New Album: Rise to Your Knees released July 17, 2007.
"This record is very much a return to our '80s approach," Curt Kirkwood says
of the new Meat Puppets album Rise to Your Knees. "It cost next to nothing
to make, and everything on it is a first take. My attitude now is that I
refuse to spend a lot of money on this, I refuse to over think it, and I
refuse to let other people impose their own agendas on my band."
Rise to Your Knees is the first album of new material to bear the Meat
Puppets name since 2000, and the first in a dozen years to reunite
guitarist/singer/main songwriter Curt with his brother, bassist/co-founder
Cris Kirkwood, who recently rejoined the band after a lengthy struggle with
substance abuse.
The 15-song album (the resurgent Meat Puppets' first for the independent
Anodyne label) boasts the same visionary fusion of complementary contrasts
that originally endeared the band to a large and loyal audience in the
1980s, when they emerged from their hometown of Phoenix, Arizona to redefine
the parameters of American indie rock.
Rise to Your Knees (recorded in the band's adopted home base of Austin,
Texas) finds the Kirkwoods and new drummer Ted Marcus tapping into the same
adventurous spirit that first put Meat Puppets on the map, recapturing the
transcendent highs of their most celebrated work. The resulting music adds
an inspired new chapter to the already massive legacy of a band whose body
of music is an indispensable cornerstone of contemporary alternative rock.
For most of the 1980s, Curt, Cris, and original drummer Derrick Bostrom
turned out a remarkable run of independent releases, originally released on
the SST label, including such acknowledged underground classics as Meat
Puppets, Meat Puppets II, Up on the Sun, Mirage, Huevos and Monsters. On
those albums, the band applied punk's loud, fast energy and a free-spirited
sense of experimentalism to an ever-evolving mix of bluesy hard rock,
high-lonesome twang and homespun psychedelia. The threesome delivered its
eclectic iconoclasm with an increasingly sophisticated level of instrumental
interplay, highlighted by Curt's inventive guitar runs and his and Cris'
rough-hewn vocal harmonies. The trio's dynamic interaction was further
reflected in their adrenaline-charged live shows, which were prone to induce
delirious sonic highs.
Meat Puppets exercised a massive influence on more than one generation of
like-minded indie combos, including Nirvana, whose fandom ran so deep that
they invited them along as opening act on their In Utero tour, and invited
the Kirkwoods to share the stage to perform three Meat Puppets numbers on
Nirvana's historic 1994 MTV Unplugged special.
After nearly a decade of D.I.Y. success, Meat Puppets made a successful
transition to major-label status in the first half of the '90s, signing with
London Records and releasing Forbidden Places, Too High to Die, and No Joke!,
making unexpected inroads into the rock mainstream and even achieving a
surprise hit with "Backwater."
The band went on hiatus for the remainder of the '90s, and Curt eventually
reemerged leading a completely new, Austin-based four-man Meat Puppets
lineup for 2000's Golden Lies. He then formed Eyes Adrift with Nirvana
bassist Krist Novoselic and Sublime drummer Bud Gaugh; that outfit released
one self-titled album in 2002. Kirkwood then spent an extended stint touring
as an acoustic solo act, releasing the stripped-down album Snow under his
own name in 2005, before feeling the urge to reactivate Meat Puppets.
"I never broke the band up," asserts Kirkwood. "I never said, 'There's no
more Meat Puppets.' I drove thousands and thousands of miles doing solo
stuff, and I had a blast doing that, but nobody was watching out for my ass
except me. After four or five years of that, I'd had enough and was ready to
play electric. And then some trusted friends in Phoenix said that Cris was
rehabilitated, so I called him up and he seemed ready."
New drummer Ted Marcus arrived in an appropriately organic fashion,
initially entering the band's orbit while working as soundman on a new Meat
Puppets documentary, which had been shooting during the early stages on Rise to Your Knees' birth cycle. "After a few days of tracking, everybody was
like, 'Sonofabitch, this is amazing,'" recalls Curt.
Having made self-produced low-budget indie records and expensive major-label
albums with big-name producers, Kirkwood has a pretty clear idea of which
approach works best for his band, whose music has always been rooted in
spontaneity and inspiration.
"In the '80s, we used to just crap this stuff out," he notes. "Those SST
records cost, like, five grand apiece, if that much, and those are the
records that made people like us. Later, when we got into a position to work
in bigger studios with outside people, we'd wind up spending a whole bunch
of money and having to satisfy the people who gave us that money. We did
that all through the '90s, and I'm just not interested in doing that
anymore.
"Now, if I can get away with it, I'll make a record as cheap as I can and
put as little work as I can into it, which is what we did with this one. I
don't like putting a lot time into it. We cut a track, and If we've played
it halfway right, we're done with it."
With Rise to Your Knees already the subject of a rapturous groundswell among
longtime fans, the reborn Meat Puppets' sense of musical mission is as
strong as ever. "I think this is the most dynamic version of the band ever,
and so far the love coming from the audience has been really, really great,"
he notes, adding, "We started when Reagan was in, and I think it's a similar
time now. It feels medieval. It feels like the world is a fuckin' pile of
shit that's full of snakes and flies, and we're here to put some frosting on
it."