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none | 128 pages | 05 Dec 2002 | Music Sales Ltd | 9780711997202 | English | London, United Kingdom Queens Of The Stone Age - Songs For The Deaf | Discogs

It features of Nirvana and on drums, [5] alongside other guest musicians, and was the last Queens to feature on bass. Songs for the Deaf is a loose concept Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaftaking the listener on a drive through the California desert from Los Angeles to Joshua Treetuning into radio stations from towns along the way such as Banning and Chino Hills. Songs for the Deaf received critical acclaim, and earned the band their first gold certification in the United States. One million copies were sold in Europe, earning a platinum certification from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry in He replaced drummer Gene Trautmannwho started working on other projects. Grohl had admired Queens of the Stone Age since they opened for Foo Fighters, and had wanted to appear on their previous album Rated R. Grohl admitted that he had not drummed for a long time and added that fronting a band was "tiring". He returned to Foo Fighters soon after, with Danzig drummer announced as his replacement in August The album also included the first musical contribution to a Queens of the Stone Age album by multi-instrumentalists Natasha Shneider and . Another change in personnel came with the arrival of producer Eric Valentinewho had previously worked on a pair of Dwarves with Oliveri. Lanegan joined the band as a full-time member in after having guested on the band's previous album, Rated Rand provided additional songwriting and lyrics to the group, in addition to lead vocals on several songs. I've been thinking of this album since the first album, not necessarily the radio thing, but to me that isn't the full concept, the full concept is the diversity of it all, I think we're supposed to be pushing buttons over the three records. I've always looked at our first three records as a set: the first one was to distance ourselves from , the second album fanned out the music into different areas and this one takes that out even a little further, I think. In the same month, Oliveri explained the band's aims in an interview with retail company HMV :. We're still doin' the same thing we always did, which is play music that we wanna hear but we can't buy it in the stores so we have to make it. We're not trying to cater to anybody — I wouldn't know how to do that because I've never sold records, you know what I mean? Between them, Homme and Oliveri had different opinions on the usage of fake radio excerpts between tracks on the album, the former believing it gave the album "fluidity". According to Oliveri, they are a jibe at "how a lot of stations play the same thing over and over. We don't get played on the radio, so I figure we should talk shit about them. Several songs that appeared on the album were re-worked forms of tracks previously recorded and released in The Desert Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deafa of with various guest collaborators. The album was initially planned for release on August 13,[23] but was eventually postponed for two weeks. The cover art for the US double LP version of the album is different from the CD version, featuring a red Q with a sperm cell as the line in the Q and an egg cell as the circle on a black background with no other text. It was Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf on red vinyl. The UK vinyl version Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf is the same as the CD cover. The person on the album disc is musician Dave Catchingwho performs on the album. Both the CD and LP cover have a seal on most copies, due to the word " fuck " appearing in the title track "A Song for the Deaf" and "Six Shooter", as well as for the violent lyrics of the latter track. There were also three different album covers that were made for the CD version of Songs for the Deaf. All of the interior artwork for each of the three versions is the same, but there were covers printed in red, magenta, and orange. The most common copy of the album Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf is the red cover. Songs for the Deaf was Queens of the Stone Age's breakout album and garnered the band international recognition. Upon its worldwide release in late Augustthe album peaked at number 17 on the Billboard album chart. Songs for the Deaf received critical acclaim and is often cited as the band's greatest album to date. This is not your father's metal. It's better. The album met with great success earning the band's first gold certification in the US on January 27,shifting overcopies, as well as platinum certification in the UK on September 20,with sales exceedingof units sold. To celebrate the twentieth anniversary of its "Hottest " poll, Australian radio station ran a "Hottest of the last 20 years" poll in June Songs that were released between and were eligible for the poll and "" was voted into eleventh position. The information regarding accolades attributed to Songs for the Deaf is adapted from Acclaimed Music. All tracks written by Joshua Homme and Nick Oliveri, except where noted. Lead vocals by Joshua Homme except where noted. The following people contributed to Songs for the Deaf : [25]. The songs on Songs for the Deaf are interluded by staged bits of radio chatter with guest DJs. In order of appearance:. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Queens of the Stone Age. [1] [2] [3] desert rock [4]. The chorus of the second single taken from Songs for the Deaf. The opening of the third single from Songs for the Deaf. This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. Please relocate any relevant information into other sections or articles. March Retrieved December 6, Retrieved September 16, Retrieved October 29, May 31, Archived from the original on October 15, Retrieved June 19, Retrieved November 16, Retrieved July 10, July Archived from the original on November 16, Retrieved July Archived from the original on June 15, Archived from the original on June 10, August 24, Archived from the original on October 27, Retrieved June 20, August 29, Archived from the original on March 22, Kinda Muzik. Retrieved June 21, Archived from the original on June 5, . May 3, . Retrieved February 9, June 9, Archived from the original on August 27, June 25, Archived from the original on September 27, Retrieved October 30, Blender 9 : Archived Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf the original on February 11, Retrieved January 9, Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 2, . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 4, Q : September Uncut 64 : Retrieved July 16, Retrieved June 18, Archived from the original on July 22, Retrieved November 25, Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf from the original on December 9, End of year lists". Retrieved August 6, Songs for the Deaf - Queens of the Stone Age | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic

