During our revisit of the one and only Talk Show album featuring the three guys not named Scott Weiland from Stone Temple Pilots during their infamous 1997 hiatus, we remarked how the music remained steady but the vocals and melodies were less interesting. Now we get to examine the other side of that temporary split with Weiland's 1998 solo debut 12 Bar Blues. Would the lack of the DeLeo brothers inventive riffing similarly hamper the lead singers creative output? The simple answer is no, thanks to Weiland's willingness to experiment, filling the record with interesting sounds and surrounding himself with accomplished musicians. It is an admirable, if occasionally messy, attempt to shatter the perceptions of what it meant to be "the lead singer of Stone Temple Pilots," but more often than not, the influences start to show. Sadly, this left us wondering if the lukewarm critical reception, albums sales and radio play pushed Weiland back into the easy embrace of Stone Temple Pilots too quickly, who churned out successive radio friendly if bland riffage that palled to their primer-era output. Weiland never pushed the envelope like he did on this record, and we try to figure out why.
Intro - Barbarella
13:20 - Mockingbird Girl
18:05 - About Nothing
29:28 - Son
Outro - Lady, Your Roof Brings Me Down
#329: Interview with Marko DeSantis of Sugarcult, The Ataris and more
#328: Cheap Trick (1997) by Cheap Trick
#327: Blind Love by Ratcat
#326: Roundtable - Sophomore Slump Revisited - Eight Arms To Hold You by Veruca Salt
#325: Small Speaker Joyland by Violetine
#324: Digging Your Scene - Roundtable Discussion on Los Angeles in the 90s
#323: Interview with Eli Janney of Girls Against Boys and the 8G Band
#322: Shuttlecock by Super TransAtlantic
#321: Twisted Willie - A Tribute To Willie Nelson
#320: Interview with Tim Kasher of The Good Life & Cursive
#319: Electronica in the 90s Roundtable
#318: Upstyledown by 28 Days
#317: Hissing Prigs in Static Couture by Brainiac
#316: ReadySexGo by Marvelous 3
#315: Deadsexy by Scarce with Joyce Raskin and Chick Graning
#314: Roundtable Discussion on the albums of 1997
#313: Baby Animals by Baby Animals
#312: Disco Volante by Mr. Bungle
#311: Season Six Review
#310: Tom Petty In The 90s Discussion with Author Paul Zollo
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Superfancast
Bandsplain
R&B Money
Because the Boss Belongs to Us
One Song