California Crossing is the seventh studio album by the American stoner rock band Fu Manchu It was released on October 23, 2001, by Mammoth Records.[1][2]
Production
The album was produced by Matt Hyde, who encouraged Fu Manchu to spend more time on preproduction and song arrangements.[3][4] The band pushed the vocals higher in the mix for the album, worked on backing vocals, and tried to keep most of the tracks around three minutes.[5][6]Circle Jerks singer Keith Morris provides vocals on "Bultaco".[7]
Drummer Brant Bjork departed the band after the recording of the album.[8]
The Guardian deemed the album "a strangely nihilistic celebration of all things Cali."[17]NME wrote that Fu Manchu "are the stoned Ramones, a matey Motorhead: a band who can rewrite that album into the infinite future and rule perpetually."[13]The Washington Post thought that "more than anything else, it's the band's cartoonish perspective that keeps Crossing from flagging."[18]USA Today called the songs "rooted in mad propulsion, clean sonics and Scott Hill's atonal holler."[16]
Vocals on "Bultaco" by Keith Morris
Backing vocals by Fu Manchu
Engineered by Nick Raskulinecz
Recorded at Sound City, Van Nuys, CA
Vocals recorded at Aftermath, Laguna, CA
Mixed at Henson Studios, Los Angeles, CA
Mastered by Dave Collins at Steve Marcussen Mastering, Hollywood, CA
Enhanced CD footage filmed by Ken Pucci
All songs written by Fu Manchu, except "California Crossing", lyrics by Rodney Skelton.[19]