Forbidden Places
Forbidden Places is the seventh studio album by the American rock band Meat Puppets, released on July 1, 1991, by London Records.[1] It is the band's first major-label release, following their independent albums on SST Records, and features the core lineup of brothers Curt Kirkwood (guitar, vocals) and Cris Kirkwood (bass), alongside drummer Derrick Bostrom.[2] The album blends alternative rock with country, psychedelic, and blues influences, spanning 11 tracks over 37 minutes.[1] It received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised its melodic songwriting and eclectic style, though some noted a shift from the band's earlier punk roots.[3] Forbidden Places peaked at number 9 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart.[1]Background
Conception
Following the release of their 1989 album Monsters on the independent label SST Records, the Meat Puppets sought a shift to a major label to address ongoing issues with distribution, financial sustainability, and limited commercial reach after years of relentless touring. By 1990, the band had grown disillusioned with SST's collapsing network and reluctance to collaborate with larger distributors, leading to negotiations and an eventual signing with London Records, a subsidiary offering greater resources and broader exposure. This transition marked a pivotal motivation for Forbidden Places, their first major-label effort, as the group aimed to leverage professional production while escaping the constraints of the indie scene.[4][5] Post-Monsters tour discussions among band members highlighted a desire to evolve without abandoning their core identity. Frontman Curt Kirkwood drove the vision for Forbidden Places, emphasizing a fusion of the band's punk and psychedelic roots with more structured, accessible rock arrangements to appeal to an expanding alternative audience. These internal conversations, centered in late 1990, focused on retaining experimental elements like surreal lyrics and dynamic instrumentation while adapting to major-label expectations for radio-friendly polish.[4][6] The album's conception drew indirect inspiration from the early 1990s alternative rock landscape, including the raw energy of emerging grunge acts, though the Meat Puppets themselves had long influenced that scene through their innovative blend of country, punk, and noise. By late 1990, the band began recording independently in Phoenix, but London Records required collaboration with producer Pete Anderson to refine their sound for wider accessibility. This timeline aligned with the band's signing to London, enabling a budget and studio environment that supported their ambitions without fully compromising their artistic edge.[7][5]Band context
The Meat Puppets formed in 1980 in Tempe, Arizona, initially as a hardcore punk band consisting of brothers Curt Kirkwood on guitar and vocals, Cris Kirkwood on bass, and drummer Derrick Bostrom.[8] Emerging from the local punk scene, the trio quickly evolved their sound, blending raw punk energy with psychedelic, country, and folk influences to pioneer an alternative rock style that distinguished them from their contemporaries.[9] This transition was evident in their early releases on SST Records, the influential indie label founded by Black Flag's Greg Ginn, which provided a platform for their experimental approach despite the constraints of underground distribution.[9] Key albums such as Meat Puppets II (1984) and Up on the Sun (1985) solidified the band's cult following among alternative rock fans, with the former introducing more melodic and psychedelic elements that influenced later grunge and indie acts, while the latter expanded into jangly, acoustic-driven psychedelia.[8] However, despite critical praise and a loyal audience known as "Meatheads," the band faced commercial struggles on SST, as the label's limited resources and regional focus hindered broader exposure and sales.[4] The original lineup of Curt Kirkwood, Cris Kirkwood, and Derrick Bostrom remained unchanged since the band's inception in the early 1980s, offering continuity that supported their creative development through multiple album cycles without disruptions from personnel shifts.[9] After the 1989 release of Monsters, which marked a return to heavier rock but underscored SST's waning support amid the label's growing legal and financial issues, the Meat Puppets decided to sign with London Records to pursue wider distribution and greater commercial potential.[10]Recording
Studio sessions
The recording of Forbidden Places took place at Capitol Studios in Hollywood, California, beginning in early 1991.[2] The sessions spanned February to April 1991, with initial tracking completed in approximately two weeks, followed by a period of overdubs and mixing.[4] The band adopted a collaborative jamming approach during daily routines, allowing ideas to evolve organically in the studio environment, while Curt Kirkwood took the lead in shaping arrangements to refine the material.[11] This method emphasized capturing the band's raw energy through live takes, minimizing post-production alterations to preserve authenticity.[12] Technically, the album was recorded using 24-track analog tape, a standard for the era at major studios like Capitol, which helped maintain an organic sound with minimal digital effects.[2] The process reflected the Meat Puppets' transition to major-label resources, enabling a polished yet unpolished aesthetic that highlighted their punk-country roots.[1]Production team
