Meat Puppets II
Meat Puppets II is the second studio album by American rock band the Meat Puppets, released in April 1984 on the independent label SST Records.[1][2] Formed in 1980 in Phoenix, Arizona, by brothers Curt Kirkwood (guitar and vocals) and Cris Kirkwood (bass), along with drummer Derrick Bostrom, the Meat Puppets transitioned from the raw hardcore punk of their 1982 self-titled debut to a more experimental style on this record.[3][2] The album was recorded in April and May 1983 at Total Access Recording in Redondo Beach, California, and mixed later that year at Chaton Studio in Scottsdale, Arizona, with production credited to the band and engineer Spot.[4][3] Musically, Meat Puppets II fuses punk rock with country, psychedelia, and folk elements, resulting in a loose, sun-soaked cowpunk aesthetic that departs significantly from the band's earlier aggression while showcasing Curt Kirkwood's melodic songwriting and surreal lyrics.[3][1] The album comprises twelve original tracks, all written by Kirkwood, including notable standouts such as "Plateau," "Oh, Me," "Lake of Fire," and "Lost," which highlight the band's blend of twangy guitars, acoustic introspection, and improvisational energy.[2][3] Upon release, Meat Puppets II garnered critical acclaim for its innovative sound and has endured as a cornerstone of alternative and indie rock, influencing the 1990s grunge movement—particularly through Nirvana's covers of three of its songs ("Plateau," "Oh, Me," and "Lake of Fire") during their 1993 MTV Unplugged in New York performance, which brought the Meat Puppets wider recognition.[3][5][6] Modern retrospectives, such as Pitchfork's 2024 review rating it 9.0 out of 10 and Al Shipley's 2025 Spin ranking placing it second in the band's discography, continue to praise it as a desert-born classic that bridges punk's DIY ethos with Americana's rustic charm.[3][7]Background
Band Formation and Early Career
The Meat Puppets were formed in Phoenix, Arizona, in January 1980 by brothers Curt Kirkwood (guitar and vocals) and Cris Kirkwood (bass), with high school acquaintance Derrick Bostrom joining on drums shortly thereafter.[8][9][10] The trio, connected through mutual friends and a shared affinity for punk rock, began jamming in a garage setting, embracing a DIY ethos amid Arizona's burgeoning underground scene.[11] Their early rehearsals produced a raw, energetic sound driven by the brothers' creative synergy and Bostrom's rhythmic foundation, establishing a stable original lineup that persisted through the band's initial years.[9] Influenced by West Coast punk acts like Black Flag and the Minutemen, the Meat Puppets developed a hardcore punk style marked by aggressive energy and experimental edge.[12] In 1981, they released their debut EP, In a Car, on the independent World Imitation label, which caught the attention of SST Records co-founder and A&R representative Joe Carducci.[13] This led to their signing with SST in 1982, the label founded by Black Flag's Greg Ginn, allowing the band creative autonomy within the punk ecosystem.[11][14] The band's self-titled debut album followed later that year on SST, comprising 17 short, lo-fi tracks that captured their chaotic, noise-driven aesthetic and aversion to punk's rigid conventions.[10] Live performances during this period were notoriously unpredictable, often featuring improvised jams, covers, and a deliberate "pathetic hatred" toward audiences, which amplified their cult status in the underground circuit.[10] Extensive tours, including support slots with Black Flag, helped build their reputation among DIY communities across the Southwest and beyond, solidifying their role as innovative outliers in the early-1980s hardcore scene.[11]Conception of the Album
Following the release of their self-titled debut album in 1982, which was characterized by raw, noisy hardcore punk, the Meat Puppets decided to evolve their sound for the follow-up, moving toward a fusion of country, psychedelia, and extended jamming. Guitarist and primary songwriter Curt Kirkwood reflected on this transition as a response to the band's initial post-debut inertia, where members were content to "sit around and get high," prompting him to focus on crafting more deliberate songs. This shift was inspired by the band's Phoenix, Arizona roots, with the desert environment influencing a sense of isolation and surrealism in their creative process.