Notes & Personnel Info |  | Stone Temple Pilots: Scott Weiland (vocals, percussion); Robert DeLeo (guitar, electric harpsichord, vibraphone, bass, 6-string bass, handclaps, percussion, background vocals); Dean DeLeo (guitar, bass, 6-string bass, handclaps); Eric Kretz (Fender Rhodes piano, drums, handclaps, percussion). |  | Additional personnel: Dave Ferguson (trumpet); Brendan O'Brien (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Clavinet, tambourine, handclaps, percussion); Steve Stewart, Gena Rankin (handclaps). |  | Engineers: Nick DiDia, Chris Goss, Tracy Chisholm. |  | Recorded at Westerly Ranch, Santa Ynez, California and Hollywood Sound, Los Angeles, California. |  | "Trippin' On A Hole In A Paper Heart" was nominated for a 1997 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance. |  | Personnel: Scott Miller (vocals, percussion); Scott Weiland (vocals); Robert DeLeo (guitar, electric harpsichord, vibraphone, 6-string bass, hand claps, percussion, background vocals); Dean DeLeo (guitar, 6-string bass, hand claps); Dave Ferguson (trumpet); Brendan O'Brien (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Clavinet, organ, tambourine, hand claps, percussion); Eric Kretz (Fender Rhodes piano, drums, percussion); Gena Maria Rankin, Steve Stewart (hand claps). |  | Recording information: Hollywood Sound, Los Angeles, CA; Westerly Ranch, Santa Ynez, CA. |  | Editor: Ron Boustead. |  | Photographers: John Eder; Alison Dyer; Nick DiDia; Stone Temple Pilots. |  | On their third album, Stone Temple Pilots distance themselves from the grunge movement that was their springboard into the multi-platinum neighborhood. From the onset, TINY MUSIC... finds the group dabbling with their sound; "Press Play," a one-minute instrumental rides a slinky funk groove, juiced along by returning producer Brendan O'Brien on Fender Rhodes piano. From here, the DeLeo brothers and drummer Eric Kretz show a willingness to musically experiment with Beatlesque songs ("Lady Picture Show"), a Leon Redbone-like instrumental replete with slack-guitar phrasings ("Daisy") and a loung-ey track that lulls the listener with liberal applications of vibraphone and harpsichord ("And So I Know"). |  | Lyrically, Weiland continues to enigmatically allude to matters of personal importance--whether it be the price of fame in "Adhesive," featuring a muted trumpet solo by Dave Ferguson that conveys the song's somber tone, or the shallowness of a fictional girlfriend in "Art School Girl." As a whole, TINY LIGHTS... gives Stone Temple Pilots the chance to shrug off the grunge mantle that many others continue to cling to. | Producer: Brendan O'Brien |
|