Pete Anderson served as the primary producer for Forbidden Places, drawing on his extensive experience in country-rock production, most notably through his long-term collaboration with Dwight Yoakam on albums such as Guitars, Cadillacs (1986) and Buenas Noches from a Lonely Room (1988), to smooth the band's raw punk influences into a more accessible sound. His approach emphasized tight arrangements and sonic polish, marking a departure from the lo-fi aesthetic of the Meat Puppets' prior SST Records output.[13] Mixing was handled by producer Pete Anderson at Soundcastle, focusing on achieving crisp separation between the guitars and vocals to highlight the album's textural layers.[14] Recording engineers Dusty Wakeman and Pete Doell assisted in capturing the sessions at Capitol Studios in Hollywood, with additional engineering support from Kevin Reeves, Leslie Ann Jones, Ray Blair, and Tracy Chisholm.[2] Guest musicians contributed to select tracks, including Tom Funderburk on backing vocals (track 2), Skip Edwards on organ (tracks 2, 5, 6), and Alex Neciosup-Acuña on percussion (tracks 5, 7, 9), with additional backing vocals by engineer Pete Doell (track 9). These contributions added rhythmic nuance and melodic enhancement to the album's sound.[14]Composition
Musical style
Forbidden Places represents a maturation in the Meat Puppets' sound, blending alternative rock with elements of punk, country, and psychedelia while shifting toward a cleaner production aesthetic compared to the raw, lo-fi recordings of their SST era albums like Monsters. This major-label debut maintains the band's signature hybrid style but polishes it for broader appeal, incorporating jangly guitar pop, punk thrash, and subtle country influences without fully abandoning their trippy, introspective edge.[1][15][16] The album's instrumentation centers on prominent electric guitars featuring clean twang, reverb-laden jangle, and inventive riffing, complemented by steady bass lines and dynamic drumming that drive the power-trio dynamic. Curt Kirkwood's guitar work evokes a sense of airy contemplation and fluid energy through heavenly layered harmonies delivered by the Kirkwood brothers. Production techniques, helmed by Pete Anderson, emphasize these harmonies and introduce a more radio-friendly sheen, with subtle textural elements enhancing the psychedelic undercurrents while consummating the band's long-simmering country-rock urges.[1][13][16] Song structures vary between mid-tempo rockers, such as the jangly "Another Moon," and more laid-back, psychedelic ballads like "Whirlpool," with tracks averaging 3-4 minutes in length across the album's concise 37-minute runtime. This mix allows for concise, hook-driven compositions that balance the band's punk energy with melodic accessibility, marking an evolution from the more experimental sprawl of prior works to a tighter, more structured approach suitable for mainstream rotation.[1][13]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Forbidden Places, primarily penned by Curt Kirkwood, delve into predominant themes of isolation, surrealism, and personal introspection, often drawing from his experiences navigating the pressures of fame following the band's shift to a major label and struggles with addiction within the Phoenix music scene.[17][18] These elements reflect a sense of alienation from both the indie punk roots and the emerging corporate music industry, portraying emotional and psychological barriers as vast, unnavigable landscapes.[15] Kirkwood's writing style employs abstract, poetic imagery, frequently invoking deserts and forbidden zones as metaphors for internal turmoil and relational "no-go" areas that symbolize emotional isolation.[18] For instance, the title track "Forbidden Places" explores anxiety about venturing beyond personal comfort zones, using surreal visions of lost free will and dawning realizations to depict strained relationships and self-imposed restrictions amid fame's disorientation.[18] Similarly, tracks like "Open Wide" feature trippy, paranoid surrealism through bizarre animalistic references—such as "little red tongues" and "fat ripe rats"—evoking a discomfort with reality tied to introspective unease.[16] In "Reach Down," Kirkwood addresses themes of redemption, extending the album's confessional tone by contemplating reaching for connection or salvation amid isolation's depths, influenced by his brother's addiction and familial bonds.[17] Compared to earlier albums like Meat Puppets II, the lyrics here evolve toward a more mature, less overtly humorous approach, adopting a confessional depth that confronts personal frustrations with the music industry and existential questions without the previous whimsy.[17] This shift underscores Kirkwood's growing focus on the individual psyche versus societal expectations, blending earthy introspection with subtle uncertainty.[17]Release
Commercial release
