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Touch Me I'm Sick

"Touch Me I'm Sick" is a song by the American alternative rock band Mudhoney. It was recorded in April 1988 at Seattle's Reciprocal Recording studio with producer Jack Endino. "Touch Me I'm Sick" was released as Mudhoney's debut single by independent record label Sub Pop on August 1, 1988. The song's lyrics, which feature dark humor, are a sarcastic take on issues such as disease and violent sex.

"Touch Me I'm Sick"
Picture sleeve for second and third editions of the US vinyl single
Single by Mudhoney
B-side"Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More"
ReleasedAugust 1, 1988 (1988-08-01)
RecordedApril 15 and 21, 1988
StudioReciprocal Recording, Seattle, Washington
GenreGrunge
Length2:33
LabelSub Pop
Songwriter(s)Mark Arm, Steve Turner, Dan Peters, Matt Lukin
Producer(s)Jack Endino, Mudhoney
Mudhoney singles chronology
"Touch Me I'm Sick"
(1988)
"Touch Me I'm Sick" / "Halloween"
(1988)
Music video
"Touch Me I'm Sick" on YouTube

When it was first released, "Touch Me I'm Sick" was a hit on college radio. Its heavily distorted and fuzzy guitars, snarling vocals, blunt bass line and energetic drumming contributed to a dirty sound that influenced many local musicians, and helped develop the nascent Seattle grunge scene. According to AllMusic, "the song's raw, primal energy made it an instant anthem which still stands as one of [grunge's] all-time classics".[1] A staple of Mudhoney's live shows, it remains the band's most recognizable song.

Origins and recording edit

According to Mudhoney vocalist Mark Arm, "Touch Me I'm Sick" originated from a discussion with Sub Pop owner Bruce Pavitt, who "said: 'Hey, you sing about dogs. You sing about being sick. You got a shtick, it'll take you to the top.' And he basically gave us five chords, but he said don't use more than three within one song."[2] Arm has also described "Touch Me I'm Sick" as a catchphrase around which the band built a song.[3]

Mudhoney recorded the song at Seattle's Reciprocal Recording studio in April 1988, three months after the band's formation.[4] Producer Jack Endino was surprised by how noisy the sessions were and how dirty the band wanted the guitars to sound; "for the most part, I just sort of stood back and let them go at it".[5] Guitarist Steve Turner said that the band selected two of their "grungiest" songs for the single.[6] "Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More" was to be the A-side of the single and "Touch Me I'm Sick" the B-side before, in drummer Dan Peters's words, "that all got flipped around".[7][8]

Music and lyrics edit

"Touch Me I'm Sick" has a straightforward garage punk structure with a simple repeating power chord riff played at a high tempo.[1] This is accompanied by a blunt bass line and frenetic drumming.[7] The song's dirty sound was produced using an Electro-Harmonix Big Muff distortion pedal, which is augmented by a second guitar providing more distortion.[1] Music writer Brian J. Barr referred to this noisy sound as "the sonic equivalent of an amplified comb scraping against paper".[9]

Critics have noted a Stooges influence in "Touch Me I'm Sick", typical of Mudhoney's early material.[4][10] Turner said: "In retrospect, it's The Yardbirds' 'Happenings Ten Years Time Ago' by way of The Stooges' 'Sick of You'. At the time I was trying for the stuttering R&B guitar of The Nights and Days."[11] The song is also reminiscent of the hardcore punk of Black Flag.[12] In his book Loser: The Real Seattle Music Story, Clark Humphrey accuses the song of being a copy of "The Witch" by The Sonics. Mudhoney have dismissed this claim, and questioned the writer's knowledge of music.[4]

Arm's lyrics, according to critic Steve Huey, are a rant about "disease, self-loathing, angst, and dirty sex".[1] In an essay called "'Touch Me I'm Sick': Contagion as Critique in Punk and Performance Art", Catherine J. Creswell suggests that some of the lyrics refer to AIDS. According to Creswell, "In declaring 'Well, I'm diseased and I don't mind' and changing the final refrain to 'Fuck Me, I'm Sick!' the speaker declares himself to be the viral, 'AIDS-bearing,' 'polluting' person of contemporary fantasy".[13] Creswell, who also believes the song parodies the theme of seduction in contemporary rock music, points to lyrics that refer to impotence ("If you don't come, if you don't come, if you don't come, you'll die alone!") and violent possession or forcing ("I'll make you love me till the day you die!").[13] However, Arm says that he had not put much thought into the lyrics; while performing the song in concerts, he sometimes changes them to amuse himself.[7]

