Details

Track Listing DISC 1: 1. East Bay Night 2. This Place 3. Up To No Good 4. Last One To Die 5. Disconnected 6. Damnation 7. New Orleans 8. Civilian Ways 9. Bravest Kids, The 10. Outgunned 11. Skull City 12. L.A. River 13. Lulu 14. Dominoes Fall 15. Liberty And Freedom 16. You Want It, You Got It 17. Locomotive 18. That's Just The Way It Is Now 19. Highway, The
DISC 2: LET THE DOMINOES FALL ACOUSTIC: 1. East Bay Night 2. LA River 3. I Ain't Worried 4. This Place 5. Disconnected 6. Liberty And Freedom 7. Dominoes Fall 8. New Orleans 9. You Want It, You Got It 10. Bravest Kids, The 11. Last One To Die 12. Last One To Die [Acoustic]
| Details | | Producer: | Brett Gurewitz | | Distributor: | Alternative Dis. Alliance | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Rancid: Lars Frederiksen, Tim Armstrong (vocals, guitar); Matt Freeman (vocals, bass guitar); Brandon Steineckert (drums). Additional personnel: Matt Hensley (banjo, accordion); Mark Switzer (banjo); Ina Veli (violin); Tom Lea (viola); Adrienne Woods (cello); Justin Gorski (accordion, piano); Vic Ruggiero (keyboards). Audio Mixer: Brett Gurewitz. Audio Remasterers: Gene Grimaldi; Bob Ludwig. Recording information: Jhoc. Arranger: Jay Terrien. Considering that Rancid's seventh studio album was largely written on acoustic guitars at new drummer Brandon Steineckert's small town Utah-based recording facility, one might guess that the band had mellowed. Not so: LET THE DOMINOES FALL is a particularly spirited set of the kind of anthemic old-school punk rock the band does best. The first single, "Last One To Die," sounds like the Pogues and the Clash in a drunken brawl at a Who concert, while other tracks recall the group's ska-punk roots in Operation Ivy. Produced by Bad Religion/Epitaph Records founder Brett Gurewirtz the record features Rancid's trademark mix of uncompromising music and insightful lyrics delivered in lead singer Tim Armstrong's inimitable mush-mouthed vocal style.
Industry Reviews The sunny brutalism of Rancid's East Bay ska-thrash has lost nary a step and their ethical-emotional rigor is as sweet as it is pure.
4 stars out of 5 -- The 19 tracks on LET THE DOMINOES FALL range in length from 64 seconds to a whopping four-plus minutes, encompassing everything from circle-pit scenarios, brisk bluebeat workouts and heart-on-sleeve introspection.
3.5 stars out of 5 -- [A] Rancid album par excellence -- a cannonball blast of punk classicism, alternating between galloping double-time punk pogos and the soulful swing that co-frontman Tim Armstrong and Lars Frederiksen learned from the Clash.
Billboard Over hard-charging rock, swinging ska-punk or just acoustic guitars and mandolins, Tim Armstrong and Lars Frederiksen deliver another round of catchy choruses...
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