Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Thank You

1.4B streams

1,445,099,928

Core (2017 Remaster)

712.2M streams

712,192,438

Purple (2019 Remaster; Super Deluxe)

651.4M streams

651,399,030

Core (Super Deluxe Edition)

181.4M streams

181,369,992

Tiny Music... Songs From The Vatican G...

122.2M streams

122,154,985

Core

52.2M streams

52,203,247

Perdida

32.7M streams

32,712,981

No. 4

31.2M streams

31,158,767

Stone Temple Pilots (2018)

29.8M streams

29,841,486

Tiny Music...Songs from the Vatican Gi...

27.6M streams

27,605,112

Biography

Stone Temple Pilots embark upon a new sonic adventure with Perdida, the band’s first-ever acoustic album. It includes 10 deeply personal songs that weave introspective lyrics together with unexpected instruments to take listeners on an emotional and musical journey through letting go and starting over. Bassist Robert DeLeo says Perdida (Spanish for ‘loss’) shows how music has helped them process grief, search for meaning and, ultimately, create something beautiful from the pain. “When I’ve gone through things in my life, I’ve found that sitting down and having an honest conversation with my guitar is the best therapy.” “Recording an acoustic album like Perdida is something the band has wanted to do for many years,” says drummer Eric Kretz. “When Robert and Dean started playing their new songs for us during our tour last year, we knew right away they would be perfect for an acoustic album.” Writing lyrics for Perdida meant exposing himself like never before, says singer Jeff Gutt, who joined the band in 2017. “It’s an emotionally honest album and I needed to approach it that way for these songs to resonate." To record Perdida, the quartet assembled at Kretz’s Bomb Shelter Studios in February. The key to making the album, Dean explains, was finding a way to say more with less. “Everything you hear serves a purpose, from the space in the arrangements to the different instruments. We only added things that served the songs.”