
Ep547: Greg Ginn - Black Flag, SST Records
Apr 27, 2026 - 01:07:13
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Butthole Surfers' Paul Leary and King Coffey trace the band's unlikely major label journey — from America's top-grossing indie act to MTV hitmakers to a lost album finally resurrected after nearly three decades. Preorder...
Ep548: After the Astronaut - Butthole Surfers' Lost Album w Paul Leary & King Coffey is an episode from The Vinyl Guide by Nate Goyer. Butthole Surfers' Paul Leary and King Coffey trace the band's unlikely major label journey — from America...
This episode belongs to The Vinyl Guide.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published May 11, 2026, 58:00 long, audio available.
Butthole Surfers' Paul Leary and King Coffey trace the band's unlikely major label journey — from America's top-grossing indie act to MTV hitmakers to a lost album finally resurrected after nearly three decades. Preorder "After the Astronaut" LP here Topics Include: After the Astronaut releases June 26 after sitting unreleased for 28 years. Capitol signed Butthole Surfers when they were America's top-grossing indie band. Label president Hale Milgram believed in them; his firing changed everything. Pepper was written on the spot after a producer demanded one more song. Pepper won radio call-in polls for a month and played MTV hourly. The hit turned them into a "follow-up band," which was never their thing. John Paul Jones produced Worm Saloon and taught Paul Leary how to produce. Jones and the band shared a Lagavulin obsession, running up a $20,000 scotch bill. Capitol's big budgets contrasted sharply with Touch and Go's approach. After the Astronaut was a deliberate return to experimental, art-school Butthole Surfers DNA. Mark Ryden painted the original cover; getting dropped handed it to Marcy Playground. Declining a Hellraiser soundtrack placement created the first real rift with Capitol. Their manager's heroin relapse coincided with the band getting dropped mid-promo cycle. Promo cassettes already pressed now sell for $800–$1,000 on the secondary market. Hollywood Records funded Weird Revolution; Rob Cavallo showed up once a week for ten minutes. Finding two-inch master tapes in a storage locker triggered the After the Astronaut remix. Documentary The Whole Truth and Nothing But took director Tom Stern five years to make. Rob Reiner called it one of the best music docs ever — hours before his murder. A potential box set looms, but Paul prefers naps, his cat, and his bicycle. H igh resolution version of this podcast is available at: Apple: Spotify: Amazon Music: Support the show at Patreon.com/VinylGuide
You can listen to Ep548: After the Astronaut - Butthole Surfers' Lost Album w Paul Leary & King Coffey online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Ep548: After the Astronaut - Butthole Surfers' Lost Album w Paul Leary & King Coffey is an episode from The Vinyl Guide by Nate Goyer.
This episode is 58:00 long.
This episode was published on May 11, 2026.
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You can listen to Ep548: After the Astronaut - Butthole Surfers' Lost Album w Paul Leary & King Coffey on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Ep548: After the Astronaut - Butthole Surfers' Lost Album w Paul Leary & King Coffey is from The Vinyl Guide by Nate Goyer.
Published May 11, 2026 and 58:00 long