Another feature of "Touch Me I'm Sick" that has been commented upon is Arm's vocals. Huey refers to them as a "hysterical screech", and "snarling, demonic howls".[1][10] Similarly, the music writer Sleazegrinder compares Arm's singing to "a gargly, half-mad howl, the panicky yelp of a rabid dog falling down a well".[14] Creswell considers Arm's "overboard" vocals to mock a variety of rock stereotypes: the punk snarl, the "woozy slur" of hard rock, garage rock "yea-ahs", R&B-style wails and a "Jerry Lee Lewis shudder".[13]

Release and reception edit

 
Vocalist Mark Arm in 2007. Arm had initially dismissed the song as a "B-side toss off".[11]

"Touch Me I'm Sick" was released on August 1, 1988, as a 7" vinyl. It was Mudhoney's debut release. Initially, Sub Pop released 800 clear coffee-brown vinyl copies, 200 black vinyl copies and a few assorted vinyl color copies of the single.[15] The limited release numbers were inspired by another indie label, Amphetamine Reptile. Sub Pop owners Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman reasoned the limited supply would increase demand, and utilized different colors of vinyl in order to rationalize further limited pressings and to increase the single's allure as a collectible item.[15] The record, which came in a white paper bag without a picture sleeve, had an inscription on the A-side: "What does the word 'crack' mean to you?". The B-side sticker featured the toilet picture that later became the cover art of the sleeved second edition of the single.[16]

According to Pavitt, "It was just a limited edition, maybe 800 pieces, but people all over America started raving about it. People that we really respected."[17] The single was a hit among Seattle's underground music scene, as well as college radio stations across the United States.[14] When asked in an interview about the sales figures of the single, Turner replied, "The first [pressing sold] 1,000, then 3,000 of the reissue, then it was out of print for a while; then they made 2,000 more and those are probably gone."[18] The single's success caught the band by surprise; Arm had initially dismissed the song as a "B-side toss off".[11] Mudhoney later included "Touch Me I'm Sick" and B-side "Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More" on their 1989 EP Boiled Beef & Rotting Teeth and the compilation albums Superfuzz Bigmuff Plus Early Singles (1990) and March to Fuzz (2000).

Sonic Youth cover edit

Prior to the release of the "Touch Me I'm Sick" single, Pavitt sent a five-song Mudhoney tape to New York alternative rock band Sonic Youth for their opinions. Sonic Youth immediately proposed a split single where each band covered the other.[19] Sonic Youth covered "Touch Me I'm Sick" while Mudhoney covered Sonic Youth's "Halloween". "Touch Me I'm Sick"/"Halloween" was released as a limited edition 7" vinyl by Sub Pop in December 1988. Sonic Youth's cover was included in the deluxe edition of Daydream Nation (2007), and offers a female perspective of the song with bassist Kim Gordon handling the vocals. Bradford Allison of Prefix magazine suggested that Sonic Youth's version "seems even grimier than the original".[20]

Legacy edit

"I got really depressed ... I was just going to be a stripper for the rest of my life and never have a band again. But I heard Mudhoney's 'Touch Me I'm Sick' one night, and I was saved. I knew that I could scream on cue like that."

