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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This album should have made them huge
Too High To Die would be the most successful album that the Meat Puppets would release. Before this, they had released several strong albums but only had a small but loyal following. The members of Nirvana were part of this following and they had the Meat Puppets open for them on their last tour and also featured the band and their music on their MTV Unplugged special...
Published on February 3, 2004 by John Alapick

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11 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Below-average offering (2.5 stars)
The Meat Puppets where one of the best bands of the 80s, but once they got signed off SST to a major label they seemed to have lost something. They didn't sell out, but a certain amount of soul present on "II" and "Up On the Sun" just wasn't there. The problem is they seemed to get swept up in the grunge explosion that happened. That isn't to say this is a terrible...
Published on June 29, 2005 by TimothyFarrell22


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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This album should have made them huge, February 3, 2004
By 
John Alapick (Wilkes-Barre, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
Too High To Die would be the most successful album that the Meat Puppets would release. Before this, they had released several strong albums but only had a small but loyal following. The members of Nirvana were part of this following and they had the Meat Puppets open for them on their last tour and also featured the band and their music on their MTV Unplugged special. This finally gave the Meat Puppets some long overdue exposure as radio and MTV finally started playing their music.

It remains a mystery how Too High To Die didn't become a huge success. The music presented here fit right in with the alternative and acoustic rock that was popular in the mid-90's. Although the track "Backwater" would become a minor hit single, several other tracks such as the acoustic ballads "Shine" and "Why?" could have also been hits if marketed correctly. The electicism of their earlier albums is on full display here. Whether it's the heavy riffing of "Violet Eyes" and "We Don't Exist", the great melodic alternative tracks "Severed Goddess Hand" and "Flaming Heart", the country of "Comin' Down", or the blues-rock of "Roof With A Hole", everything here is top notch. Other great tracks here include "Things", "Evil Love", and "Never To Be Found." There's also an unlisted remake of their song "Lake Of Fire", which was popularized by Nirvana on MTV Unplugged, at the end of the album. Simply a great album. Highly recommended.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My Personal 2nd favorite Puppets (after UP ON THE SUN), September 9, 2005
By 
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
I'm not trying to say it's better than II (commonly considered their best along with UOTS). Personal preferences sometimes have to do with, say, the great summer you had listening to a cool record, or maybe when one saved your sanity at a boring job. But I really do think TOO HIGH TO DIE is truly one of their best, and I even know a few Meat-heads who insist it is, in fact, their greatest.

This kind of praise unfortunately gets thrown around a lot, but I must (type) that I think Curt Kirkwood is a highly underrated guitar genius. His playing is pretty unique, super-melodic and he's technically gifted. The Kirkwood brothers' voices ("Cris" on bass) are less so. They tend to sing in the same basic range here, but they actually SING (no screaming, posturing, etc.) and do it well - I dig their voices!

This album rocks, but there's also a lot of variety. There's quite a bit of country influence and it's ironic that I love it so much cuz I'm no country fan. I didn't go for a lot of this album at first, but now some of those songs I didn't go for initially get stuck in my head - and I like that! The following notes are my personal impressions of TOO HIGH TO DIE:

"Violet Eyes" - kicks it off with a killer, the hardest rocker on the record. Awesome feedback-laden soloing from Curt - trippy!

"Never To Be Found" - catchy and tuneful, this groover is addictive. The bass is simple and perfect. It starts off lighter than "Violet Eyes" with some crisp strumming, but takes off to great heights. "We got road, we got time, so we're out of here . . ." Love the epic guitar coda at the end before the band kicks in again with a faster tempo.

"We Don't Exist" - cool rocker. I'm not sure why the singer wants and needs "Cayenne" so bad or what it will do for him, but his longing for it is powerful. Or maybe Cayenne's just a girl.

"Severed Goddess Head" - Sweet and easy-going rocker with cool vocal harmonies.

"Flaming Heart" - drummer Derrick Bostrom gradually and skillfully increases the tempo over the course of this song with the effect of intensifying it (contrary to some opinions, that's a compliment). This is one of the songs that sometimes just pops in my head and starts playing - the part towards the end where the lead guitar kicks in.

"Shine" - unlike the other songs here, this one is really mellow and beautiful.

"Station" - This track sounds like a demented country circus. I couldn't deal with it when I first heard this album. Now I'm addicted to it.

"Roof With a Hole" - a loooow down, powerful, blues-y #. "There may be diamonds in that dream on the hill/ But the people who live there still complain/ Cause the roof's got a hole in it/ And everything's been ruined by the rain." (Listening to this song today struck me as poignant in the wake of Hurricane Katrina's devestation.)

