Ween discography

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Ween discography
Ween in Edmonton Alberta.jpg
Ween performing in Edmonton, Alberta
Studio albums9
Live albums7
Compilation albums2
Video albums1
Music videos10
EPs8
Singles18
Demo tapes15

The following is the discography of Ween, a Pennsylvania-based experimental alternative band formed by childhood friends Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo, better known by their respective stage names, Gene Ween and Dean Ween. Starting out with a few locally released demo tapes, including The Crucial Squeegie Lip, AXIS: Bold as Boognish, and The Live Brain Wedgie / WAD Excerpts, the band was picked up by independent label Twin/Tone Records in 1990 and released their debut GodWeenSatan: The Oneness. In 1991 they signed with another independent label, Shimmy-Disc, and released The Pod. Later, Ween signed with Elektra Records and released their major label debut Pure Guava in 1992. It features their highest-charting single to date, "Push th' Little Daisies". While touring for this album, they played at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, which would later be released as a CD/DVD live album in 2008 titled At the Cat's Cradle, 1992.

In 1994 Chocolate and Cheese was released, which spawned the singles "Voodoo Lady", "Freedom of '76", and "I Can't Put My Finger on It". Ween's next album, released in 1996, was titled 12 Golden Country Greats and was recorded with several prominent Nashville musicians, featuring a distinct country sound. It gave way to the singles "Piss Up a Rope" and "You Were the Fool". The nautically-themed album The Mollusk followed in 1997. It is considered a prog rock concept album, and featured the singles "Mutilated Lips" and "Ocean Man", the latter gaining a significant following after being a song on the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie soundtrack. The band's desire to pursue alternate forms of media led to the MP3-only release Craters of the Sac, presented by Melchiondo for online download and free trade. The same year the band had planned to release a live album compilation spanning their entire career up to that point, titled Paintin' the Town Brown: Ween Live 1990-1998. However, according to Melchiondo, once the album was completed, Elektra realized the sales potential of the CD and denied Ween the right to release it through their independent label. Ween's sixth studio album, White Pepper, was the band's final studio release for Elektra and was released in 2000. The pop-themed, Lennon-McCartney-inspired album produced two singles: "Even If You Don't", which was made into a music video directed by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, and "Stay Forever".

Ween formed their own label in 2001, Chocodog Records, the label Ween originally planned to release Paintin' the Town Brown on. Later, Ween released the first official Chocodog album, Live in Toronto, Canada. The limited-pressing CD, available exclusively through the band website, became an instant collector's item. Subsequent Chocodog releases were produced in higher volumes to meet demand. Ween signed to Sanctuary Records and released Quebec, their first studio release in three years, in 2003. Later that year, the band held a poll on their official message boards to select songs for the band to play on their forthcoming live-in-studio album All Request Live. Released on November 22, the album would be the first time Ween would play all five parts of "The Stallion" (Parts 1 & 2 from The Pod, Part 3 from Pure Guava, the unreleased Part 4, and Part 5 from Craters of the Sac). The performance also included rarely-played early Ween tracks such as "Pollo Asado", "Mononucleosis" and "Cover it with Gas and Set it in Fire", as well as Ween's rejected Pizza Hut jingle, "Where'd the Cheese Go?". In 2004, Ween released Live in Chicago, a DVD and CD set that compiled tracks from two live performances from the Quebec tour at Chicago's Vic Theatre in November 2003.

In 2005, Ween hit the studio to record better quality versions of previously-unreleased songs for the compilation Shinola, Vol. 1. The twelve tracks were all, according to Melchiondo, "songs we regretted not putting on other records". The tracks spanned the band's career, from "Tastes Good on th' Bun", a Pod outtake, to "Someday", a Quebec outtake. Different versions of three of the songs, "Big Fat Fuck", "How High Can You Fly?" and "Monique the Freak" had previously appeared on Craters of the Sac.