Courtney Love on her decision to give up stripping and pursue a career in music[21]

Following the success of the "Touch Me I'm Sick" single in the Seattle area, Sub Pop positioned Mudhoney as the flagship band of their roster and heavily promoted the group.[22] The band's early material received airplay on college radio and influenced many local musicians, including Kurt Cobain of Nirvana.[12] In a few years, many Seattle grunge bands signed to major labels and broke into the mainstream, achieving mass popularity. Although Mudhoney never attained this level of mainstream acceptance, according to AllMusic's Mark Deming, the band's "indie-scene success laid the groundwork for the movement that would (briefly) make Seattle, WA, the new capital of the rock & roll universe".[23]

Since its release, "Touch Me I'm Sick" has been accorded classic status within the grunge genre.[9] Writing for AllMusic, Steve Huey described the song as "the ultimate grunge anthem" and "a crucial and vastly influential touchstone in the evolution of the grunge movement, virtually defining the term".[1][10] For its northwestern rock exhibit, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame requested the song's original lyrics sheet. Since it did not exist—Arm briefly considered making a fake one by writing down the lyrics, crumpling the sheet, and then burning the edges—the band instead donated Turner's old Big Muff pedals.[24] First editions of the 7" itself are considered collector's items, "routinely command[ing] three-figure prices", according to Louder magazine in 2016.[14]

"Touch Me I'm Sick" remains Mudhoney's most popular song. Joe Ehrbar called it "the song most of us would come to know [the band] by".[7] A staple of Mudhoney's live set ever since its release, Arm says the band hasn't tired of performing the song: "The beauty of it is that it’s two minutes long. It’s not like it’s 'Free Bird' where you have to suffer through 10 minutes of playing it every night."[14] He considers the track to be Mudhoney's highwater mark,

"There's something special about that first single, we were never quite able to recapture that sound. I don't know if it was the guitars or the recording. It was just a really gnarly, gnarly guitar sound. ... I think it had more to do with the actual electromagnetic chemistry of what was going through our amps that day. It was just a cool, fried-out sound."[25]

The song was referenced in the 1992 film Singles, which is set against the backdrop of the Seattle grunge scene. The fictional band in the film, Citizen Dick, perform a song called "Touch Me I'm Dick"—a wordplay on Mudhoney's song.[4] In 2003, Charles Peterson published a book of photography titled Touch Me I'm Sick. It features black-and-white photographs of bands (including Mudhoney) and concerts, and focuses on the alternative music scene of the 1980s and 1990s.[26]

Accolades edit

Accolades for "Touch Me I'm Sick"
Year Publication/
author
Country Accolade Rank
2002 NME United Kingdom 100 Greatest Singles of All Time[27] 99
2004 Kerrang! United Kingdom 666 Songs You Must Own (Grunge)[28] 5
2005 Blender United States The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born (1981–2005)[29] 396
2006 Toby Creswell Australia 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time[30] N/A
2010 Robert Dimery United States 1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die[31] N/A
2014 Paste United States The 50 Best Grunge Songs[32] 8

Track listing edit

7" single (SP18)

Both songs credited to Mark Arm, Steve Turner, Dan Peters and Matt Lukin.

  1. "Touch Me I'm Sick" – 2:33
  2. "Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More" – 3:35

