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Tomorrow Hit Today

4.4 out of 5 stars 35 ratings

$20.84
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Tomorrow Hit Today [Explicit] Amazon Music Unlimited
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Audio CD, September 22, 1998
$20.84
$16.84
Vinyl, Import, October 19, 2018

Track Listings

1 A Thousand Forms Of Mind
2 I Have To Laugh
3 Oblivion
4 Try To Be Kind
5 Poisoned Water
6 Real Low Vibe
7 This Is The Life
8 Night Of The Hunted
9 Move With The Wind
10 Ghost
11 I Will Fight No More Forever
12 Beneath The Valley Of The Underdog

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

So what does a grunge band sound like in 1998? It still sounds dirty, but the dirt is arrived at by better technology and a bigger budget. Recorded with legendary Memphis producer Jim Dickinson (who has recorded Big Star and the Replacements but is best known for playing piano with the Rolling Stones), Tomorrow Hit Today has an astonishing variety of guitar sounds and moods. The old Mudhoney were once content to kick you in the gut, but now the grunge lads are discovering the complexities of their grimy sound, adding whinnying slide guitars, swampy bass lines, and emphatic vocals that steer the humor of one song into the pathos of the next. Overlooked in the rush to hype Nirvana, Sub Pop, and coffee, Seattle's Mudhoney now deserve to be listened to with a postgrunge ear. --Lois Maffeo

Review

Tomorrow Hit Today may seem like a methodical angling for a piece of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion/Reverend Horton Heat market share. But in reality, the album is simply a natural progression for a veteran ensemble who have been demonstrating contorted blues-licking since Moby Dick was a minnow. -- Alternative Press

Sadly, souped-up and ultra-heavy as it is (they used 30 different fuzz-pedals while recording it),
Tomorrow Hit Today remains as defiantly unadvanced as ever. -- New Musical Express

Product details

  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 4.94 x 0.45 inches; 2.83 ounces
  • Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Reprise
  • Date First Available ‏ : ‎ December 12, 2006
  • Label ‏ : ‎ Reprise
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00000AG91
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 35 ratings