More Images. Please enable Javascript to take full advantage of our site features. Vinyl Me, Please. Essentials — E Nov Stoner RockHard Rock. Includes art print of the original LP release's "sperm" cover. USA Add Review kedzobj October 16, Report. I love this record and I'm glad to have a press of this but is it just me or is this version extremely upper mid-range heavy? I love the packaging and the sequencing of the the double12 of this but it does not sound as precise as the original CD pressing of this I grew up on. Perhaps the point is for this version to Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf like a Stooges Live pressing. Reply Notify me Helpful. Do yourself a favor and buy this pressing, you'll be blown away by the sound quality even if you're not a huge QOTSA fan. VMP really outdid themselves with this one. Reply Notify me 2 Helpful. Austintex3 March 1, Report. Reply Notify me 3 Helpful. This has to be last years finest reissue - superb remastering and cutting, pressing made by pallas Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf gatefold with embossed features I've cleaned the record and the problem replicates every single time. Anyone else having this issue or was I just unlucky? Otherwise a great sounding record. Superb Reissue! Since a long time I was trying to get this record, but this VMP edition satisfied me a lot. Worth the price!!! Reply Notify me 1 Helpful. Absolutely stunning package all the way around. Hits the needle hard, too. Scottyc January 9, Report. Sadly mine was damaged with a chip right in the opening track Disappointed to say the least. Email VMP, and they said they would send me a new one, that was the day I received it, back on 14 Nov If you didn't know, as their emails have stated, that they just changed over some system, and with all the holiday issues, they got slammed with a serious backlog of issues, going back into October I was worried after reading mixed reviews but nothing about this reissue sounds flat or muddy. As a matter of fact it rocks! The sound burst our of the speakers and hits hard while Homme's vocals are intricate and delicate. Excellent Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf. Focused mids. Crisp highs. Nice bass definition and larger-than-life drums. Whats most important is the music has presence and the mix is expansive and compliments the hard-energy rock 'n roll laid down on the tracks. I'm enjoying the listening experience. Also, this is the quietest pressing I've ever heard, no static, clicks or pops and I don't say that often. Records come in black polylined sleeves. Embossed cover. A delicious package. Have: Want: Avg Rating: 4. Vinyl Me, Please Collection by ponyboyrosa. Vinyl Me Please wishlist by mattromrellslc. My VMP records by yoswa. . Sell This Version. Not On Label. Songs for the Deaf - Wikipedia

Kings of the Stone Age is too lopsided. Misgendering was something they invited; confusion regarding genre, however, was rather less welcome. The love of cannabis is defined by subjective feeling; the desert is an objective fact, a presence in nature. You can bargain with your own perceptions, but the demands of the desert are nonnegotiable. Emotions, in their songs, have a peculiarly concrete texture. One listens to them less for feeling, more for impact. The desert was their literal birthplace. Bands and audiences would find each other at concerts powered by gasoline generators in the arid wasteland. Replacing the low-rider sonics of Kyuss with more intemperate tones, the Queens released one album Queens of the Stone Age in and then a second Rated R in The former was more straightforward and the latter more relaxed; both albums brimmed with power, though concentrating that power and giving it direction remained elusive. The Queens have never made a bad album, but the substantial charms of the predecessors and successors to Songs of the Deaf are predicated on there being a trade-off, however minor, between power and nuance. Songs for the Deaf is the only album that refuses that exchange entirely. Words had been somewhat incidental to enjoying the self-titled album and Rated Rbut they proved crucial in guiding listeners on Songs for the Deaf. The car radio dial serves as a microcosm for Southern California culture; other stations are themed around death metal, Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf music, hip-hop, and Evangelical preaching, and the Queens are positioned, implicitly, as Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf common thread that runs, or rather drives, through them all. Though words help to frame the saga, giving it the spirit if not quite the form of a , ultimately Songs for the Deaf stands on a sound whose crystal-hard ferocity precedes and precludes verbal communication. It took some effort to hear this album properly in New York, where the open road the album cites is absent and the summer climate is too muggy to qualify as desert-like. Songs for the Deaf is a reminder, if one was needed, that there is no such thing as objective quality in music. The mode of transmission counts for a lot, too: Songs for the Deaf is best served through a car stereo, Turn on the Bright Lights through headphones. Naturally, the Queens conclude the album on a feminine note. Here is something you should drop to your knees for, and worship. But you are too stupid to realize yourselves. A song for the deaf, that is for Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf. Gender relations are an even more twisted topic for the band than their name implies. Though, to be fair, and to quote the title of another single, no one knows. But they managed, in their masterpiece, to phrase the questions in a striking way. Already a subscriber? Log in or link your magazine subscription. Learn More. Account Profile. Sign Out. Queens of the Stone Age front man Josh Homme. Tags: music queens of the stone age songs for the deaf. Most Viewed Stories. Promoted links by Taboola.