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UK / US
Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser

Neil Gust and Elliott Smith arrived in Portland, OR together in the summer of 1991 to start a new band with drummer/producer Tony Lash. Within a year of adding bassist Brandt Peterson on bass, they were playing across the West Coast and demoing dozens of songs for their first LP. Six of these tracks were self-released on the cassette titled “The Music of Heatmiser” which was sold at shows, local record shops, and handed out to record labels. The sound of the band changed a lot over 3 LP’s, but this is Heatmiser right out of the gate. New, energetic, excited, moving quickly through styles, totally broke and making it work in whatever way possible. It’s guitar rock, full-blast, through 100 watt Marshall half stacks, when grunge was ascendant in the Pacific Northwest and the Portland scene was exploding. Fast, tight, loud, fun.

Heatmiser

The Music of Heatmiser

Third Man
Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
LPx2 +

$34.99

Indie Exclusive

Red/Yellow Sun Splatter

Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TME899V

Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
LP

$32.99

Black
Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TMR899V

Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
CD

$14.99

Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TMR899C

Heatmiser

The Music of Heatmiser

Third Man
Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
LPx2 +

$34.99

Indie Exclusive

Red/Yellow Sun Splatter

Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TME899V

Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
LP

$32.99

Black
Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TMR899V

Album artwork for The Music of Heatmiser by Heatmiser
CD

$14.99

Released 10/06/2023Catalogue Number

TMR899C

Neil Gust and Elliott Smith arrived in Portland, OR together in the summer of 1991 to start a new band with drummer/producer Tony Lash. Within a year of adding bassist Brandt Peterson on bass, they were playing across the West Coast and demoing dozens of songs for their first LP. Six of these tracks were self-released on the cassette titled “The Music of Heatmiser” which was sold at shows, local record shops, and handed out to record labels. The sound of the band changed a lot over 3 LP’s, but this is Heatmiser right out of the gate. New, energetic, excited, moving quickly through styles, totally broke and making it work in whatever way possible. It’s guitar rock, full-blast, through 100 watt Marshall half stacks, when grunge was ascendant in the Pacific Northwest and the Portland scene was exploding. Fast, tight, loud, fun.