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Huey, Steve. "Touch Me I'm Sick" song review. AllMusic. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  2. ^ Maslin, Janet. " Successful in Seattle: Turning Grunge to Gold". The New York Times. November 8, 2006. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  3. ^ Azerrad, p. 426
  4. ^ a b c d Cantu, Bob. "Flipside Interviews Mudhoney". Flipside. February 1998. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  5. ^ "Left of the Dial". Episode 6, Seven Ages of Rock. BBC Worldwide & VH1 Classic. 2007.
  6. ^ Higgins, JR. "Mudhoney: No Nonsense Seattle Supergrunge". Backlash. December 1988.
  7. ^ a b c d Ehrbar, Joe. "In Fuzz We Trust: Mudhoney". The Rocket. January 2000.
  8. ^ March to Fuzz liner notes 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine . "Sweet Young Thing Ain't Sweet No More" recording information. Sub Pop. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  9. ^ a b Barr, Brian J. Mudhoney promotional biography for Under a Billion Suns. Sub Pop. March 7, 2006.
  10. ^ a b c Huey, Steve. "Review: Superfuzz Bigmuff Plus Early Singles". AllMusic. Retrieved June 30, 2007.
  11. ^ a b c March to Fuzz liner notes 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine . "Touch Me I'm Sick" recording information. Sub Pop. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  12. ^ a b "Sub Pop's first single: Mudhoney's 'Touch Me I'm Sick'". BBC's Seven Ages of Rock. Retrieved July 2, 2007.
  13. ^ a b c Ulrich, John M.; Harris, Andrea L. Genxegesis: Essays on Alternative Youth (sub)culture. Popular Press. 2003. pp. 86–87.
  14. ^ a b c d Sleazegrinder. "The Story Behind The Song: Mudhoney – Touch Me I'm Sick". Louder. December 14, 2016. Retrieved on July 31, 2019.
  15. ^ a b Azerrad, pp. 426–27
  16. ^ "Touch Me Im Sick"/"Sweet Young Thing". Sub Pop. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  17. ^ Rose, Cynthia. "Sub Pop: See Label For Details – An Interview with Bruce Pavitt". Dazed & Confused. 1994.
  18. ^ LaVella, Mike. "Maximum Rocknroll Interviews Mudhoney". Maximum Rocknroll. August 1990. Retrieved July 1, 2007.
  19. ^ Azerrad, p. 428
  20. ^ Allison, Bradford: Review: Daydream Nation (Deluxe Edition), Prefix magazine, 13 June 2007. Retrieved on 1 July 2007.
  21. ^ Wise, Nick (2004). Kurt and Courtney: Talking. Omnibus press. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-84449-098-1
  22. ^ Olsen, Matt. . Sub Pop. Retrieved April 28, 2008.
  23. ^ Deming, Mark. Mudhoney biography. AllMusic. Retrieved April 28, 2008.
  24. ^ "Generation Spokesmodel". B.B Gun No. 4. 1997.
  25. ^ La Briola, John. "Here's Mud in Your Ear". Westword. August 2001.
  26. ^ "Touch Me I'm Sick by Charles Peterson". Powell's Books. Retrieved May 4, 2008.
  27. ^ "100 Greatest Singles of All Time". NME. November 2002.
  28. ^ "666 Songs You Must Own". Kerrang!. November 2004.
  29. ^ . Blender. October 2005. Retrieved August 24, 2009.
  30. ^ Creswell, Toby (2006). 1001 Songs: The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists, Stories and Secrets Behind Them. Thunder's Mouth Press. pp. 708–09. ISBN 1-56025-915-9
  31. ^ Dimery, Robert, ed. (2010). "Mudhoney: Touch Me I'm Sick". 1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die. Octopus Publishing Group. p. 610. ISBN 978-1-84403-684-4.
  32. ^ Danaher, Michael (August 4, 2014). "The 50 Best Grunge Songs". Paste.