[15][3] Songwriting for Meat Puppets II occurred mainly between 1982 and early 1983, amid relentless touring that provided opportunities for ideas to develop organically. Curt Kirkwood led the effort, composing all of the material, marking a departure from the debut where drummer Derrick Bostrom had penned most lyrics. The process emphasized spontaneity over discipline, with melodies and structures emerging from casual jamming rather than structured sessions, allowing for absurdity and humor to infuse the songs.[16][17][18] Conceptually, the album aimed for a "cowpunk" aesthetic—blending punk energy with country twang and psychedelic exploration—to create longer, more improvisational pieces compared to the debut's brief, aggressive bursts. This Western-gothic vibe, rooted in Arizona's sparse landscapes, sought to capture themes of environmental whimsy and personal experimentation through loose, humorous narratives. Band dynamics played a key role, as the trio's close living situation and pervasive drug use fostered a relaxed rehearsal style that imbued the material with an unpolished, transcendent feel, prioritizing collective intuition over rigidity.[19][3][15]Recording and Production
Studio Sessions
The recording of Meat Puppets II took place during the spring of 1983 at Total Access Recording in Redondo Beach, California, a studio frequently used by SST Records artists including Black Flag due to the label's close ties and the expertise of engineer Spot.[20][21] The sessions spanned approximately two months, beginning with the tracking of basic instrumental tracks recorded live as a trio to preserve the band's raw, unpolished energy, followed by overdubs including multiple vocal passes.[22] The band's workflow emphasized minimal advance preparation and heavy reliance on improvisation, with several songs emerging spontaneously during drug-influenced sessions, such as "Lake of Fire" and "Magic Toy Missing," which were composed in about 20 minutes amid an acid trip.[3] This approach fostered a relaxed, exploratory atmosphere that stood in stark contrast to the hurried, three-day acid-fueled recording of their self-titled debut album.[3] The process involved three distinct sessions overall, with the initial focus on instrumentals and subsequent ones dedicated to vocals, as frontman Curt Kirkwood refined his singing style through trial and error to achieve the desired melodic and harmonic effects.[22] Although the album was completed by late 1983, its release was delayed until April 1984 owing to SST Records' backlog of projects and internal production priorities, a situation that held the master tapes for eight to ten months, according to drummer Derrick Bostrom's recollection.[22] This lag reflected broader challenges at the label during its rapid expansion in the punk and alternative scenes.[22] The sessions marked a conceptual evolution from the band's punk roots, allowing greater freedom in blending country and psychedelic elements.[3]Production and Engineering
The production of Meat Puppets II was handled by Glen "Spot" Lockett, a key figure at SST Records renowned for his raw and unpolished approach to recording punk and indie acts. Spot, who engineered many foundational SST releases including works by Black Flag and Hüsker Dü, emphasized capturing the band's live energy with minimal intervention, often recording entire takes in one room to preserve natural interplay and "looseness." For the Meat Puppets, this meant encouraging their experimental, jam-oriented sessions influenced by psychedelics, resulting in a cohesive sound that Spot himself described as "gelatinous"—a term of high praise for its fluid, unified quality.[23][24][25] Recording took place over April and May 1983 at Total Access Recording Studios in Redondo Beach, California, utilizing analog 16-track tape machines typical of the era's punk productions.[20] The studio's large live room allowed for a full-band setup without isolation, promoting heavy amp bleed and room ambience that highlighted the album's acoustic guitar elements and rustic textures, while Spot employed close-miking techniques with microphones like Shure SM57s and EV RE20s to manage volume without excessive compression or effects. This approach yielded a sparse, direct mix that accentuated the band's desert-rooted psychedelia, avoiding overdubs in favor of spontaneous performances.[20][25][26] Post-production involved mixing at Chaton Studios in Scottsdale, Arizona, during October and November 1983, where Spot refined the tracks to maintain the lo-fi aesthetic while enhancing subtle psychedelic layers through basic EQ and natural reverb. Mastering occurred at K Disc Mastering in Hollywood, California.[27] The album's artwork, a minimalist surreal illustration evoking disjointed puppet figures amid abstract landscapes, was created by guitarist Curt Kirkwood and artist Neal Holliday, aligning visually with the record's thematic otherworldliness.[20][28]Musical Style and Themes
