Songs from the Superunknown

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Songs from the Superunknown
Brendan O'Brien, Soundgarden
Soundgarden EPs chronology
Loudest Love
(1990)
Songs from the Superunknown
(1995)
Before the Doors: Live on I-5 Soundcheck
Alive in the Superunknown
Artwork for the Alive in the Superunknown CD-ROM
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Songs from the Superunknown is an EP by the American rock band Soundgarden. It was released on November 21, 1995, through A&M Records. It was released on the same day as the CD-ROM Alive in the Superunknown.

Overview

The EP is the audio-only counterpart to Alive in the Superunknown. AllMusic staff writer Greg Prato gave the EP two and a half out of five stars. He called it a "solid (albeit short) collection of Soundgarden outtakes".

Alive in the Superunknown

The CD-ROM Alive in the Superunknown contains the first four tracks from Songs from the Superunknown plus a multimedia portion featuring photos of the band, a video game, four music videos ("

Fell on Black Days"), a performance/special effects video of "Superunknown", and a live video of "Kickstand", among other things. Entertainment Weekly said, "Nothing on Alive ... equals the mystery, humor, sonic impact, or imagination contained on any one of the tracks on Soundgarden's Superunknown album."[2]

Track listing

All songs written by Chris Cornell, except where noted:

  1. "Superunknown" (Cornell, Kim Thayil) – 5:06
  2. "
    Fell on Black Days
    " (video version) – 5:26
    • Originally from the "
      Fell on Black Days
      " single. An alternate version, it is the one used in the music video for the song.
  3. "She Likes Surprises" – 3:17
  4. "Like Suicide" (acoustic) – 6:11
  5. "Jerry Garcia's Finger" (Matt Cameron, Cornell, Ben Shepherd, Thayil) – 4:00
    • Previously unreleased.

Personnel

Soundgarden
Production
  • Brendan O'Brien
    , Soundgarden -production
Management

References

  1. ^ Prato, Greg. "allmusic ((( Songs from the Superunknown > Review )))". AllMusic. Retrieved May 20, 2009.
  2. ^ "The Mouse That Rocks". Entertainment Weekly. January 12, 1996.