The Ping Pong EP | |
Type: | EP |
Artist: | SNFU |
Cover: | snfu ping pong.jpg |
Released: | 2000 |
Recorded: | 1996 |
Genre: | Punk rock |
Length: | 25:30 |
Label: | Alternative Tentacles |
Producer: | SNFU |
Prev Title: | Beautiful, Unlike You and I |
Prev Year: | 1993 |
Next Title: | A Happy Number |
Next Year: | 2017 |
The Ping Pong EP is an EP by Canadian punk rock band SNFU. Its tracks were taken from the 1996 recording sessions for the band's FYULABA album.[1] It was released in 2000 on Alternative Tentacles.
In 2000, SNFU was searching for a recording contract after being dropped by Epitaph Records three years earlier. Their previous release had been the faux live album Let's Get It Right the First Time, and they had since undergone several lineup changes.
As a stopgap between full-length albums, the band issued five outtakes from their 1996 album FYULABA as The Ping Pong EP on Alternative Tentacles. The FYULABA sessions occurred at Mushroom Studios with engineer Pete Wonsiak and mixer Dave Ogilvie, the latter known for his work with Skinny Puppy. Former SNFU drummer Dave Rees, who played on the songs released on the EP, later expressed disappointment that these outtakes were issued as new material.
The EP's title came from the band's love of ping pong, in which later member Matt Warhurst joked the band was more interested than practicing.
The EP received positive reviews. Writing for AllMusic, critic Vincent Jeffries awarded the EP three out of five stars and described the band as "pound[ing] out light-speed skate punk as singer Mr. Chi Pig warbles, hoots, and hollers his bizarre lyrics." Jeffries concluded that the EP is "one of SNFU's stronger '90s releases." Writing for PopMatters, reviewer Andrew Johnson praised the EP for its contribution to SNFU's longevity, noting that the band is "still into playing at breakneck speed, making a lot of melodic noise and focusing more energy into one song than a lot bands manage to exert over an entire evening."[2] Exclaim! reviewer Stuart Green gave the EP a favorable review, calling the tracks "what may be five of the best songs they've recorded in a decade."[3]
All songs written by SNFU