iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store. If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop. Progress Indicator
iTunes 9

iTunes is the world’s easiest way to organize and add to your digital music and video collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Thank You by Stone Temple Pilots, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Thank You

Stone Temple Pilots

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Stone Temple Pilots

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Vasoline Stone Temple Pilots 2:56 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Down Stone Temple Pilots 3:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Wicked Garden Stone Temple Pilots 4:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Big Empty Stone Temple Pilots 4:54 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Plush Stone Temple Pilots 5:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Big Bang Baby Stone Temple Pilots 3:23 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Creep Stone Temple Pilots 5:33 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Lady Picture Show Stone Temple Pilots 4:08 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Trippin' On a Hole in a Paper Heart Stone Temple Pilots 2:56 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Interstate Love Song Stone Temple Pilots 3:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 All in the Suit That You Wear (Album Version) Stone Temple Pilots 3:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Sex Type Thing Stone Temple Pilots 3:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 Days of the Week Stone Temple Pilots 2:35 $0.99 View In iTunes
14 Sour Girl Stone Temple Pilots 4:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
15 Plush (Acoustic) Stone Temple Pilots 3:50 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Some bands get no respect, no matter what they do, but Stone Temple Pilots suffered the slings and arrows of outrageous misfortune more than most. Some of this was brought on by themselves, particularly in the early days when they sounded like a mix of Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains and relied on macho bluster in their videos, but critics and rockists singled them out as the one band that typified how the establishment was going to sell out the alt-rock revolution that Nirvana kicked off in 1992, the year punk broke. By Stone Temple Pilots' second album, 1994's Purple, they had not only gotten better and weirder than expected; they'd also had the benefit of being surrounded by bands that really were corporate alt-rock rip-offs, so they not only had gotten better, but circumstances made them seem better, too, even if many critics still clung to their blind hatred of the band. Then, as the music guitarist Dean DeLeo and vocalist Scott Weiland wrote continued to get more interesting, Weiland began his descent into drug addiction, cycling through jail and rehab innumerable times. There was a brief parting of the ways in 1997, as Weiland recorded a solo album and the remaining trio formed the short-lived Talk Show, but the group soldiered on into 2001, cutting solid records, yet they were ultimately derailed by Weiland's addictions — which, in a charming display of empathy, made some of the band's longtime critics gloat.

But, as the years pass, the turmoil gradually fades away (even though Weiland was arrested for DUI weeks before the release of this album), and the music stands at center stage, and it's best heard on Thank You, a 14-track collection of the group's hits (the album clocks in at 15 tracks, but "Plush" is repeated in a widely popular acoustic version). Though each record found STP trying different things and each has a clutch of good album tracks, they were at their best as a singles act, since that's where the strengths — DeLeo's knack for catchy, monstrous riffs, Weiland's insanely hooky neo-psychedelic melodies, the band's tight, propulsive rhythms, Brendan O'Brien's clean yet intricate production — lie. Although they seemed rather cookie-cutter at first, thanks partially to the clobbering grunge of "Sex Type Thing" used as their debut single, the jumbled chronology of Thank You forces the listener to see each track as its own work and judge it on its own merits. And, based on that, it's clear that Stone Temple Pilots were one of the great singles bands of the '90s. Single for single, they had a dynamic mix of crunching hard rock and sugary, slightly trippy melodies, underscored by a real sense of urgency and perfect production by O'Brien, where each track unfolded with layer upon layer of sonic detail and no song outstayed its welcome. This was alt-rock played as classic rock — it played by the rules of '70s album rock, but its amalgam of sounds and styles, where STP poached from metal, glam, bubblegum, the Beatles, and album rock in equal measure, was purely a creation of the '90s, where postmodern aesthetics became part of the mainstream. And, within the mainstream, nobody did it better than Stone Temple Pilots. Yes, their peers certainly had more indie credibility, but great pop music isn't about credibility; it's how the music sounds, and STP made music that sounded great at the time and even better now.

With a few exceptions — the most notable being the charting singles "Unglued," "Hollywood Bitch," and "Pretty Penny," though cases could be made for their acoustic cover of Zeppelin's "Dancing Days," Weiland's spin-off "Mockingbird Girl" (not STP, but it fits musically), and the album tracks "Tumble in the Rough" and "Church on Tuesday," but that's nit-picking — Thank You contains all of their great songs, and there are many: the hazy, murky cavalcade of imagery in "Vasoline"; the swelling, mournful "Creep"; the neo-glam crunch of "Big Bang Baby"; the eerie, desolate late-night dread of "Big Empty"; the majestic "Plush"; the candy-coated rush of "Trippin' on a Hole in a Paper Heart"; the silly but effective Alice in Chains homage "Wicked Garden"; the heavy, heavy monster sound of "Down"; the sighing cinematic "Lady Picture Show"; the effortless, incandescent power pop "Days of the Week"; the matter-of-fact, heartbreaking resignation of "Sour Girl"; and, best of all, the timeless travelogue "Interstate Love Song," as great a driving song as has ever been recorded. These are the songs that have been classified as guilty pleasures by alt-rockers too consumed by conventional definitions of good taste, but ten years after STP's peak, this music reveals itself as some of the best singles of the '90s. Scoff if you want and call them the Guess Who of the '90s, but this music has stood the test of time and this collection is nearly perfect.

Recent Customer Reviews

Pretty good
     
by YaCantKillTheMetal

It's pretty good, though, inprefer to slashs guitar playing and revolvers backup singers, he shouldn't of left in 2008

Best of the best
     
by mouserbry

Recently saw STP live in concert and they were AMAZING. You know a band is good when they can sound good live and after so many years. This album is the best of the best for them.

STP rock!!!!!
     
by dillpickle3

Has most of their hits, but where is "Dead and Bloated" and "Crackerman". Although these arent the best songs ever, they still need to be on this CD. Still, this is Stone Temple Pilots were talkin' about here, its impossible not to be absolutely amazing.

Biography

Formed: 1992

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Stone Temple Pilots were able to make alternative rock into stadium rock; naturally, they became the most critically despised band of their era. Accused by many critics of being nothing more than rip-off artists, pilfering from Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and Alice in Chains, the band nevertheless became...
Full Bio
Thank You, Stone Temple Pilots
View In iTunes

Customer Ratings

     
105 Ratings

Influencers

Followers

Contemporaries