Mush
Studio album by
Released1991
RecordedMay 1991, the Greenhouse (London N1)
Genre
Length45:53
LabelRoughneck (original release), Seed (U.S. re-release)
Leatherface chronology
Fill Your Boots
(1990)
Mush
(1991)
Minx
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
Christgau's Consumer Guide(neither)[1]

Mush is the third full-length album by the English punk band Leatherface. It was originally released only in Britain on Roughneck, a subsidiary of Fire Records, in 1991. It was re-released on Seed Records, an offshoot of Atlantic Records, in 1992, in an unsuccessful attempt to capitalize on the popularity of Nirvana in the United States.[2]

The Guardian called it an album "which has influenced every hardcore, post-hardcore, call it what you want, punk group that exists anywhere across the globe."[3] Kerrang rated it as one of the 50 best albums of 1991.[4]

In 2012, Sarah Anderson of NME named it one of "20 lost albums ripe for rediscovery",[5] and the same magazine named it the 49th best album of 1991 in 2016.[6]

Track listing

All songs written by Frankie Stubbs, except where noted.

  1. "I Want the Moon" (Stubbs, Dickie Hammond) - 2:49
  2. "How Lonely" - 2:39
  3. "I Don't Want to Be the One to Say It" (Stubbs, Hammond) - 2:34
  4. "Pandora's Box" (Stubbs, Hammond) - 3:01
  5. "Not a Day Goes By" - 2:38
  6. "Not Superstitious" - 4:19
  7. "Springtime" (Stubbs, Hammond) - 3:19
  8. "Winning" - 1:59
  9. "In the Real World" (Stubbs, Hammond) - 2:23
  10. "Baked Potato" (Stubbs, Hammond) - 3:17
  11. "Bowl of Flies" - 2:58
  12. "Dead Industrial Atmosphere" - 4:03

Bonus tracks on the CD re-release:

  1. "Trenchfoot" - 3:00
  2. "Scheme of Things" - 3:20
  3. "Message in a Bottle" (Sting) - 3:34 (cover version of original by The Police)

References

  1. 1 2 Christgau, Robert (15 October 2000). Christgau's Consumer Guide: Albums of the '90s. Macmillan Publishing. p. 173. ISBN 9780312245603.
  2. 1 2 3 Ogg, Alex. "Mush - Leatherface". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  3. "Melancholia and raw pain: The sad end of Leatherface". TheGuardian.com. 6 November 2015.
  4. "The 50 best albums from 1991".
  5. Anderson, Sarah (7 February 2012). "20 Lost Albums Ripe For Rediscovery". NME. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  6. "1991". NME. 10 October 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2017.


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