"Backwater" - a great song and pretty much their lone hit on alt-rock radio. I don't think it's necessarily the best on the album, but it's certainly a strong contender and it did sound great on the radio. Killer rhythm!

"Things" - another great one (I'd rate every song on TOO HIGH TO DIE a 5) with some truly wild and strange guitar moves from Curt.

"Why?" - a gorgeous, folky little tune.

"Evil Love" - Another excellent rock groove.

"Comin Down" - great, bouncy tune and (more or less) a straight-up country track.

bonus hidden track - a deadpan, super-cool re-recording of their classic "Lake of Fire." Doesn't surplant the original, but it's way cool and Curt solos his ass off.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Among the best of the decade, November 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
"Too High to Die" isn't the best Meat Puppets album (that award goes to the 1985 masterpiece "Up on the Sun") but this is as close as they've gotten. This much-overlooked Tucson-based trio has outlasted practically every early-post-punk band that sprung up in the early 80s. And they've done so by consistently delivering on their country-psychedlic-folk-punk brand of irresistable songcraft. About every other Puppets release is a fringe disappointment, but they always return to the fore with their next release. This is one of those return-to-the-fore CDs. On "Too High," Curt Kirwood's singing has never been stronger and is now holds a solid attachment to the band's musical chops. The songs are tight but still explode with a transcendent, soaring brilliance. Combines the meaty strength of "Monsters" with the thoughtfulness of "Forbidden Places" and easily ranks as one of the best rock albums of the decade, and among the finest dozen or so ever made. That's No Joke, for real.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars No plaster in my eye., July 6, 2001
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
Aside from a few songs that seem to be there as filler... this is the best of the later Mup's period. And, contrary to popular belief, there is more to this record than just "Backwater". Nothing wrong with that song, either... but one listen to "Things" or "Severed Goddess Hand", and the true charcter of this desperate longing album will come out and smack ya in the nose. Presuming that you want to be smacked in the nose, that is. And why wouldn't you? Because it hurts... that's why. But, the nice country groove of "Comin Down" will cradle you in it's arms and make it all better, I promise. Oh... and let's not forget the extra track... the kickin' reworking of "Lake Of Fire"... with listenable vocals!!!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the nineties' best albums, October 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
"Things" is perhaps the best Puppets tune you've ever heard, and you can't beat this eclectic collection which jumps from hard-driven rock to country twang, all with as much feeling and musicianship as any band out there. Buy it!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TAKE A DEEP BREATH...., April 30, 2008
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
This was the first Puppets album I ever heard, and really is one of their best. I've spun a lot of their records, and I like some of the stuff that most Meat Puppet fans dig on. The first album is all kinds of weird, and the second album is great, and raw and punky. But for me, I like the style of this album the best. On par with the always wonderful UP On The Sun album, but this is the one that was there for me in my younger days, where I didn't discover Sun until many years later. Sometimes the songs on this one just catch you in a place where you can take the biggest heap of sh** you are dealing with, and just float away on it, as if it were a flying carpet. The songs here work like this on me even more now than they did back then...(I deal with a lot more sh** piles, I guess).
They really make you stop for a minute and just breathe everything in, and sometimes that makes the back of my head go buzz a little, and is a truly welcome sensation.
This album never really acheived much success, even though their names became pretty well known during 1994, the year this was released, ala, the tour with Nirvana. Maybe a certain tragedy took some of the light off of them, but at the time it seemed like they were ready to rebirth a new career. Lots of great harmonizing and some rockin guitars and/or nice mellow grooves.
I def say check it out!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars underrated classic, June 24, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
Great album that has a indie rock vibe in the songs "Backwater" and "We Don't Exist." Also of note is the unlisted hidden track, "Lake of Fire" which is just a timeless classic. I can see this song being covered many times over and being passed on from generation to generation. True classic.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At the top, October 10, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
I'd give five-star-ratings for "meat puppets II", "live in montana" (best live-recordings ever!!) and for "too high..." the ultimate meat pups-cd!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Buy! Good!! Go buy now!!!, January 22, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
Arguably the finest alternative band of all time. This is a good place to start if you don't own anything by this band--it is instantly accessible and the performance is top-notch; too bad "MP II" is not in print, but this is very good! Up on the Sun is good too, as is No Joke! Their songs are a mix of rock, nature, weirdness, and virtuosity, and that's a pretty poor description; indescribable! My favorite rock band!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful!, March 13, 2000
By 
Bill Felps (Kansas City, MO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Too High to Die (Audio CD)
Listening to this album, you'll understand why the Meat Puppets have outlasted all of their puny "grunge" imitators. Curt Kirkwood is one of the only guitar heroes to come out of the nineties. Go out and buy it now! You won't regret it!
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Too High to Die
Too High to Die by Meat Puppets (Audio CD - 1994)
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