Genre Influences
Meat Puppets II represents a pioneering fusion of punk and hardcore with country and bluegrass elements, marking a deliberate shift from the band's earlier aggressive sound toward a more eclectic, roots-oriented approach.[3] This blend drew heavily from the bluesy, riff-driven style of ZZ Top, as guitarist Curt Kirkwood cited the Texas rockers as a key influence during his formative years, incorporating their gritty, swampy guitar tones into the album's instrumentation.[14] Similarly, the album's extended improvisational sections echoed the Grateful Dead's jamming ethos, with drummer Derrick Bostrom noting the band's intermittent appreciation for the Dead's expansive, psychedelic-tinged explorations that informed their country-inflected jams.[14][29] The record's psychedelic rock undercurrents stemmed directly from the band's Arizona origins, infusing tracks with a hazy, expansive quality that evoked the vast, sun-scorched landscapes of the Southwest desert.[3] This "sun-baked, acid-addled" vibe, as characterized by reviewers, arose from the Phoenix punk scene's progressive leanings and the members' experimentation with psychedelics, creating a disorienting, otherworldly atmosphere distinct from urban punk's raw edge.[3][14] As early architects of cowpunk, the Meat Puppets combined roots rock's twangy authenticity with punk's irreverent attitude on Meat Puppets II, predating and differentiating from contemporaries like X and the Blasters through its heavier emphasis on desert isolation and improvisational freedom rather than straight-ahead rockabilly revivalism.[30][3][31] This hybrid form positioned the album as a foundational work in the genre, blending hardcore's energy with country-western motifs in a way that felt uniquely Southwestern and subversive.[32] Subtle nods to 1970s stoner rock and folk traditions further enriched the album's texture, with psychedelic haze and folk-derived simplicity yielding a "Western-gothic" identity that prioritized atmospheric immersion over overt imitation.[3][33] The production amplified these layers, allowing the stoner-like introspection and folk minimalism to coexist with punk's velocity, forging a sound that captured the arid, introspective ethos of rural Americana refracted through alternative rock's lens.[3]Lyrics and Composition
The lyrics of Meat Puppets II, penned almost exclusively by Curt Kirkwood, embrace an absurdist humor laced with surreal imagery and drug-fueled nonsense, often channeling rural Americana through themes of isolation, euphoria, and hallucinatory mental states. Influenced by Brothers Grimm fables and Jack Kirby's comic book mythologies, the words prioritize evocative snapshots over linear narratives, as seen in tracks like "Split Myself in Two," where Rumpelstiltskin-like motifs blend whimsy with alienation. In "Lake of Fire," Kirkwood adopts a childlike rhyme scheme to probe religious fervor and the afterlife, questioning "Where do bad folks go when they die?" in a tone that mixes mockery with existential curiosity. These elements reflect a slacker-prophet perspective on a degraded American West, incorporating desert mysticism and talk-show banalities, such as "holy ghosts and talk show hosts planted in the sand" in "Plateau."[3][34][16] Compositions on the album balance tight hooks with opportunities for psychedelic expansion, featuring tracks that average around 2.5 minutes yet incorporate extended jams through layered guitar work. Kirkwood's songwriting process was intuitive and spontaneous, often beginning with melodies that preceded lyrics, with many pieces emerging during relaxed or intoxicated states, such as "Lake of Fire" composed alone on a Halloween night. Sessions emphasized minimalism, with most songs captured in single straight takes and few overdubs, fostering a raw interplay between Curt Kirkwood's twangy riffs and Cris Kirkwood's percolating bass lines inspired by Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh. This approach allowed for dynamic builds, exemplified by the dual guitar harmonies that evolve organically across verses and choruses.