References edit

touch, sick, song, american, alternative, rock, band, mudhoney, recorded, april, 1988, seattle, reciprocal, recording, studio, with, producer, jack, endino, released, mudhoney, debut, single, independent, record, label, august, 1988, song, lyrics, which, featu. Touch Me I m Sick is a song by the American alternative rock band Mudhoney It was recorded in April 1988 at Seattle s Reciprocal Recording studio with producer Jack Endino Touch Me I m Sick was released as Mudhoney s debut single by independent record label Sub Pop on August 1 1988 The song s lyrics which feature dark humor are a sarcastic take on issues such as disease and violent sex Touch Me I m Sick Picture sleeve for second and third editions of the US vinyl singleSingle by MudhoneyB side Sweet Young Thing Ain t Sweet No More ReleasedAugust 1 1988 1988 08 01 RecordedApril 15 and 21 1988StudioReciprocal Recording Seattle WashingtonGenreGrungeLength2 33LabelSub PopSongwriter s Mark Arm Steve Turner Dan Peters Matt LukinProducer s Jack Endino MudhoneyMudhoney singles chronology Touch Me I m Sick 1988 Touch Me I m Sick Halloween 1988 Music video Touch Me I m Sick on YouTubeWhen it was first released Touch Me I m Sick was a hit on college radio Its heavily distorted and fuzzy guitars snarling vocals blunt bass line and energetic drumming contributed to a dirty sound that influenced many local musicians and helped develop the nascent Seattle grunge scene According to AllMusic the song s raw primal energy made it an instant anthem which still stands as one of grunge s all time classics 1 A staple of Mudhoney s live shows it remains the band s most recognizable song Contents 1 Origins and recording 2 Music and lyrics 3 Release and reception 3 1 Sonic Youth cover 4 Legacy 4 1 Accolades 5 Track listing 6 Notes 7 ReferencesOrigins and recording editAccording to Mudhoney vocalist Mark Arm Touch Me I m Sick originated from a discussion with Sub Pop owner Bruce Pavitt who said Hey you sing about dogs You sing about being sick You got a shtick it ll take you to the top And he basically gave us five chords but he said don t use more than three within one song 2 Arm has also described Touch Me I m Sick as a catchphrase around which the band built a song 3 Mudhoney recorded the song at Seattle s Reciprocal Recording studio in April 1988 three months after the band s formation 4 Producer Jack Endino was surprised by how noisy the sessions were and how dirty the band wanted the guitars to sound for the most part I just sort of stood back and let them go at it 5 Guitarist Steve Turner said that the band selected two of their grungiest songs for the single 6 Sweet Young Thing Ain t Sweet No More was to be the A side of the single and Touch Me I m Sick the B side before in drummer Dan Peters s words that all got flipped around 7 8 Music and lyrics edit nbsp Touch Me I m Sick source source Sample of Touch Me I m Sick illustrating its high tempo heavily distorted main guitar riff and frenetic drumming Problems playing this file See media help Touch Me I m Sick has a straightforward garage punk structure with a simple repeating power chord riff played at a high tempo 1 This is accompanied by a blunt bass line and frenetic drumming 7 The song s dirty sound was produced using an Electro Harmonix Big Muff distortion pedal which is augmented by a second guitar providing more distortion 1 Music writer Brian J Barr referred to this noisy sound as the sonic equivalent of an amplified comb scraping against paper 9 Critics have noted a Stooges influence in Touch Me I m Sick typical of Mudhoney s early material 4 10 Turner said In retrospect it s The Yardbirds Happenings Ten Years Time Ago by way of The Stooges Sick of You At the time I was trying for the stuttering R amp B guitar of The Nights and Days 11 The song is also reminiscent of the hardcore punk of Black Flag 12 In his book Loser The Real Seattle Music Story Clark Humphrey accuses the song of being a copy of The Witch by The Sonics Mudhoney have dismissed this claim and questioned the writer s knowledge of music 4 Arm s lyrics according to critic Steve Huey are a rant about disease self loathing angst and dirty sex 1 In an essay called Touch Me I m Sick Contagion as Critique in Punk and Performance Art Catherine J Creswell suggests that some of the lyrics refer to AIDS According to Creswell In declaring Well I m diseased and I don t mind and changing the final refrain to Fuck Me I m Sick the speaker declares himself to be the viral AIDS bearing polluting person of contemporary fantasy 13 Creswell who also believes the song parodies the theme of seduction in contemporary rock music points to lyrics that refer to impotence If you don t come if you don t come if you don t come you ll die alone and violent possession or forcing I ll make you love me till the day you die 13 However Arm says that he had not put much thought into the lyrics while performing the song in concerts he sometimes changes them to