The seeds for the revolving door lineup that
Queens of the Stone Age has become famous for were originally sown in another related project,
the Desert Sessions. Dating back to the ‘80s, guitarist
Josh Homme and his pals would throw what would become known as "generator parties" -- consisting of live music played for a bunch of friends out in a secluded part of California's Palm Desert, the electricity for the amplifiers being supplied by a power generator. Between his exit from stoner rock groundbreakers
Kyuss and the formation of
Queens,
Homme found himself with plenty of free time on his hands, and he decided to start up these get-togethers once more. The only difference was that this time,
Homme would record the proceedings -- dubbing them ‘the Desert Sessions' -- while a rotating list of recognizable names of hard rock would be invited to participate. Working at a breakneck pace, a total of six volumes were issued during a one-year period (1998-1999) for the indie label Man's Ruin, and featured input by the likes of
Ben Shepherd (
Soundgarden,
Hater,
Wellwater Conspiracy),
John McBain (
Monster Magnet,
Wellwater Conspiracy),
Fred Drake (Earthlings),
Brant Bjork (
Kyuss,
Fu Manchu),
Alfredo Hernandez (
Kyuss),
Dave Catching (Earthlings),
Chris Goss (
Masters of Reality), and
Pete Stahl (
Wool, Earthlings), among others. In addition to being released on CD (each CD release paired two "volumes" together), the early entries in the series were also issued on double 10" vinyl. But when Man's Ruin went out of business and
Homme founded
Queens of the Stone Age with former
Kyuss bandmate (and
Desert Sessions contributor)
Nick Oliveri, the
Desert Sessions series took a break. The break wasn't long however, as the
Southern Lord label picked up
Desert Sessions, Vols. 7 & 8, which saw such renowned names as
Mark Lanegan (
Screaming Trees),
Samantha Maloney (
Hole,
Mötley Crüe), and
Alain Johannes (
Eleven,
Chris Cornell) join up with
Homme. With
Queens of the Stone Age scoring a major hit with their 2002 release,
Songs for the Deaf, the
Desert Sessions garnered quite a bit of interest from newcomers.
Vols. 9 &10 was issued on
Mike Patton's Ipecac label in 2003, and featured input from
Dean Ween (
Ween),
Josh Freese (
the Vandals),
PJ Harvey,
Twiggy Ramirez (
Marilyn Manson),
Joey Castillo (
Danzig,
QOTSA),
Natasha Shneider (
Eleven), and
Troy Van Leeuwen (
A Perfect Circle,
QOTSA), among others. Another attraction of the
Desert Sessions series for
QOTSA fans is that several songs debuted on
Desert Sessions releases have since gone on to reappear as newly recorded versions on subsequent
Queens albums (namely "Millionaire," "Avon," "Hanging Tree," etc.).
–
Greg Prato, Rovi