Forbidden Places was released on July 9, 1991, through London Records in the United States and internationally, marking the band's major-label debut following their independent releases on SST Records.[1][2] The album appeared in several physical formats, including 12-inch vinyl LP, compact cassette, and compact disc, catering to the preferences of alternative rock listeners in the early 1990s.[2] The cover artwork was created by Meat Puppets guitarist and vocalist Curt Kirkwood, depicting abstract imagery suggestive of vast desert plains and surreal elements like a pink whirlpool in the sky, which echoed the album's exploratory themes.[19][20] Positioned for the alternative rock market, the release targeted audiences familiar with the band's underground reputation, with distribution strategies focusing on college radio outlets to build on their established presence in independent music circuits.[13] A limited edition vinyl reissue was released on November 24, 2023, for Record Store Day Black Friday.[2]Promotion and singles
To promote Forbidden Places, London Records issued "Sam" as the lead single in 1991, which included a music video directed by the band members themselves.[21] A second single, "Whirlpool", followed later that year as a promotional release on vinyl and CD.[22] These singles received airplay on alternative radio stations, supporting the album's push into mainstream markets following the band's move from independent label SST to major-label backing.[2] The band supported the release with a U.S. club tour starting in the summer of 1991, featuring performances at venues like Gabe's Oasis in Iowa City on September 24 and Ground Zero in Boulder on September 21.[23] Commercially, Forbidden Places achieved modest success. By 1992, the album had sold around 60,000 copies in the United States, a figure that reflected its niche appeal but helped cultivate the band's growing cult following among alternative rock audiences.[24]Reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in 1991, Forbidden Places received generally positive reviews from critics, who appreciated its more accessible sound as the Meat Puppets transitioned to a major label, though some noted a shift toward polish that distanced it from the band's rawer independent era. AllMusic's Greg Prato described it as a solid effort that, while not matching the heights of the band's SST Records output, offered greater accessibility for broader audiences through its blend of country and punk elements.[1] Rolling Stone contributor Al Weisel awarded the album three-and-a-half out of five stars, praising its "polished evolution" of the group's signature country-punk style while suggesting the Kirkwood brothers were refining their vocal delivery.[20] Robert Christgau, in his Village Voice consumer guide, selected choice cuts from the record, highlighting standout tracks amid its eclectic mix and deeming it a coherent display of the band's weirdness without assigning a full album grade.[25] Mixed critiques emerged from punk-oriented circles, where the major-label production was sometimes viewed as overly slick and a potential sellout compared to earlier works like Meat Puppets II. Trouser Press's Ira Robbins called it a "so-so record," lamenting its timing amid the rise of grunge and its departure from the band's more unpolished roots.[16] Audience reception was strong within underground and alternative rock scenes, bolstered by energetic live performances that spread word-of-mouth enthusiasm; the album's twangy guitars and psychedelic edges drew parallels to emerging grunge acts, cementing the Meat Puppets' influence in those communities.[26]Retrospective views
In the 2000s, a revival of interest in the Meat Puppets' catalog led to reevaluations of Forbidden Places as an underrated work that bridged their punk and psychedelic roots with emerging grunge influences, particularly in its raw energy and country-tinged alt-rock sound. Critics have increasingly recognized Forbidden Places as a precursor to 1990s alternative rock, highlighting its blend of introspective lyrics and fluid instrumentation amid the major-label polish. Its release coincided with the grunge explosion, positioning the Meat Puppets as unwitting architects of the era's sound despite commercial underperformance.[16] Fan appreciation has grown steadily through digital streaming platforms, fostering a cult following that views the album as essential to the band's endurance during their major-label phase. A 2023 vinyl reissue limited to 2,500 copies for Record Store Day Black Friday renewed interest and improved availability.[27] Modern aggregated scores from retrospective sources place Forbidden Places around 75/100, reflecting its solid but overshadowed status in the band's discography, with AllMusic maintaining a 4/5 rating for its twangy, melodic strengths.[1][3]Personnel
Meat Puppets
- Curt Kirkwood – guitar, vocals[2]
- Cris Kirkwood – bass, backing vocals[2]
- Derrick Bostrom – drums, percussion[2]
Additional musicians
- Skip Edwards – organ (tracks 2, 5), piano (track 6)[2]
- Tom Funderburk – backing vocals (track 2)[2]
- Pete Doell – additional backing vocals (track 9)[2]
Production
- Pete Anderson – producer, mixing[2]
- Dusty Wakeman – programming, recording[2]
- Pete Doell – recording, mixing[2]
- Kevin Reeves – additional engineering[2]
- Leslie Ann Jones – additional engineering[2]
- Ray Blair – additional engineering[2]
- Tracy Chisholm – additional engineering[2]
- Doug Sax – mastering[2]
Artwork
- Klotz – art direction[2]
- Curt Kirkwood – cover[2]
- Cris Kirkwood – inside drawing[2]
- Dennis Keeley – photography[2]