• > Home
  • > Artists
  • > Poundhound
  • > Albums
  • > Pineappleskunk
  • Poundhound


    Pineappleskunk

    Poundhound - Pineappleskunk

    06/05/2001


    Sorry, this item is not available from ARTISTdirect.

    Bookmark and Share

    All Music Guide Review

    Talented Texas rock trio King's X is a vastly overlooked band except for as musicians, but one thing is certain -- they need all three of their musicians to function at full capacity. Upon their 1997 Best Of CD, guitarist Ty Tabor's 1998 solo debut, Moonflower Lane, and bassist/vocalist Doug Pinnick's band, Poundhound's Massive Grooves CD that same year, the rumor was that King's X was finished after a 12-year recording career. But Moonflower Lane missed Pinnick's soulful vocals as much as Massive Grooves lacked Tabor's fiery guitar playing, so the trio's 1998 Tape Head CD signaled a truce. Yet Pinnick still seems to think that his voice isn't heard enough even though he's the King's X frontman, as evidenced by Poundhound's 2001 Pineappleskunk sophomore release. Again recording with King's X drummer Jerry Gaskill, Pinnick crafts a 16-step program in disappointment, otherwise "written, arranged, recorded, mixed, produced and performed by Doug Pinnick." Pinnick opens the introductory track "Somedays" with the line "Now I'm on my own/I took a break for heaven's sake," the first of the many trite lyrical excursions that he avoids with King's X. "If people could stop sucking, the world could be a better place" dooms "Next in Line," and Pinnick's guitar playing -- no match for Tabor's, or even his own creatively effect-laden bass tones and soaring voice -- thwarts nearly every tune. With whammy-bar dives and pick scratches reminiscent of a second-rate Joe Satriani, Pinnick reduces "Mind" and "Atlanta" to "music minus one" variations of King's X. Unfortunately, that "one" is Tabor, an under-heard yet extraordinary blend of Jimi Hendrix, Steve Vai, and Pink Floyd's David Gilmour. Pinnick also puts the spotlight too much on himself by overdubbing all his own vocal harmonies, rather than allowing Gaskill -- one-third of the most choir-like band in rock -- to do anything but play drums. Glimmers of R&B ("Jumpin") and strutting metal ("Eventime") keep Pineappleskunk off the respirator, but for Pinnick's best work from this time frame, refer to King's X's 2000 CD, Please Come Home...Mr. Bulbous. ~ Bill Meredith, All Music Guide

    Pineappleskunk Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Somedays
  • 3:13
  • Sound Clip for Somedays from Pineappleskunk


  • 2
  • Rise-N-Shine
  • 1:02
  • Sound Clip for Rise-N-Shine from Pineappleskunk


  • 3
  • Jumpin
  • 3:10
  • Sound Clip for Jumpin from Pineappleskunk


  • 4
  • Mind
  • 4:45
  • Sound Clip for Mind from Pineappleskunk


  • 5
  • Oh My Soul
  • 3:48
  • Sound Clip for Oh My Soul from Pineappleskunk


  • 6
  • Next in Line
  • 3:17
  • Sound Clip for Next in Line from Pineappleskunk


  • 7
  • Rain
  • 3:52
  • Sound Clip for Rain from Pineappleskunk


  • 8
  • Pineapple
  • 3:40
  • Sound Clip for Pineapple from Pineappleskunk


  • 10
  • Higher
  • 4:00
  • Sound Clip for Higher from Pineappleskunk


  • 11
  • She
  • 2:45
  • Sound Clip for She from Pineappleskunk


  • 12
  • Someone
  • 3:05
  • Sound Clip for Someone from Pineappleskunk


  • 13
  • Smearing
  • 2:50
  • Sound Clip for Smearing from Pineappleskunk


  • 14
  • Atlanta
  • 3:20
  • Sound Clip for Atlanta from Pineappleskunk


  • 15
  • The Will
  • :52
  • Sound Clip for The Will from Pineappleskunk


  • 16
  • Eventime
  • 4:37
  • Sound Clip for Eventime from Pineappleskunk


  • Credits of Pineappleskunk

    • Doug Pinnick
    • Bass, Guitar, Arranger, Producer, Design, Concept, Mixing, Engineer, Vocals

    Similar Albums to Pineappleskunk



    What's Hot from ARTISTdirect