Garbage - Album 2.0

“Only Happy When It Rains” becomes “Happy (The Drought Edit).” Gone is the jangly guitar hook. In its place: a low, sub-bass rumble and Manson reciting the lyrics like a weather report. “I’m only happy when it rains,” she deadpans. “Which is all the time now. Because of the climate. Obviously.” It’s black comedy, but it lands like a punch. The most radical shift is Manson herself. In 1995, she was 29—angry, seductive, and playing a character of controlled hysteria. In 2.0 , she’s 59. Her voice has deepened, cracked around the edges. When she re-sings the chorus of “Vow”— “I came to cut you up” —it’s no longer a threat. It’s a promise kept.

And for the next four minutes, a room full of old punks, young hyperpop kids, and middle-aged former goths stood in the dark, grinning at the sound of their own obsolescence. It felt like hope. Or at least like very good garbage. is out now on Stunvolume Records. Vinyl 4xLP with 60-page book of Manson’s diary entries from 1995. Cassette limited to 666 copies. garbage album 2.0

Another: a cover of The Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter” recorded in one take at 3 AM, fueled by whiskey and rage. Manson forgets the second verse and instead starts laughing—then screaming—then whispering Merry Clayton’s famous “Rape, murder!” line as if she’s confessing to both. It’s uncomfortable. It’s meant to be. The initial reception to Garbage 2.0 has been split—perfectly, appropriately. Pitchfork gave it a 7.2, writing: “A fascinating but flawed séance. The new recordings sometimes bully the old ones into submission.” The Guardian called it “the bravest reissue ever made—a band undressing in public.” Meanwhile, Rolling Stone (finally) awarded the original album five stars in a retrospective review, admitting: “We were wrong in 1995. This was always a masterpiece. 2.0 just proves how much it still hurts.” “Only Happy When It Rains” becomes “Happy (The

Now, three decades later, we have Garbage 2.0 —but not as a cash-grab. The band has returned to those original 24-track tapes, but instead of simply cleaning them up, they’ve unmade them. 2.0 is a companion piece, a shadow album: alternate mixes, unreleased sessions, and brand-new 2026 recordings that sample and respond to the 1995 originals. The result is a ghost story where the ghosts answer back. What strikes you first about Garbage 2.0 is the space . The original album was famously dense—Vig layered forty tracks of guitar just for a single verse hook. 2.0 strips away the armor. “Which is all the time now

The lights cut. The opening bass loop of “Queer” dropped—but pitched down, distorted, with Manson’s 2026 voice layered underneath: “What do you think you’re looking at? You’ve seen this movie before.”