
WEEN '12 GOLDEN COUNTRY GREATS' 3LP (Deluxe, 20th Anniversary Edition)
LABEL: Rhino Records
RELEASE DATE: 07/31/2026
VARIANT: Deluxe, 20th Anniversary Edition, Black Vinyl 3LP
20 years ago this month â over the weekend, in fact â Ween released their third studio album on Elektra Records, an endeavor which found Dean and Gene Ween going country.
It would be fair to say that Ween arrived on Elektra Records with a reputation for delivering music both eccentric and entertaining, but their first major-label album, Pure Guava, kind of set the tone for the masses, in that it left them with absolutely no idea what to make of the band, thanks to the albumâs first single, âPush Thâ Little Daisies.â Chocolate and Cheese, their follow-up effort for the label, mostly maintained that status quo with its single, âVoodoo Lady,â but when the time came for their third Elektra album, they decided to go in a completely different direction, opting to pick a specific genre and sticking with it from start to finish.
When Ween went country, they did it with no half measures: they recorded it at Bradleyâs Barn, they hired the Jordanaires to help out on backing vocals, and they brought in a variety of musicians with some serious country street cred, including Buddy Harman, Charlie McCoy, Hargus âPigâ Robbins, Buddy Spicher, and many others. Mind you, some of the song titles would have caused the average country fanâs eyebrows to rise skyward (âMister Richard Smokerâ and âHelp Me Scrape the Mucus Off My Brainâ leap immediately to mind as examples), and the albumâs lone single, âPiss Up a Rope,â was definitely geared toward the existing Ween fans, but if a song like âIâm Holding Youâ had been released to country radio, thereâs every chance that it couldâve turned into a legitimate hit.
Sadly, if not entirely unexpectedly, 12 Golden Country Greats didnât turn out to be a mainstream breakthrough for Ween, but because the band made a concerted effort to make an album that sounded like classic country and western, itâs arguably more timeless than just about anything else in their catalog.
PLEASE NOTE: DUE TO MANUFACTURING PROCESSES, PRODUCTS MAY VARY FROM IMAGE MOCK-UP. WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ORDERED OF THIS TITLE.
Original: $83.99
-65%$83.99
$29.40Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
LABEL: Rhino Records
RELEASE DATE: 07/31/2026
VARIANT: Deluxe, 20th Anniversary Edition, Black Vinyl 3LP
20 years ago this month â over the weekend, in fact â Ween released their third studio album on Elektra Records, an endeavor which found Dean and Gene Ween going country.
It would be fair to say that Ween arrived on Elektra Records with a reputation for delivering music both eccentric and entertaining, but their first major-label album, Pure Guava, kind of set the tone for the masses, in that it left them with absolutely no idea what to make of the band, thanks to the albumâs first single, âPush Thâ Little Daisies.â Chocolate and Cheese, their follow-up effort for the label, mostly maintained that status quo with its single, âVoodoo Lady,â but when the time came for their third Elektra album, they decided to go in a completely different direction, opting to pick a specific genre and sticking with it from start to finish.
When Ween went country, they did it with no half measures: they recorded it at Bradleyâs Barn, they hired the Jordanaires to help out on backing vocals, and they brought in a variety of musicians with some serious country street cred, including Buddy Harman, Charlie McCoy, Hargus âPigâ Robbins, Buddy Spicher, and many others. Mind you, some of the song titles would have caused the average country fanâs eyebrows to rise skyward (âMister Richard Smokerâ and âHelp Me Scrape the Mucus Off My Brainâ leap immediately to mind as examples), and the albumâs lone single, âPiss Up a Rope,â was definitely geared toward the existing Ween fans, but if a song like âIâm Holding Youâ had been released to country radio, thereâs every chance that it couldâve turned into a legitimate hit.
Sadly, if not entirely unexpectedly, 12 Golden Country Greats didnât turn out to be a mainstream breakthrough for Ween, but because the band made a concerted effort to make an album that sounded like classic country and western, itâs arguably more timeless than just about anything else in their catalog.
PLEASE NOTE: DUE TO MANUFACTURING PROCESSES, PRODUCTS MAY VARY FROM IMAGE MOCK-UP. WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ORDERED OF THIS TITLE.