In 2006, Ween rented an old farmhouse and converted it into a working studio. After writing over 50 songs and recording rough versions through 2006, they picked through them and, with Andrew Weiss as producer, re-recorded album versions for what would become The Friends EP and the full-length La Cucaracha which were both released in 2007 on Rounder Records. La Cucaracha, which would prove to be Ween's final album, would later be called a "big piece of shit" by Freeman, adding, "I think the songs on it were good, or a bunch of songs, but overall that was a big clue Mickey and I were finito".

In 2011, Melchiondo quietly released an MP3-only collection of songs called The Caesar Demos, named after the band's original working title for Quebec, to friends on his Facebook page. In his comment, he stated the songs were all recorded between 2001 and 2003 while Claude Coleman was recovering from injuries sustained in a car accident, and that many of the tracks featured only himself and Freeman. In addition to a handful of tracks that eventually made Quebec, Caesar Demos would also feature several previously unreleased tracks.

The band broke up in 2012, after Freeman commented in a Rolling Stone interview that it was time to pursue solo projects. The manager for the band, Greg Frey, later confirmed he had decided to 'end his musical relationship' with Ween. Melchiondo was unaware of this until it was public information. In 2015, Freeman began using the Gene Ween moniker again for live performances, and later that year they announced their first shows in years for 2016. A sequel to the first outtakes collection, Shinola vol. 1, was confirmed to be in the works by Melchiondo on Facebook in 2016. A live album containing a 2001 performance of every song from their first album was released in 2016, entitled GodWeenSatan Live.

Studio albums[]

Year Title Label Peak chart positions
US
[1]
US
Heat.

[2]
AUS
[3]
1990 GodWeenSatan: The Oneness Twin/Tone
1991 The Pod Shimmy Disc
1992 Pure Guava Elektra 93
1994 Chocolate and Cheese 10 80
1996 12 Golden Country Greats 23 72
1997 The Mollusk 159 5 69
2000 White Pepper 121 2
2003 Quebec Sanctuary 81
2007 La Cucaracha Rounder/Schnitzel 69 84

Live albums[]

Year Title Label Peak chart positions
US
Heat.

[2]
1999 Paintin' the Town Brown: Ween Live 1990–1998 Elektra 37
2001 Live in Toronto Canada Chocodog/Schnitzel
2002 Live at Stubb's 7/2000 Chocodog
2003 All Request Live
2004 Live in Chicago Sanctuary
2008 At the Cat's Cradle, 1992 Chocodog/Schnitzel
2016 GodWeenSatan Live

Compilation albums[]

EPs[]

Year Title Label
1992 Sky Cruiser EP White
1994 I Can't Put My Finger On It EP Elektra
Freedom of '76 EP Flying Nun Records
Voodoo Lady EP Flying Nun
1996 Piss Up a Rope/You Were the Fool EP Flying Nun
2000 Stay Forever Promo EP Mushroom
Stay Forever Red Vinyl EP Mushroom
2007 The Friends EP CD and limited edition picture disc 12" Chocodog/Schnitzel

Singles[]

Year Title US
Alt.

[4]
AUS
[3]
UK
[5]
Album
1992 "I'm Fat" Non album single
"Push th' Little Daisies" 21 18 Pure Guava
"Sky Cruiser" Non album single
1994 "I Can't Put My Finger on It" Chocolate and Cheese
"Freedom of '76'" 152
"Voodoo Lady" 32 58 97
1996 "Piss Up a Rope" 116 12 Golden Country Greats
"You Were the Fool" 98
1997 "Mutilated Lips" The Mollusk
"Ocean Man"
2000 "Even If You Don't" 135 White Pepper
"Stay Forever" 138
2003 "Tried and True/Mountains and Buffalo" Quebec
"Transdermal Celebration"
2005 "Monique the Freak" Shinola, Vol. 1
"Gabrielle"
2007 "Your Party" La Cucaracha
2010 "DC Won't Do You No Good" Non album single

Music videos[]

Early independent releases[]

