Back in 1994, as Pearl Jam were ascending to the very top of the rock universe, guitarist Stone Gossard teamed up with Regan Hagar, a friend and bandmate in the side project Brad, who had also played drums with fellow Seattle rockers Malfunkshun. Together, they formed Loosegroove Records, a label dedicated to, as Gossard puts it, “signing artists that we loved and wanted to support.”
Over the next few years, the small imprint provided a home to a wide range of unique, innovative acts, among them the rock-funk-hip-hop collective Weapon of Choice, the instrumental and experimental Critters Buggin and the then brand-new Queens of the Stone Age, who issued their landmark 1998 self-titled debut through Loosegroove.
Not long after, Loosegroove closed its doors. Now, more than 20 years later, Gossard…
