Jason Loewenstein
2:49
-
32
Soul and Fire (Acoustic Demo)
Lou Barlow
2:13
Recorded at home on cassette
Personnel and credits
Musicians
The album Bubble & Scrape was recorded by the core trio of Sebadoh: Lou Barlow, Jason Loewenstein, and Eric Gaffney, who collectively handled vocals, guitars, bass, and drums across the tracks, reflecting the band's lo-fi, multi-instrumentalist approach.[9]Lou Barlow contributed vocals, guitar, and bass on several tracks, including "Soul and Fire" and "Emma Get Wild."[9]Jason Loewenstein provided bass, drums, guitar, and vocals, notably on songs like "Happily Divided," "On Fire," and "Sister."[9]Eric Gaffney, the drummer and a founding member, played drums, guitar, bass, harp, keyboards, and contributed vocals and cassette bits on multiple tracks, such as "Think (Let Tomorrow Bee)," "Ride the Rider," and "Narrow Stories"; this was his final album with the band.[9]Guest vocalist Seana Carmody appeared on "Think (Let Tomorrow Bee)."[9]
Technical staff
The production of Bubble & Scrape was handled by a team of engineers who worked across various studios, reflecting the album's lo-fi indie rock aesthetic and collaborative approach. Recording took place mainly at Slaughterhouse in Northampton, Massachusetts, with additional sessions at The Cellar Sound Studio in Providence, Rhode Island, and Don’t Come On Monday in Berlin for select tracks.[30]Brian Fellows and Paul McNamara served as engineers for the majority of the tracks (1–4, 9, 11, 14, and 17), capturing the raw, intimate sound characteristic of Sebadoh's early work. Bob Weston, known for his contributions to other indie and noise rock projects, engineered tracks 5, 7, 12, 13, and 16, and also mixed the opening tracks 1 ("Soul and Fire") and 2 ("Two Years Two Days").[30][9]Mixing duties were shared, with Bob Weston handling the first two tracks at The Cellar Sound Studio, while the remaining tracks (3–17) were mixed by band members Eric Gaffney and Jason Loewenstein at Slaughterhouse. Tim O'Heir provided sequencing for the album at Fort Apache Studios, ensuring cohesive flow across its 17 tracks. No separate mastering credits are listed, aligning with the era's DIY production ethos.[30]