[3][16][15] Instrumentation shifts the band's sound toward melodic accessibility compared to their debut's punk aggression, incorporating banjo-like acoustic picking on electric guitars, loose and expressive drumming from Derrick Bostrom, and a overall looser rhythmic foundation that supports the album's country-punk hybrid. Bostrom's simplified patterns provide space for the Kirkwood brothers' interplay, while vocal deliveries range from bored drawls to strained caterwauls, enhancing the surreal lyrics without overpowering the instrumentation. Some tracks, like "Seal Whales," originated with lyrics but were refined into instrumentals to better capture their atmospheric essence.[3][16] The album's structure progresses from upbeat, hardcore-leaning openers like "Split Myself in Two" to more introspective, Western-gothic explorations in later tracks such as "Aurora Borealis" and "Lake of Fire," underscoring the Meat Puppets' maturation in blending punk energy with folk and psychedelic songcraft. This arc mirrors the band's deliberate expansion of their musical palette, moving from rapid-fire aggression to contemplative builds that invite listener immersion.[3][34]Release and Promotion
Initial Release
Meat Puppets II was released in April 1984 by the independent label SST Records, bearing the catalog number SST 019. The album comprises 12 tracks with a total runtime of 29:57 and was initially issued as a vinyl LP in limited pressing runs typical of SST's punk and alternative output.[27][35] Lacking support from major labels, the album's distribution relied on underground networks, including SST's mail-order service and independent record stores catering to punk and alternative scenes. This approach led to modest initial sales, confined largely to dedicated fans within these subcultures, as SST focused on grassroots reach rather than mainstream commercial channels.[36] Promotion centered on SST's established methods, such as advertisements in punk fanzines and the label's mail-order catalog, which often included order forms inside album jackets. The band complemented these efforts with live appearances at key 1984 events, including SST showcases and punk festivals, to build buzz among niche audiences. The album's cover art, an abstract painting by guitarist Curt Kirkwood and artist Neal Holliday featuring bold swatches of green, blue, and red, played a crucial role in marketing its eccentric, desert-punk vibe to this targeted demographic.[37][3]Reissues and Remasters
In 1999, Rykodisc released a remastered CD reissue of Meat Puppets II that expanded the original 12-track album with seven bonus tracks, bringing the total runtime to approximately 48 minutes.[38] These additions included previously unreleased material such as B-sides and demos (see track listing for details). The enhanced edition also featured a 12-page booklet with new liner notes, lyrics, photographs, and artwork, making it a comprehensive package for collectors.[39] In February 2024, Megaforce Records issued a remastered edition of Meat Puppets II on both 180-gram vinyl and CD as part of a broader revival of the band's SST Records catalog from 1981 to 1989.[40] Sourced from the original analog tapes, this version offered improved audio fidelity over prior pressings while retaining the seven bonus tracks from the 1999 Rykodisc release.[41] The reissue aligned with the album's 40th anniversary celebrations, enhancing accessibility through high-quality analog-to-digital transfers.[40] Since the early 2010s, Meat Puppets II has been widely available on digital streaming platforms such as Spotify, where the expanded 19-track version (including bonuses) streams to millions of listeners annually.[42] Tracks from Meat Puppets II, notably "Plateau" and "Lake of Fire," have appeared in various punk and alternative rock compilations and box sets, such as SST's retrospective collections, thereby introducing the album to subsequent generations of fans.[2]Reception
Contemporary Critical Response
