By 1989, Amphetamine Reptile released their Dope, Guns 'N' Fucking in the Streets, Vol. 1-3 compilation, which included a track from the Thrown Ups' Felch session. 1989 also found the Thrown Ups back at Reciprocal with Endino recording their only full-length album, Melancholy Girlhole.
It appeared on the Munich, Germany, label Glitterhouse the following year, while it was released in the United States by Amphetamine Reptile as three 7" records. In the next two years, Turner and McLaughlin began devoting their main attention to Mudhoney.
As a result, Beezer kicked everyone out of the Thrown Ups in 1991 and labeled its former members as sellouts. Beezer said this was a convenient excuse to avoid arguments, although the real reason he broke up the band was due to the fact that it had exceeded its lifespan.
While Turner and McLaughlin were spending their post-Thrown Ups' days in Mudhoney, Beezer went on to form the bands El Grand Conquistador and Stomach Pump. He also kept busy as a program manager and developer for Microsoft. Fotheringham pursued his career in art,
designing album covers for Mudhoney, as well as many jazz labels like Verve. The Thrown Ups' complete discography for Amphetamine Reptile appeared on a single album, titled Seven Years Golden, on January 28, 1997. The record also contained three bonus tracks.
According to Beezer, one of the previously unavailable songs, called "Bucking Retards," was a prototype for Mudhoney's "Keep It Out of My Face."
Melody Maker 3-18-1989
Leighton
Melody Maker 3-19-1989
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…….."Cool Beans: Are the Thrown Ups dead and buried?
Steve: Oh yes. Leighton fired us. Leighton being the bass player.
Cool Beans: Why?
Steve: He booked a show without telling us. Then he told us about three days before the show.
We need more than three days to prepare for a show because we have costumes and we need to have a gimmick.
So we said "We're not going to do it, Layton. You should have told us."
Then he got really mad and did the show with a couple other people.
Cool Beans: So there was a new Thrown Ups?
Mark: He changed the name to Stomach Pump.
Steve: Yeah, and we thought it was so funny that he fired us.
Mark: Because we figured that the Thrown Ups was going to be a band that never ended. Because we never praticed--
Steve: We made absolutely no effort. But then we thought that was just too perfect an ending for the Thrown Ups.
In almost every article ever written about the Thrown Ups they never ever wrote about Leighton, and we'd explain that it was really Leighton's band.
It was his idea. But they'd always just talk about Ed and Mark and me. Fired by the bass player that no one ever talked about.
Cool Beans: And the retrospective CD on Amphetamine Reptile came out later.
Mark: Much later. Ed never wanted to finish the cover because he didn't really want it coming out.
Steve: Ed is a graphic designer and never really wanted anyone to know about the Thrown Ups.
Cool Beans: He was embarassed to be part of the band?
Mark: He just doesn't want the folks at Nieman Marcus to know what he sang about.
Cool Beans: I can see that.
Steve: And then of course there was the theory that we would probably do a reunion show only to embarass Ed.
Force Ed to do the show and then just watch Ed be really uncomfortable making a fool of himself. Were you a Thrown Ups fan?
Cool Beans: Yeah. But I only have the Melancholy Girlhole box.
Mark: The problem with that one is that... For all the singles, we'd record for one hour or two and then take the funniest parts and make a single.
But with Melancholy Girlhole that was basically everything we did for an entire session.
Steve: Some of it is really good though. I really like the short songs like "Sparse tits."
Mark: Hairy Crater Man is Bob Whittaker, our [Mudhoney's] manager."
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