Superjudge Explained

Superjudge
Type:studio
Artist:Monster Magnet
Cover:Monster Magnet Superjudge.jpg
Recorded:October 1992
Genre:
Length:53:43
Label:A&M
Producer:Dave Wyndorf
Prev Title:Spine of God
Prev Year:1991
Next Title:Dopes to Infinity
Next Year:1995

Superjudge is the second full-length album by American rock band Monster Magnet, released on April 6, 1993. It is the first Monster Magnet album to feature lead guitarist Ed Mundell, who replaced founding member John McBain in 1992. Tracks "Twin Earth" and "Face Down" were released as singles with accompanying music videos.

Overview

Superjudge was Monster Magnet's second official album, with their debut release Tab being an EP, and also their debut with major label A&M Records. It was recorded and mixed by Steve Rosenthal at New York's "The Magic Shop" studio in October, 1992, with all original material composed by the band's lead vocalist Dave Wyndorf.

The album fared poorly commercially, largely due to its release coinciding with the advent of the grunge era, which ultimately resulted in a dramatic decline in the popularity of heavy metal in general. Though a commercial disappointment in the months following its release in 1993, Superjudge has since become a very influential album within the stoner rock genre.[3]

The album includes covers of Willie Dixon's "Evil" (utilizing an arrangement used by the band Cactus on their 1971 cover of the song), and Hawkwind's "Brainstorm" from their 1972 album, Doremi Fasol Latido.

Music and lyrics

Superjudge is overall heavier than the band's previous album Spine of God, and also makes use of less vocal effects. The album incorporates elements of hard rock, psychedelia, heavy metal, blues rock and punk rock.

According to singer Dave Wyndorf, Superjudge began as something of a concept album, but the only surviving part is the band's cover of Willie Dixon's "Evil (Is Going On)". Also according to Dave Wyndorf, "For a while, we were thinking of doing a total blues record, old Ten Years After stuff and old Howlin' Wolf stuff," Wyndorf says. "But we couldn't pull it off. It didn't sit right with us, so we kept 'Evil' and a couple others, but only 'Evil' made it to the tape."[4]

The album's lyrics make references to various sci-fi topics, with Wyndorf saying he writes "ambiguous and coded" lyrics because if he didn't, "I'd get bored singing them after three gigs." "The songs I like aren't explained," he says. "You can try to figure them out. I write stream-of-consciousness and I don't rewrite much. A lot of times, I'll have one foot in reality-something going on in Belgium or whatever-and the other in what I wish could happen-planets, spaceships-and try to fit them together and make sense out of it."

Track listing

All songs written by Dave Wyndorf unless noted otherwise.

An import version of Superjudge is also available, containing live bonus tracks.

Bonus tracks (import version)

  1. "Nod Scene" [Live] – 6:26
  2. "Snake Dance" [Live] – 3:33
  3. "Medicine" [Live] – 4:24

Personnel

Monster Magnet
Additional musicians
Technical staff and artwork

Notes and References

  1. Web site:
    1. TBT: Superjudge is MONSTER MAGNET's Psychedelic-Kissed Retro Metal
    . Metal Injection. January 31, 2019. June 28, 2024.
  2. Web site: Schleutermann . Marcus . 28 May 1993 . Superjudge . 2024-06-28 . . de.
  3. http://www.web2carz.com/lifestyle/music/1948/twenty-years-ago-today-monster-magnet-release-superjudge "Monster Magnet - Superjudge"
  4. Web site: 'Superjudge' The Latest From Monster Magnet. Chicago Tribute. November 11, 1993. June 28, 2024.