White Pepper
White Pepper is the seventh studio album by the American rock band Ween, and the last album they would release on Elektra Records. It was released on May 2, 2000.
Musical style
The album incorporates elements of genres such as acoustic pop, Caribbean music, country, electronica, grunge, jazz, progressive rock, psychedelia, soft rock, speed metal, stoner rock and Britpop. "Bananas and Blow" has elements of Caribbean/calypso music and is lyrically about a drug mule. "Stroker Ace" is a speed metal track, and one of the band's heaviest songs, while "The Grobe" has been called a grunge/stoner rock-style song. Among the other songs on the album, "Pandy Fackler" is a jazz-influenced track, the instrumental "Ice Castles" draws from electronica, "Falling Out" has elements of country music and the single "Stay Forever" is an acoustic pop number. AllMusic describe the lead single "Even If You Don't" as being a Britpop-styled track, and "Back to Basom" as a "psych-prog-tinged soft-rock epic"."Stay Forever" was written for cellist Tanya Haden.
Promotion and commercial performance
The band helped promote the album by performing "Exactly Where I'm At" on the Late Show with David Letterman. The track "Even If You Don't" was made into a music video and directed by Trey Parker and Matt Stone of South Park fame. According to Dean Ween, he and Gene Ween are good friends of Parker and Stone, and Freeman has referred to them as "kindred spirits."In November 2002, two and a half years after the album was released, Billboard magazine reported that White Pepper had sold 72,000 copies in the US alone.
Singles
- "Even If You Don't" was released as a single on Mushroom Records with the B-side "Cornbread Red".
- "Stay Forever" was released as a single on Mushroom Records with "The Grobe" and "Who Dat?". "Who Dat?" was also included in the Japanese version of the album.
Legacy
In 2020, Stereogums Nate Rogers wrote a piece on the album for its 20th anniversary. He attributed the initial lukewarm reception of the album to its lack of profanity and increased accessibility, suggesting that it may have alienated much of the band's hardcore fans. "It's much easier to appreciate White Pepper now that we know it did not lead to a final form in which Ween were just edge-less and overglossed" he wrote, "The band never gave in to the powers that be. They never stopped being artists who deferred to the playful will of their mighty Demon God Boognish while also writing frequently — if not perpetually — fantastic music."
Track listing
All songs written by Ween. Published by Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./Ver Music/Browndog Music, BMI.Personnel
Ween:- Dean Ween - Electric & Acoustic Guitar, Vocals, Bass Guitar, Keyboards, Drums, Mellotron, Synthesizers, Piano, Sitar Guitar on “Flutes of Chi”
- Gene Ween - Vocals, Electric & Acoustic Guitars, Keyboards, Bass Guitar
- Claude Coleman Jr. - Drums, Percussion, Vocals, E-Drums on “Exactly Where I’m At”
- Dave Dreiwitz - Bass Guitar, Vocals
- Glenn McClelland - Keyboards, Synthesizers, Piano, Mellotron, effects
- Stu Basore - pedal steel guitar
- Vaneese Thomas – backing vocals on "Bananas and Blow"
- Angela Clemons – backing vocals on “Bananas and Blow”
- Pat Frey - Strings On “She’s Your Baby”
- Jane Scarpantoni - Cello
- Russel Simins - Drums on “Falling Out”
- Mark McDonald - Keyboards on “stay Forever”
- Chris Shaw – producer, engineer, mixer
- Danny Madorsky – assistant engineer
- Phil Painson – assistant engineer
- Damian Shannon – assistant engineer
- Kirk Miller – live sound engineer
- Ween – producer
- Howie Weinberg – mastering
- Jon Weiss – cover art illustration
- Gregory Burke – art direction
- Danny Clinch – photography
Charts