The Muffs - Happy Birthday To Me (1997)

Artist: The Muffs
Title: Happy Birthday To Me
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Reprise Records
Genre: Alt Rock, Garage Rock, Punk Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 48:54
Total Size: 119/298 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Happy Birthday To Me
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Reprise Records
Genre: Alt Rock, Garage Rock, Punk Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 48:54
Total Size: 119/298 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview

Tracklist:
01. Crush Me
02. That Awful Man
03. Honeymoon
04. All Blue Baby
05. My Crazy Afternoon
06. Is It All Okay
07. Pennywhore
08. Outer Space
09. I'm A Dick
10. Nothing
11. Where Only I Could Go
12. Upside Down
13. You And Your Parrot
14. Keep Holding Me
15. The Best Time Around
Line-up::
Bass, Vocals – Ronnie Barnett
Drums, Vocals – Roy McDonald
Guitar, Lead Vocals – Kim Shattuck
Vocals – Ronnie Barnett, Roy McDonald
The Muffs are an American punk rock band based in Southern California, formed in 1991 and disbanded in 2019.
The Muffs started as a collaboration between guitarists Kim Shattuck and Melanie Vammen, both former members of the 1980s all-female hard rock group, The Pandoras. The band started performing and recording after the addition of bassist Ronnie Barnett (Shattuck's then-boyfriend) and drummer Criss Crass. Following the release of their first album in 1993, Crass left the band. By the time the band recorded their second LP, 1995's "Blonde and Blonder", Melanie Vammen had departed and Roy McDonald was the group's drummer. This would become The Muffs' definitive line-up. That same year, the band released one of their best-known songs, a cover of Kim Wilde's "Kids In America", for the soundtrack to the movie "Clueless" (ironically, it was a song that the band reportedly neither liked nor ever performed live). After 2004's "Really, Really Happy" LP the band went on extended hiatus, not returning to action until 2012 (Kim Shattuck credited former drummer Jim Lespesa, who filled in on tour after Chris Crass left, with bringing her, Ronnie Barnett, and Roy McDonald back together). The band recorded a new album, "Whoop Dee Doo" that year but it's release was delayed when Shattuck was offered the bass-playing slot in the Pixies. Her Pixies stint was famously short-lived and the album was released in 2014. The band's final album, "No Holiday" was released in October 2019, shortly after Shattuck's death from complications related to ALS.
The Muffs started as a collaboration between guitarists Kim Shattuck and Melanie Vammen, both former members of the 1980s all-female hard rock group, The Pandoras. The band started performing and recording after the addition of bassist Ronnie Barnett (Shattuck's then-boyfriend) and drummer Criss Crass. Following the release of their first album in 1993, Crass left the band. By the time the band recorded their second LP, 1995's "Blonde and Blonder", Melanie Vammen had departed and Roy McDonald was the group's drummer. This would become The Muffs' definitive line-up. That same year, the band released one of their best-known songs, a cover of Kim Wilde's "Kids In America", for the soundtrack to the movie "Clueless" (ironically, it was a song that the band reportedly neither liked nor ever performed live). After 2004's "Really, Really Happy" LP the band went on extended hiatus, not returning to action until 2012 (Kim Shattuck credited former drummer Jim Lespesa, who filled in on tour after Chris Crass left, with bringing her, Ronnie Barnett, and Roy McDonald back together). The band recorded a new album, "Whoop Dee Doo" that year but it's release was delayed when Shattuck was offered the bass-playing slot in the Pixies. Her Pixies stint was famously short-lived and the album was released in 2014. The band's final album, "No Holiday" was released in October 2019, shortly after Shattuck's death from complications related to ALS.