amuse himself 7 Another feature of Touch Me I m Sick that has been commented upon is Arm s vocals Huey refers to them as a hysterical screech and snarling demonic howls 1 10 Similarly the music writer Sleazegrinder compares Arm s singing to a gargly half mad howl the panicky yelp of a rabid dog falling down a well 14 Creswell considers Arm s overboard vocals to mock a variety of rock stereotypes the punk snarl the woozy slur of hard rock garage rock yea ahs R amp B style wails and a Jerry Lee Lewis shudder 13 Release and reception edit nbsp Vocalist Mark Arm in 2007 Arm had initially dismissed the song as a B side toss off 11 Touch Me I m Sick was released on August 1 1988 as a 7 vinyl It was Mudhoney s debut release Initially Sub Pop released 800 clear coffee brown vinyl copies 200 black vinyl copies and a few assorted vinyl color copies of the single 15 The limited release numbers were inspired by another indie label Amphetamine Reptile Sub Pop owners Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman reasoned the limited supply would increase demand and utilized different colors of vinyl in order to rationalize further limited pressings and to increase the single s allure as a collectible item 15 The record which came in a white paper bag without a picture sleeve had an inscription on the A side What does the word crack mean to you The B side sticker featured the toilet picture that later became the cover art of the sleeved second edition of the single 16 According to Pavitt It was just a limited edition maybe 800 pieces but people all over America started raving about it People that we really respected 17 The single was a hit among Seattle s underground music scene as well as college radio stations across the United States 14 When asked in an interview about the sales figures of the single Turner replied The first pressing sold 1 000 then 3 000 of the reissue then it was out of print for a while then they made 2 000 more and those are probably gone 18 The single s success caught the band by surprise Arm had initially dismissed the song as a B side toss off 11 Mudhoney later included Touch Me I m Sick and B side Sweet Young Thing Ain t Sweet No More on their 1989 EP Boiled Beef amp Rotting Teeth and the compilation albums Superfuzz Bigmuff Plus Early Singles 1990 and March to Fuzz 2000 Sonic Youth cover edit Prior to the release of the Touch Me I m Sick single Pavitt sent a five song Mudhoney tape to New York alternative rock band Sonic Youth for their opinions Sonic Youth immediately proposed a split single where each band covered the other 19 Sonic Youth covered Touch Me I m Sick while Mudhoney covered Sonic Youth s Halloween Touch Me I m Sick Halloween was released as a limited edition 7 vinyl by Sub Pop in December 1988 Sonic Youth s cover was included in the deluxe edition of Daydream Nation 2007 and offers a female perspective of the song with bassist Kim Gordon handling the vocals Bradford Allison of Prefix magazine suggested that Sonic Youth s version seems even grimier than the original 20 Legacy edit I got really depressed I was just going to be a stripper for the rest of my life and never have a band again But I heard Mudhoney s Touch Me I m Sick one night and I was saved I knew that I could scream on cue like that Courtney Love on her decision to give up stripping and pursue a career in music 21 Following the success of the Touch Me I m Sick single in the Seattle area Sub Pop positioned Mudhoney as the flagship band of their roster and heavily promoted the group 22 The band s early material received airplay on college radio and influenced many local musicians including Kurt Cobain of Nirvana 12 In a few years many Seattle grunge bands signed to major labels and broke into the mainstream achieving mass popularity Although Mudhoney never attained this level of mainstream acceptance according to AllMusic s Mark Deming the band s indie scene success laid the groundwork for the movement that would briefly make Seattle WA the new capital of the rock amp roll universe 23 Since its release Touch Me I m Sick has been accorded classic status within the grunge genre 9 Writing for AllMusic Steve Huey described the song as the ultimate grunge anthem and a crucial and vastly influential touchstone in the evolution of the grunge movement virtually defining the term 1 10 For its northwestern rock exhibit the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame requested the song s original lyrics sheet Since it did not exist Arm briefly considered making a fake one by writing down the lyrics crumpling the sheet and then burning the edges the band instead donated Turner s old Big Muff pedals 24 First editions of the 7 itself are considered collector s items routinely command ing three figure prices according to Louder magazine in 2016 14 Touch Me I m Sick remains Mudhoney s most popular song Joe Ehrbar called it the song most of us would come to know the band by 7 A staple of Mudhoney s live set