- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) · 1991
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Piece of Cake · 1992
- Morning in America · 2019
- Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge · 1991
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Mudhoney · 1989
- Since We've Become Translucent · 2002
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
- Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge · 1991
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (Deluxe Edition) · 1988
Essential Albums
- Mudhoney’s debut single “Touch Me I’m Sick” and its follow-up Superfuzz BigMuff EP defined an era of late-80s-early ‘90s Seattle grunge, with its sludgy guitars, roughshod rhythms and singer Mark Arm’s emphatic whelps and screams. Other bands from the region went on to greater success — Nirvana, Soundgarden — but none represented the scene’s spirit more effectively; Mudhoney schooled every band that heard them. The band’s playful vibe channeled genuine rage; their cover of the Texas punk group the Dicks’ “Hate the Police” is a most forceful anti-authority anthem. This deluxe edition collects the early singles, the original EP, various compilation tracks, several early demos, live recordings from Berlin, and a 1988 radio program in Santa Barbara. It captures them at their spontaneous and magical best with an energy and un-jaded enthusiasm that only true believers can channel. The live version of “If I Think” expresses the perfect dynamic, lying low for the verses and exploding for the chorus with unrelenting force. Even at this early stage with tunes like “In n’ Out of Grace,” “Need,” and “You Got It (Keep It Outta My Face)” they already had a deep catalog to draw from.
- 2023
- 2023
Artist Playlists
- Dirty riffs and naughty humor from the true creators of grunge.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
More To Hear
- How the Seattle indie label created three decades of noise.
- How the Seattle indie label created three decades of noise.
About Mudhoney
Since their formation in 1988, Mudhoney have been one of Seattle’s sharpest musical exports, their grinding-gears guitars and pummeling drums combining with the caustic vocals of Mark Arm in a way that echoes a certain strain of Gen X world-weariness. Arm and fellow guitarist Steve Turner had been in the proto-grunge band Green River until 1987; they formed Mudhoney with Bundle of Hiss drummer Dan Peters and ex-Melvins bassist Matt Lukin. Their debut single, the raucous, irascible “Touch Me I’m Sick,” became one of the defining songs of its era, putting the band’s label, Sub Pop, on the map. That song’s attendant EP, Superfuzz Bigmuff, also became an underground hit. Mudhoney’s self-titled full-length followed in 1989, and two years later they released the garage-y Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge. The early-’90s alt-rock gold rush led to them being signed to Reprise, and their first album for that label, the hammering, sarcasm-scorched Piece of Cake, came out in 1992. Mudhoney's Seattle-hype broadside “Overblown” was one of the highlights of the Singles soundtrack, and their uneasiness with being in the major-label machine gave a heavy energy to 1995’s blistering My Brother the Cow and 1998’s blues-tinged Tomorrow Hit Today. Lukin departed the band and Mudhoney left Reprise after that album, returning to Sub Pop. In the 2000s, they expanded on their aesthetic, leaning into psychedelia on 2002’s Since We’ve Become Translucent and bringing in brass for 2006’s Under a BIllion Suns, but they doubled down on their fury and returned to their raw, powerful form on the albums that followed, including the 2018 collection of 21st-century salvos Digital Garbage.
- ORIGIN
- Seattle, WA, United States
- FORMED
- 1988
- GENRE
- Alternative