Upon its release in April 1984, Meat Puppets II garnered acclaim in the underground punk scene for its witty humor and bold shift away from the chaotic hardcore of the band's debut toward an eclectic fusion of country twang, psychedelia, and rock influences.[11] Punk zines lauded the album's playful genre-blending and irreverent spirit, positioning it as a refreshing evolution for the Arizona trio within the SST Records lineup.[11] Kurt Loder's review in Rolling Stone awarded the album four stars, calling it "one of the funniest and most enjoyable albums of 1984" and emphasizing its broad appeal that extended beyond hardcore audiences to a wider rock constituency. Loder highlighted the record's "cultural trash compactor" quality, mashing up bluegrass, punk, and surrealism in a way that captured the band's stoner-infused creativity. The album's rollout faced challenges from SST's production delays, with recording completed in 1983 but the release postponed until the following spring amid the label's busy schedule of high-profile punk releases.[43] Despite this, strong word-of-mouth spread through West Coast punk circuits, where live shows amplified its quirky charm and helped cement its status as an instant cult favorite among SST artists like Hüsker Dü and the Minutemen.[11] Early fan reception focused on tracks like "Up on the Sun" and "Lake of Fire" for their infectious hooks and offbeat lyrics, fostering a dedicated following in independent music communities.[3]Retrospective Reviews
In the decades following its release, Meat Puppets II has been widely reappraised as a pioneering work in alternative rock, particularly for its fusion of punk energy with country and psychedelic elements, often termed "cowpunk." Music critics have highlighted its foundational role in shaping alt-country by blending hardcore punk's raw aggression with Southwestern folk traditions, as seen in tracks like "Plateau" and "Aurora Borealis," which evoke a desert-infused psychedelia.[3] Pitchfork's 2024 retrospective review awarded the album a 9.0 out of 10, praising it as a "sun-baked, country-fried, acid-addled cowpunk album" that captured the unique spirit of the Arizona desert and influenced subsequent genre explorations.[3] The album's influence extends to grunge and alternative rock, with critics noting its impact on bands like Nirvana, whose frontman Kurt Cobain frequently cited it as a key inspiration, leading to the Meat Puppets' performance on Nirvana's 1993 MTV Unplugged. Music press reflections, including those in Trouser Press, emphasize how Meat Puppets II expanded punk's boundaries into "radical country-punk," offering stylistic contrasts that prefigured the eclecticism of 1990s alternative scenes.[3][31] It has earned high placements in retrospective rankings, including #94 on Pitchfork's 2002 list of the Top 100 Albums of the 1980s, #91 on Slant Magazine's 2012 ranking of the 100 Best Albums of the 1980s, and #2 on Spin's 2025 ranking of every Meat Puppets album, behind only Up on the Sun.[44][45][7] Reissues have further fueled this renewed appreciation. The 1999 Rykodisc remaster introduced the album to broader audiences through improved sound quality, while the 2024 Megaforce Records reissue of the SST catalog, remastered from original tapes, coincided with a surge in streaming availability that amplified its discovery among younger listeners.[2][40] In the streaming era, these efforts have elevated Meat Puppets II's status, with critics observing its enhanced resonance in playlists blending indie rock and Americana, solidifying its legacy as an underappreciated gem of 1980s innovation.[3]Legacy
Influence on Other Artists
Meat Puppets II played a pivotal role in bridging punk rock with alt-country and grunge, serving as a touchstone for subsequent artists through its innovative fusion of genres. Kurt Cobain of Nirvana frequently cited the album as a major influence, praising its originality and psychedelic elements, which resonated with his own songwriting approach. This admiration culminated in Nirvana covering three tracks—"Plateau," "Oh, Me," and "Lake of Fire"—from Meat Puppets II during their 1993 MTV Unplugged performance, with brothers Curt and Cris Kirkwood joining them onstage. The album's raw energy and genre-blending style helped shape early grunge aesthetics, positioning the Meat Puppets as core influencers in the Pacific Northwest scene. The record's impact extended to the 1990s "cowpunk" revival, where its punk-infused country and psychedelia informed the insurgent country movement. Uncle Tupelo, often credited with kickstarting alt-country, drew significant inspiration from Meat Puppets II, with frontman Jay Farrar noting the band's three-piece dynamic and genre-mixing as key influences on their sound. Similarly, the Jayhawks, part of the same Midwestern alt-country wave, absorbed elements of the Meat Puppets' hybrid style into their jangly, roots-oriented rock amid overlapping fanbases and scenes. These connections helped elevate Meat Puppets II as a foundational text for blending American folk traditions with punk attitude. In the Arizona music scene, Meat Puppets II's psychedelic-country fusion left a lasting legacy, inspiring