Year Title Label
1985 Mrs. Slack Self-released
Ween WAD[6]
1986 Erica Peterson's Flaming Crib Death[7]
1987 The Crucial Squeegie Lip[8] Bird O’ Pray
1988 Ween II Axis: Bold as Boognish[9]
The Live Brain Wedgie! / Wad Excerpts[10]
1989 Prime 5[11]

Notable demo tapes[]

Year Title
1987 We Broke Up  – (Unreleased)[12]
Ween/Smersh  – (Unreleased)[13]
1988 The Scraping the Palm for Guava Tape  – (Unofficially released)
1989 The Focus Tape  – (Unreleased)
1990 The Pod Demos  – (The Big Timmy Wasserman Tape, Bilboa, and The Stallion, unofficially released)
Pandy Fackler Tape  – (Unofficially released)
Eindhoven EP  – (Released 2018)[14]
Weed Whore  – (Unreleased)[15]
1991 Pure Guava Demos  – (Caprice Classic and Springstuff, unreleased)[16]
1992 Chocolate & Cheese Taster  – Demos Summer 1992 (unofficially released)
The Freedom Tape  – (Unreleased)
1993 The Crème de Menthe Tape  – (Unreleased)
1994 12 Golden Country Greats Demos  – (Unofficially released)
1995 Mollusk Sessions  – (Released 2007)
Music for Drunk Irish Homos  – (Unreleased)
1997 White Pepper Demos  – (Unofficially released)
1999 Long Beach Island Tapes  – (Unofficially released)
2001–2003 The Caesar Demos  – (Released 2011)
1985-1994 Boognish Rising Thanksgiving Sampler 2014  – (Released 2014)
2006 La Cucaracha demos  – (Unofficially released)

Appearances[]

Year Title Label
1993 En Esch - Cheesy TVT Records
Lifetime Entertainment
1994 Frente! - Lonely Mushroom Records
A Merry Little Christmas : A Holiday Sampler from Elektra & EastWest Elektra/EastWest
1995 Kostars - Klassics With a K Grand Royal
Used & Recorded by 3RRR Vol.2 Radio Release
1996 Beautiful Girls
Ben Vaughn - Instrumental Stylings Bar None Records
Yoko Ono-Rising Mixes Capitol Records
Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks Atlantic Records
1997
N/A
1998 Hub - Hub SLASH RECORDS
Chef Aid: The South Park Album Columbia
The X-Files: The Album WEA
2002 Run Ronnie Run soundtrack New Line Productions Inc.
Morvern Callar Warp Records
Crank Yankers Comedy Central
2000 SpongeBob SquarePants (Season 2, Episode 21a "Your Shoe's Untied") Sire/London/Rhino
2004 The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie – Music from the Movie and More... Sire/London/Rhino
Tony Hawk's Underground 2 soundtrack Activision/Neversoft
2008 Weeds: Music from the Original Series, Volume 3 N/A
2009 G.N.A.R (ski film) N/A

References[]

  1. ^ "Ween Chart History: Billboard 200". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-06-29.
  2. ^ a b "Ween Chart History: Heatseekers Albums". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-06-29.
  3. ^ a b Australian (ARIA) chart peaks:
  4. ^ "Ween Chart History: Alternative Songs". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-06-29.
  5. ^ UK chart peaks:
  6. ^ "Ween - Ween WAD". Discogs. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  7. ^ "Ween - Erica Peterson's Flaming Crib Death". Discogs. Retrieved June 6, 2021.
  8. ^ "Ween - The Crucial Squeegie Lip". Discogs. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  9. ^ "Ween - Ween II (Axis: Bold as Boognish)". Discogs. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  10. ^ "Ween - The Live Brain Wedgie! / Wad Excerpts". Discogs. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  11. ^ "Ween - Prime 5". Discogs. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  12. ^ https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sdWVYUewPMU/maxresdefault.jpg
  13. ^ https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sdWVYUewPMU/maxresdefault.jpg
  14. ^ https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sdWVYUewPMU/maxresdefault.jpg
  15. ^ https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sdWVYUewPMU/maxresdefault.jpg
  16. ^ https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sdWVYUewPMU/maxresdefault.jpg
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