Three Fish | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Three Fish |
Cover: | Three Fish album.jpg |
Caption: | Cover to the Compact Disc version of the album |
Released: | June 11, 1996 |
Recorded: | August 1994 – January 1996 at John & Stu's Place and Avast Recording Co., Seattle, Washington |
Genre: | Alternative rock |
Length: | 58:05 |
Language: | English |
Label: | Epic |
Producer: | John Goodmanson, Three Fish |
Next Title: | The Quiet Table |
Next Year: | 1999 |
Three Fish is the debut studio album by the American rock band Three Fish.[1] It was released on June 11, 1996, through Epic Records.[2]
Three Fish is a musical collaboration between Jeff Ament of Pearl Jam, Robbi Robb of Tribe After Tribe, and Richard Stuverud of the Fastbacks. The album's recording sessions took place from August 1994 to January 1996 at John & Stu's Place and Avast Recording Co. in Seattle, Washington. The band worked with producer John Goodmanson, who also mixed the album. The album's cover art was illustrated by Ames Design. The album's songs combine rock music with mystical-style Eastern music.
The album received critical recognition.[3] David Fricke of Rolling Stone said, "The whole thing is a weird mix – folky self-obsession, crackling pop, heavy, metallic sighing – but Three Fish is definitely worth, in the words of one song, 'a lovely meander.'" Music videos were made for the songs "Laced" and "Song for a Dead Girl". The Los Angeles Times wrote: "An earthy, organic trio that eschews most traces of Pearl Jam's carefully constructed, hard-driving riff-rock, the band leans on a no-holds-barred sound that rings with the emotive, loose-limbed flow of Middle Eastern music."[4]