Throwing Muses Lyrics — by Popularity
221 songs · Page 4 of 5
| 151 | Fish |
| 152 | Flood (Live) |
| 153 | Flood (Remastered) (Live) |
| 154 | Folding Fire |
| 155 | Folding Fire 1 |
| 156 | Folding Fire 2 |
| 157 | Freesia |
| 158 | Furious (Live) |
| 159 | Glass Cats |
| 160 | Hate My Way (Live) |
| 161 | Hazing (Live) |
| 162 | Hazing (Remastered) (Live) |
| 163 | Intro 2 |
| 164 | I’m Alive |
| 165 | Lazy Eye |
| 166 | Los Flamingos |
| 167 | Mania (Live At the Town and Country Club 1988) |
| 168 | Manic Depression |
| 169 | Marriage Tree (Live) |
| 170 | Milan |
| 171 | Morning Birds |
| 172 | Morning Birds 1 |
| 173 | Morning Birds 2 |
| 174 | Opiates |
| 175 | Pandora's Box |
| 176 | Pearl (Live) |
| 177 | Pearl (Remastered) (Live) |
| 178 | Quick |
| 179 | Rabbits Dying (Live) |
| 180 | Red Eyes |
| 181 | Run Letter (Live) |
| 182 | Ruthie's Knocking |
| 183 | Ruthie’s Knocking |
| 184 | Say Goodbye (Live) |
| 185 | Shark / White Bikini Sand |
| 186 | Shimmer (Live) |
| 187 | Shimmer (Remastered) (Live) |
| 188 | Sinkhole |
| 189 | Sleepwalking |
| 190 | Sleepwalking 1 |
| 191 | Sleepwalking 2 |
| 192 | Slippershell |
| 193 | Smoky Hands |
| 194 | Smoky Hands 1 |
| 195 | Smoky Hands 2 |
| 196 | Snail Head |
| 197 | Snail Head (Live) |
| 198 | Snailhead |
| 199 | Snailhead (Live) |
| 200 | Snakeface (Live) |
Throwing Muses Albums
About Throwing Muses
Throwing Muses is an American alternative rock band formed in 1981 by Kristin Hersh and Tanya Donelly, pioneering the indie rock movement with their angular guitar work, unconventional song structures, and Hersh's powerful, emotionally raw vocals. Their early albums like "Throwing Muses" (1986) and songs such as "Dizzy" and "Not Too Soon" helped define the college rock sound that would influence grunge and alternative music throughout the '90s. After Donelly's departure to form Belly, Hersh continued evolving the band's sound through albums like "Purgatory/Paradise" (2013), maintaining their reputation for uncompromising artistry and complex, cathartic songwriting. The band's fearless approach to melody and dissonance, combined with Hersh's confessional yet cryptic lyrics, established them as cult heroes who bridged punk's intensity with pop's accessibility.