Her Highness (album)

Her Highness is the third album by American rock band Medicine, released in 1995 by American Recordings. The band broke up after the album's release, and would not record again until 2003's The Mechanical Forces of Love.

Critical reception
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music called the album "almost numbingly introspective, both musically and lyrically." The Chicago Tribune wrote that "for all of its manufactured navel-contemplating, Her Highness is a trance-inducing album due mostly to its languor." The Tampa Bay Times wrote that a "new-found versatility actually opens the heavy-handed Medicine to lighter, ethereal passages ... rather than just feedback-laden noisefests—although the swirling psychedelic jam of 'Heads' may be one of the group's finest efforts."

Personnel

 * Medicine
 * Jim Goodall – drums
 * Brad Laner – vocals, guitar, bass guitar, keyboards, arrangement, production, engineering
 * Beth Thompson – vocals, photography
 * Production and additional personnel
 * David Campbell – violin, viola, arrangement
 * Larry Corbett – cello
 * David Harlan – design
 * Bruce Lampcov – mixing
 * Medicine – art direction
 * Justin Meldal-Johnsen – bass guitar, clarinet
 * Eddy Offord – production, engineering
 * Tom Recchion – art direction