Read Ween's Chocolate and Cheese (33 1/3) Online
Authors: Hank Shteamer
Above
: “Baby Bitch” track sheet from Graphic Sound Studio.
Left
: With Mohamed on the set of the “I Can’t Put My Finger On It” video.
Above
: Fan-made Boognish belts.
Below
: Still from the
Live in Chicago
DVD: Ween’s current quintet lineup live in November, 2003.
Above
:
Pure Guava
insert: at Brookridge Farm. Freeman: fifth from left on balcony; Melchiondo: fifth from right on porch.
Right
:
Chocolate and Cheese
insert portrait (bottom right) and outtakes: at Ringing Rocks.
Left and below: Chocolate and Cheese
insert portraits and outtakes.
Credits
Figures 1–10: courtesy of Ween
Figure 11: Ole Lütjens 2010
Figure 12: Tom Nichols
Figures 13–15: Danny Clinch
Also available in the series:
1.
Dusty in Memphis
by Warren Zanes
2.
Forever Changes
by Andrew Hultkrans
3.
Harvest
by Sam Inglis
4.
The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society
by Andy Miller
5.
Meat Is Murder
by Joe Pernice
6.
The Piper at the Gates of Dawn
by John Cavanagh
7.
Abba Gold
by Elisabeth Vincentelli
8.
Electric Ladyland
by John Perry
9.
Unknown Pleasures
by Chris Ott
10.
Sign ‘O’ the Times
by Michaelangelo Matos
11.
The Velvet Underground and Nico
by Joe Harvard
12.
Let It Be
by Steve Matteo
13.
Live at the Apollo
by Douglas Wolk
14.
Aqualung
by Allan Moore
15.
OK Computer
by Dai Griffiths
16.
Let It Be
by Colin Meloy
17.
Led Zeppelin IV
by Erik Davis
18.
Exile on Main St.
by Bill Janovitz
19.
Pet Sounds
by Jim Fusilli
20.
Ramones
by Nicholas Rombes
21.
Armed Forces
by Franklin Bruno
22.
Murmur
by J. Niimi
23.
Grace
by Daphne Brooks
24.
Endtroducing
… by Eliot Wilder Wilder
25.
Kick Out the Jams
by Don McLeese
26.
Low
by Hugo Wilcken
27.
Born in the U.S.A.
by Geoffrey Himes
28.
Music from Big Pink
by John Niven
29.
In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
by Kim Cooper
30.
Paul’s Boutique
by Dan LeRoy
31.
Doolittle
by Ben Sisario
32.
There’s a Riot Goin’ On
by Miles Marshall Lewis
33.
The Stone Roses
by Alex Green
34.
In Utero
by Gillian G. Gaar
35.
Highway 61 Revisited
by Mark Polizzotti
36.
Loveless
by Mike McGonigal
37.
The Who Sell Out
by John Dougan
38.
Bee Thousand
by Marc Woodworth
39.
Daydream Nation
by Matthew Stearns
40.
Court and Spark
by Sean Nelson
41.
Use Your Illusion Vols 1 and 2
by Eric Weisbard
42.
Songs in the Key of Life
by Zeth Lundy
43.
The Notorious Byrd Brothers
by Ric Menck
44.
Trout Mask Replica
by Kevin Courrier
45.
Double Nickels on the Dime
by Michael T. Fournier
46.
Aja
by Don Breithaupt
47.
People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm
by Shawn Taylor
48.
Rid of Me
by Kate Schatz
49.
Achtung Baby
by Stephen Catanzarite
50.
If You’re Feeling Sinister
by Scott Plagenhoef
51.
Pink Moon
by Amanda Petrusich
52.
Let’s Talk About Love
by Carl Wilson
53.
Swordfishtrombones
by David Smay
54.
20 Jazz Funk Greats
by Drew Daniel
55.
Horses
by Philip Shaw
56.
Master of Reality
by John Darnielle
57.
Reign in Blood
by D. X. Ferris
58.
Shoot Out the Lights
by Hayden Childs
59.
Gentlemen
by Bob Gendron
60.
Rum, Sodomy & the Lash
by Jeffery T. Roesgen
61.
The Gilded Palace of Sin
by Bob Proehl
62.
Pink Flag
by Wilson Neate
63.
XO
by Matthew LeMay
64.
Illmatic
by Matthew Gasteier
65.
Radio City
by Bruce Eaton
66.
One Step Beyond …
by Terry Edwards
67.
Another Green World
by Geeta Dayal
68.
Zaireeka
by Mark Richardson
69.
69 Love Songs
by L. D. Beghtol
70.
Facing Future
by Dan Kois
71.
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
by Christopher R. Weingarten
72.
Wowee Zowee
by Bryan Charles
73.
Highway to Hell
by Joe Bonomo
74.
Song Cycle
by Richard Henderson
75.
Spiderland
by Scott Tennent
76.
Kid A
by Marvin Lin
77.
Tusk
by Rob Trucks
1
Several sources state that Mickey Melchiondo has defined the term, as it is employed in the Ween universe, as “fucked-up in a good way.” The following explanation by Andrew Weiss offers some further insight into its meaning:
It’s an aesthetic. It’s initially probably scatological in origin. It’s kind of like the best stuff you get, for me, and I think for Mickey and Aaron too, or the most interesting stuff — you know, stuff’s always so well-orchestrated, or tries to be, when people make records, but the best sound you’re gonna get out of a stompbox [i.e. distortion pedal] is when the battery’s right at the point of dying and it sounds like it’s being strangled or something. So it’s kind of like those glorious mistakes are what you’re lookin’ for. But “brown” is really — it’s a far-reaching concept. It’s really not very complex or deep. Once you smell the brown, you know it when you see it.
2
Digital Audio Tape, a now-discontinued archival cassette format used widely in the ’90s.
3
A 1993
New York Times
piece recounted the band’s middle-school-era fascination with tape-speed manipulation: “Mr. Freeman discovered that if he pushed the play and record buttons simultaneously on his father’s tape recorder, the tape would speed up and on playback, his voice would come out deep and distorted. ‘I thought that was the coolest thing I’d ever seen in my life,’ he said.”
4
Jonze: “Me and a friend of mine, Doug Aitken, dressed up as a Hasidic father and son, and we went out and shot a Christmas-card photo of us chopping down a Christmas tree. When we got back into town, Ween was playing, and my girlfriend and I went. And I had the tight
peyes
glued into my hair, and I figured I would go enjoy Ween as a Hasid.
“And this one song had this sort of ‘Hava Nagila’-type [
imitates Hebrew-chant breakdown, often performed as part of either ‘Vallejo’ or ‘I Can’t Put My Finger On It’
] … And it was this epic, long, ten-minute jam they turned it into. My girlfriend dared me to go onstage, and I had to do it. As I walked onstage, the sound person sort of stepped aside and let me on without any badges or anything. So I went on and I did a whole jig. And Aaron didn’t notice it for most of the song — he was doing this sort of hypnotic chanting — but Dean was very ecstatic that they suddenly had this guest dancer, and I was doing all the jigs I could think of. And when the song finished, Dean said, ‘No, please stay — dance with us for the show.’ And I said, [
mock-solemnly
] ‘No, my work is done here.’