I'm Now: The Story of Mudhoney

49,565
0
Published 2021-09-09

All Comments (21)
  • @LucidStew
    Touch Me I'm Sick was a go-to track during the pandemic.
  • @jfennell3954
    My cousin lives in Portland. I went to his wedding and then he told me "go out in Portland and have fun," I went wandering out into the town and picked up a newspaper on the ground. Opened it up to the entertainment section and it said "Mudhoney, Saturday night." It was Saturday.... So I found a taxi who drove me to the venue. It was a freaking party. An absolute party. Mudhoney played Hate the police, I was knocked onto the floor with a bunch of other random people, but we were all picked back up and it was just fun, absolute fun. I made it back to the hotel wondering what the fuck had just happened... I'll never forget that night. Mudhoney are amazing. If you guys are reading this, thank you. Respect.
  • @DeliRevv
    My introduction to Mudhoney was Superfuzz Bigmuff. College was never the same after that for me and God bless them.
  • @user-mk9gh1lk3r
    Matt Lukin, everyone's favourite drunk uncle lol. I absolutely love this band, both in original form and current form.
  • @damagedbug8848
    Bands nowadays only dream of having the opportuntity to have worked as hard as Mudhoney. Thanks for the music
  • @tostaydown
    Still my favorite band from the Seattle scene!
  • @robashton8606
    And that, boys and girls, is how to be a proper Rock 'n' Roll band. The music is the end, not the means. So true. Long Live Mudhoney!
  • @mikeborgmann
    My brother the cow and piece of cake are great albums!
  • @babywah3290
    Touch Me I’m Sick is still the definitive Seattle Grunge song. I hope Iggy Pop danced his ass off when he first heard that.
  • @stevedemon1981
    It's so awesome that they are still around and releasing new music. One of the only few that survived like Melvins
  • When i'm older and have a band i'm gonna give theese guys creative credits or whatever on every album because one of the only reasons i wanna have a band is because i wanna be that cool.
  • @peterallison6605
    Great documentary, great band. They've always sounded fresh and still do...
  • @OGGOAT23
    Fun fact: in 2012 I've seen Soundgarden and literally the next day went to see Mudhoney in a different city! That was something
  • @tinastagg6258
    The band that changed the course of my life. People reference Nirvana so much, but the first time I heard Bleach (on imported vinyl, no less) was through a friend who subscribed to all the coolest magazines — no internet then — who told me if I liked Mudhoney I might like these kids. Fantastic to see the Great Tad Doyle here as well. Eight Way Santa remains one of my desert island discs after 30+ years, and all the legal BS that prevented Tad from ruling the world still bugs me.
  • @1htsht4u
    I stopped going to shows about the time Mudhoney started. I saw Greenriver a bunch of times, I saw Poison Idea a bunch of times, the Melvins at the Meat Locker was the first show I ever saw and I was at the Circle Jerks riot in Fremont but I never saw Soundgarden, Nirvana, Pearl Jam or Mother Love Bone. Somehow I missed the entire Grunge scene in spite of living in Seattle and seeing all the bands that became the bands that made it big.
  • @raharold
    This is a really good documentary. Thank you so much for producing it. I’ve been listening to Mudhoney since Super Fuzz was released. I heard it for the first time on Rice radio KTRU in Houston when I was in college. I’ve been a fan ever since. This brought back a lot of really great memories!
  • @jayeyesacks1604
    My first hearing of Mudhoney was at a show in 1989 at the Cabaret Metro in Chicago, the ticket for which cost $6. A friend's band was on the bill, and I was absolutely floored by Mudhoney's sound, particularly Dan Peters' surgical snare rolls. I next saw them at the Metro in 1991, for the EGBDF tour. Mark Arm stopped the show a little prematurely because a security guy roughed up a kid who got on stage. As I recall, the crowd was really pissed at the time, feeling that they didn't get their money's worth (the ticket cost for this show was a little more than $6).