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In 2004, Hi-n-Dry released the Mark Sandman box set Sandbox, which contained two CDs and a DVD of previously unreleased material spanning Sandman's musical career. The DVD featured clips from early Sandman shows, interviews from the Morphine tours, and various videos from other Sandman solo and group projects, such as Treat Her Right.
In 2004, Sandbox: The Mark Sandman Box Set was released. The 2-CD/1-DVD compilation was culled from Sandman's personal archive. The 2-CD/1-DVD compilation was culled from Sandman's personal archive. It included several Treat Her Right songs, although for some unknown reason, Jim Fitting's name did not appear in the credits.
The Mark Sandman Music Education Fund was established by his friends and family in order to give children in the Cambridge and Boston area an opportunity to learn musical instruments. As of 2008, this foundation has been renamed the Mark Sandman Music Project.
It contains 31 mostly previously unreleased songs [2] recorded by Sandman and his various bands and side projects: Sandman, Treat Her Right, Hipnosonics, Pale Brothers, Supergroup, Candy Bar, Treat Her Orange, and Morphine. None of the tracks on the two CDs are credited to a particular band.
Cure for Pain is the second studio album by alternative rock band Morphine, released through Rykodisc in September 1993. Jerome Deupree, the band's original drummer, quit due to health problems during the recording of the album and was replaced by Billy Conway.
While it was the alternative crowd who immediately latched onto Morphine, their music was geared more toward the jazz scene – a wailing saxophone, lead bass (played with a slide), and lyrics influenced by '50s beat poetry were all-important ingredients." [6]
Bassist Will Turpin has co-written two of the band's songs. Drummer Johnny Rabb, who began touring with the band in 2012, made his recording debut with See What You Started by Continuing (2015). Morphine frontman Mark Sandman wrote "You Speak My Language," originally featured on 1993's Good.
Yes is the third studio album by alternative rock band Morphine, released in March 1995.It was their first album to make the Billboard Top 200, but fared less well abroad than its predecessor.