ever since its release Arm says the band hasn t tired of performing the song The beauty of it is that it s two minutes long It s not like it s Free Bird where you have to suffer through 10 minutes of playing it every night 14 He considers the track to be Mudhoney s highwater mark There s something special about that first single we were never quite able to recapture that sound I don t know if it was the guitars or the recording It was just a really gnarly gnarly guitar sound I think it had more to do with the actual electromagnetic chemistry of what was going through our amps that day It was just a cool fried out sound 25 The song was referenced in the 1992 film Singles which is set against the backdrop of the Seattle grunge scene The fictional band in the film Citizen Dick perform a song called Touch Me I m Dick a wordplay on Mudhoney s song 4 In 2003 Charles Peterson published a book of photography titled Touch Me I m Sick It features black and white photographs of bands including Mudhoney and concerts and focuses on the alternative music scene of the 1980s and 1990s 26 Accolades edit Accolades for Touch Me I m Sick Year Publication author Country Accolade Rank2002 NME United Kingdom 100 Greatest Singles of All Time 27 992004 Kerrang United Kingdom 666 Songs You Must Own Grunge 28 52005 Blender United States The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born 1981 2005 29 3962006 Toby Creswell Australia 1001 Songs The Great Songs of All Time 30 N A2010 Robert Dimery United States 1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die 31 N A2014 Paste United States The 50 Best Grunge Songs 32 8Track listing edit7 single SP18 Both songs credited to Mark Arm Steve Turner Dan Peters and Matt Lukin Touch Me I m Sick 2 33 Sweet Young Thing Ain t Sweet No More 3 35Notes edit a b c d e f Huey Steve Touch Me I m Sick song review AllMusic Retrieved November 27 2010 Maslin Janet Successful in Seattle Turning Grunge to Gold The New York Times November 8 2006 Retrieved July 1 2007 Azerrad p 426 a b c d Cantu Bob Flipside Interviews Mudhoney Flipside February 1998 Retrieved July 1 2007 Left of the Dial Episode 6 Seven Ages of Rock BBC Worldwide amp VH1 Classic 2007 Higgins JR Mudhoney No Nonsense Seattle Supergrunge Backlash December 1988 a b c d Ehrbar Joe In Fuzz We Trust Mudhoney The Rocket January 2000 March to Fuzz liner notes Archived 2007 06 25 at the Wayback Machine Sweet Young Thing Ain t Sweet No More recording information Sub Pop Retrieved July 1 2007 a b Barr Brian J Mudhoney promotional biography for Under a Billion Suns Sub Pop March 7 2006 a b c Huey Steve Review Superfuzz Bigmuff Plus Early Singles AllMusic Retrieved June 30 2007 a b c March to Fuzz liner notes Archived 2007 06 25 at the Wayback Machine Touch Me I m Sick recording information Sub Pop Retrieved July 1 2007 a b Sub Pop s first single Mudhoney s Touch Me I m Sick BBC s Seven Ages of Rock Retrieved July 2 2007 a b c Ulrich John M Harris Andrea L Genxegesis Essays on Alternative Youth sub culture Popular Press 2003 pp 86 87 a b c d Sleazegrinder The Story Behind The Song Mudhoney Touch Me I m Sick Louder December 14 2016 Retrieved on July 31 2019 a b Azerrad pp 426 27 Touch Me Im Sick Sweet Young Thing Sub Pop Retrieved July 1 2007 Rose Cynthia Sub Pop See Label For Details An Interview with Bruce Pavitt Dazed amp Confused 1994 LaVella Mike Maximum Rocknroll Interviews Mudhoney Maximum Rocknroll August 1990 Retrieved July 1 2007 Azerrad p 428 Allison Bradford Review Daydream Nation Deluxe Edition Prefix magazine 13 June 2007 Retrieved on 1 July 2007 Wise Nick 2004 Kurt and Courtney Talking Omnibus press p 16 ISBN 978 1 84449 098 1 Olsen Matt The Story of Sub Pop or How I Lost the Weight and How I Plan to Keep It Off Sub Pop Retrieved April 28 2008 Deming Mark Mudhoney biography AllMusic Retrieved April 28 2008 Generation Spokesmodel B B Gun No 4 1997 La Briola John Here s Mud in Your Ear Westword August 2001 Touch Me I m Sick by Charles Peterson Powell s Books Retrieved May 4 2008 100 Greatest Singles of All Time NME November 2002 666 Songs You Must Own Kerrang November 2004 The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born 351 400 Blender October 2005 Retrieved August 24 2009 Creswell Toby 2006 1001 Songs The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists Stories and Secrets Behind Them Thunder s Mouth Press pp 708 09 ISBN 1 56025 915 9 Dimery Robert ed 2010 Mudhoney Touch Me I m Sick 1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die Octopus Publishing Group p 610 ISBN 978 1 84403 684 4 Danaher Michael August 4 2014 The 50 Best Grunge Songs Paste References editAzerrad Michael 2001 Our Band Could Be Your Life Scenes from the American Indie Underground 1981 1991 Little Brown and Company ISBN 0 316 78753 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Touch Me I 27m Sick amp oldid 1186935142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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