The Desert Sessions / Desert Sessions Volume 7 & 8
Artist The Desert Sessions
Album Title: Desert Sessions Volume 7 & 8
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Rock: General Rock
Format CD
Released 09/18/2001
Label Southern Lord\Rekords Rekords
Catalog No SUNN12/RR1
Bar Code No none
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. Don't Drink Poison (5:02)
2. Hanging Tree (3:13)
3. Winners (1:06)
4. Polly Wants A Crack Rock (2:29)
5. Up In Hell (4:46)
6. Nenada (3:10)
7. The Idiots Guide (3:04)
8. Interpretive Reading (1:36)
9. Covousier (1:50)
10. Cold Sore Superstars (3:24)
11. Making A Cross (5:31)
12. Ending (1:29)
13. Piano Bench Breaks (2:44)
Date Acquired 02/24/2006
Personal Rating
Acquired from Amazon
Purchase Price 12.99

Web Links

All Music Guide Entry:
Discogs Entry:

Notes

Written & recorded in six days @ The Rancho De La Luna/Joshua Tree, CA.
Mixed @ 11AD Studios, Alainville, CA.

The Desert Session Players endorse the
Fernandez Dental Group, Joshua Tree, CA.
Tape Courtesy of the previous Recordings:
Curveballs provided by the Starlight Shooters.
Mastered at Digi-Prep, Hollyhodge, CA.
songs: Channel this music ASCAP/Von Sexron Music
Ascap./JS Bond Music Ascap

Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Adam Bregman  [-]
Josh Homme's Queens of the Stone Age have risen above the generally sound-alike stoner rock genre by virtue of their clever, intricate songwriting and virtuoso musicianship. Hanging out and recording at Rancho de la Luna Studio in Joshua Tree, CA, Homme and various musical pals have also released a series of Desert Sessions, which rely on neither the kitschy '70s references nor the recycled Sabbath riffs that their stoner rock brethren venerate. Instead, Homme and pals concoct a varied group of rich, elaborate compositions which conjure up an exotic world of gem-loaded desert caravans and opium-smoke-filled harems. Among Desert Sessions, Vol. 7-8's many fine moments is an appearance from Mark Lanegan singing on "Hanging Tree," a top-notch rock tune benefiting from Lanegan's grunge-era voice and some hypnotizing background effects. Another great smoke-out tune is "The Idiot's Guide," where Homme's whispered falsetto is particularly effective. This song wanders around like an acid casualty lost in the desert after a rave. But it's the caravan-like marching tunes that really stick out, "Don't Drink Poison" and "Up in Hell," which feature an orchestra of Eastern-style guitars, tribal drums, and chanting lunatics for an ornate, Arabian Nights vibe. The album's humorous finale, "Ending," is the rock band's frenzied last song cliché taken way over the top with "thank yous," "good nights," and solos and drums that won't end. Even better than Queens of the Stone Age's last record, R, these sessions are a wild, uninhibited orgy of magnificent, tweaked-out music.

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