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
35 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2018
    This album came out after Soundgarden broke up, after Alice in Chains kinda faded away and disappeared for a long time, and well after Kurt Cobain died (which is when many people say that grunge itself died). Mudhoney (and Pearl Jam) kept the Seattle fires burning. Unfortunately these guys never got the success or credit they deserved, but they never seemed to mind. I saw an interview with them where Mark Arm said that they didn't care what was going on in the music scene around them- they were happy to still be doing their thing and didn't mind that they were not the richest or most well-known band. This album was a nice "throwback" to a happier era, released at a time when nu-metal was getting popular (for some reason I'll never really understand). Mudhoney proved they still had it. Tomorrow Hit Today may not be as flat-out wild as their early albums, but it is good nonetheless.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2020
    good product
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2021
    Good and grungy the way Mudhoney is and always will be. Like AC/DC and Motorhead, you always know what you're going to get. Not one of their best but worth it for "Poisoned Water" and their appearance in the Chris Farley movie "Black Sheep". Recommended.
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2003
    This album is amazing. For starters, the album is properly produced with a famous producer and a big budget. This was to be Mudhoney's commercial breakthrough- the album was to make Mudhoney a great rock band(not just a grunge one) but it didn't happen and a year after this was released the band were dropped by Reprise records. The criminally poor sales of this album were caused not least by the accusations by critics and fans that this album was a sellout from the bands old and dreaded grunge label into more classically rotated rock. This is by no means their most hardcore album it is a mature, postgrunge album and Mudhoneys last ditch attempt to prevent themselves dying with grunge- and they should not have died because forget about grunge for a moment, this is one of the finest rock'n'roll albums I have ever heard.
    Steve Turners' guitar riffs and solo's are brilliant I never knew he could play the guitar so good- his unmistakable country-rock style riff on 'Real Low Vibe' later became the main theme for a budweiser beer advertisement on television. It's a pity more people bought the beer than this album. The band still show their grunge roots are still in tact with the climatic 'I have to laugh'. Although it's the only 100% 'grunge' song on the album it is Mudhoney's best ever grunge song- it blew my mind the first time I heard it and it continues to do so Mark Arm's screeching is terrific- this is a very strong performance vocally and lyrically from Arm. Just listen to 'Move with the wind', what cool lyrics and slow but brilliant classical guitar riff- unlike anything ever heard on any other Mudhoney album. This album is a cross between the sex pistols and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Terrific stuff. The album finshes up with the moody epic 'Beneath the valley of the underdog' its just one of those rare 10 out of 10 songs to close a brilliant album. People need to hear this album. Forget about that grunge thing they were doing in the early 90's and how nobody took them really serious. This is seriously a brilliant rock'n'roll album(NOT grunge)by a seriously talented band.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2003
    it seems mudhoney have grown up. this band used to be content to kick out the 3 chords and rock. one of the pinnacle live bands of the nineties, THEY put on a rock show. this album seems mature due to the fact that they have experimented with different distortion sounds. steve turner cranks out some wicked good riffs and with a little diversity (the country meets rock of "real low vibe" is aamzing) this album is like punk meets grunge meets the blues (maybe grunge and stevie ray vaughn?)
    tis a shame americans are so closed minded to music. we seem to be content to be force fed our music. this album is great and needs to be heard. forget boy bands and jennifer lopez. this is the real deal.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 1999
    It was in September that I saw Mudhoney in concert, and got to hang out with Mark Arm, and the rest of the band after the concert. This was before I had gotten the album, but I knew most of the songs by heart from previous Seattle concerts. We chatted back and forth, briefly. A truly accomplished musicain of the Seattle Music Scene, as well, definetly, as the rest of the band. This album, in their decade long career, is by far the one that costed the most money. This album costed more money to make than all the others combined. It shows. Nothing of Mudhoney's has ever been more potent than these songs. It was also said this has been, clearly, the dumbest move in their whole careers, creating this good of an album, their best, this far into their musical lives. To tell you the truth, I don't West Seattle has been this rocking out since Pearl Jam got home.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2000
    In 1998 when grunge music has been long dead Mudhoney produced what is arguably their best album. From the you-know-it's-a-hit-from-the-first-20 seconds A Thousand Forms of Mind to the equally brilliant Night Of The Hunted and Ghost this album never lets up until brief dead air after Beneath the Valley of the Underdog befor the secret song starts. Mike McCready of Pearl Jam listed this CD as one of his favorite of '98 and it's no wonder why.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2020
    This product did not come in colored vinyl as advertised
    Seller did not respond correctly after 2 attempts

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Thomas
    4.0 out of 5 stars Ottimo vinile (non colorato, attenzione!)
    Reviewed in Italy on September 8, 2020
    Tralasciando il valore artistico dell'album (secondo me uno dei migliori dischi grunge o post-grunge degli anni '90), devo dire che una piccola delusione c'è stata perché mi aspettavo un vinile blu ed invece è arrivato nel classico nero. A parte questo piccolo ma fastidioso dettaglio, il vinile suona molto bene, ha un suono pieno e dettagliato, con un rumore di fondo veramente ai minimi termini. Consegna precisa come sempre da parte di Amazon.
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    Thomas
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Ottimo vinile (non colorato, attenzione!)

    Reviewed in Italy on September 8, 2020
    Tralasciando il valore artistico dell'album (secondo me uno dei migliori dischi grunge o post-grunge degli anni '90), devo dire che una piccola delusione c'è stata perché mi aspettavo un vinile blu ed invece è arrivato nel classico nero. A parte questo piccolo ma fastidioso dettaglio, il vinile suona molto bene, ha un suono pieno e dettagliato, con un rumore di fondo veramente ai minimi termini. Consegna precisa come sempre da parte di Amazon.
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  • Tobias Jone
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 30, 2015
    Classic album
  • Grelier
    4.0 out of 5 stars Toujours d'attaque
    Reviewed in France on February 10, 2012
    Ici, c'est la transition entre le Mudhoney brut des premiers albums bien cradingues et les suivants où ils agrémentent leur gros son de quelques touches plus subtiles que ça soit dans les compos que dans les sonorités plus travaillées. Beaucoup se plantent à ce stade de leur carrière, pour ma part Mudhoney devient meilleur!