later desert rock outfits amid the state's arid, experimental ethos. Acts like Kyuss, emerging from the Palm Desert area, echoed the album's hazy, expansive soundscapes in their stoner rock, contributing to a regional lineage of boundary-pushing rock that tied Phoenix's punk roots to broader Southwestern heaviness. This local influence underscored the album's role in fostering a distinctive Arizona alternative landscape. Broader endorsements in alt-rock oral histories highlight Meat Puppets II's place in the 1980s indie evolution, with its DIY ethos and sonic experimentation cited as blueprints for bands like Dinosaur Jr. and R.E.M. The 2012 oral history Too High to Die: Meet the Meat Puppets documents how the album's release on SST Records amplified its reach within underground circuits, influencing the trajectory of college radio and alternative rock.Notable Covers and Performances
Nirvana's performance of three songs from Meat Puppets II—"Plateau," "Oh Me," and "Lake of Fire"—during their November 18, 1993, MTV Unplugged in New York session stands as one of the album's most significant tributes. With Meat Puppets guitarist Curt Kirkwood and bassist Cris Kirkwood joining Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic, and Dave Grohl onstage, the renditions brought the punk-country hybrids to a global audience of over 4 million viewers, propelling the 1984 album into mainstream awareness upon the release of Nirvana's MTV Unplugged in New York in 1994.[5] The Meat Puppets themselves revived the album in full during their 2008 reunion, performing the entire Meat Puppets II tracklist at the All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Monticello, New York, as a curated set highlighting its foundational role in their catalog. This live rendition underscored the record's lasting performative vitality amid the band's return after years of hiatus.[3] Beyond these milestones, songs from Meat Puppets II have inspired subsequent covers by prominent artists, including Wilco leader Jeff Tweedy's acoustic take on "Plateau" released in 2023 as part of his Starship Casual series. These interpretations, often featured in tribute-style sessions or recordings post-1990s, reflect the album's influence in alternative rock circles.[46] The album's tracks have also sustained visibility through media placements and ongoing live events, such as "Lake of Fire" appearing in the 1994 film Chasers, where it accompanies key scenes, and continued festival performances of staples like "Plateau" and "Oh Me" by the Meat Puppets into the 2020s, including sets at events like the 2022 Great American Music Hall show.Album Details
Track Listing
Meat Puppets II was originally released on vinyl as SST 019 in April 1984, divided into two sides with all songs written by Curt Kirkwood.[27][2]Side A
| No. | Title | Duration | Writer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Split Myself in Two" | 2:22 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 2 | "Magic Toy Missing" | 1:20 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 3 | "Lost" | 3:24 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 4 | "Plateau" | 2:22 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 5 | "Aurora Borealis" | 2:44 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 6 | "We're Here" | 2:40 | Curt Kirkwood |
Side B
| No. | Title | Duration | Writer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | "Climbing" | 2:41 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 8 | "New Gods" | 2:09 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 9 | "Oh, Me" | 2:59 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 10 | "Lake of Fire" | 1:54 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 11 | "I'm a Mindless Idiot" | 2:26 | Curt Kirkwood |
| 12 | "The Whistling Song" | 2:56 | Curt Kirkwood |
Bonus Tracks (1999 Rykodisc Edition)
| No. | Title | Duration | Writer(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | "Teenager(s)" | 3:36 | Kirkwood, Kirkwood, Bostrom | B-side, previously released in Take It! Magazine #1.2 (1982) |
| 14 | "I'm Not Here" | 1:55 | N/A | Outtake, previously unreleased |
| 15 | "New Gods" | 2:14 | Curt Kirkwood | Outtake, previously unreleased |
| 16 | "Lost" | 3:03 | Curt Kirkwood | Outtake, previously unreleased |
| 17 | "What to Do" | 2:35 | Jagger, Richards | Rolling Stones cover, previously unreleased |
| 18 | "100% of Nothing" | 1:50 | N/A | Outtake, previously unreleased |
| 19 | "Aurora Borealis" | 2:29 | Curt Kirkwood | Outtake, previously unreleased |