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Post by hazardous on Jun 13, 2009 1:12:27 GMT
I just picked up "Let The Dominoes Fall", I quite enjoyed it listening through all 19 songs.
Here's them on Conan last night. You may get the stupid, "not available in your country BS" This one hasn't been flagged yet
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Hud
New Member
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Post by Hud on Jun 14, 2009 16:18:15 GMT
Like this, just ordered the album. H
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Post by markyglam on Jun 15, 2009 3:48:10 GMT
THE NEW RANCID ALBUM SMOKES!!! THE TRASHY SIDE OF THE DISC IS GREAT WITH SONGS LIKE CIVILIAN WAYS, THE HIGHWAY, OUTGUNNED TO MENTION A FEWS)
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andii
Junior Member
Posts: 54
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Post by andii on Jun 15, 2009 7:41:51 GMT
I agree Marky. Amazing album! "Disconnected", "Damnation", "Civilian Ways" and "You Want it, You Got it" are my faves so far.
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carl
Junior Member
Posts: 97
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Post by carl on Jun 15, 2009 15:33:10 GMT
2 things:
1. Who plays more guitar live, Tim Armstrong or Paul Stanley???
2. Very cool that Armstrong gave Conan a guitar. If you listen close you hear Conan say "thank you for the guitar" as he hugs Armstrong. Conan is a rabid Gretsch collector, one of the top collectors in the country. I would love to see which one Armstrong gave him.
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Post by hazardous on Jun 16, 2009 5:52:16 GMT
2 things: 1. Who plays more guitar live, Tim Armstrong or Paul Stanley??? 2. Very cool that Armstrong gave Conan a guitar. If you listen close you hear Conan say "thank you for the guitar" as he hugs Armstrong. Conan is a rabid Gretsch collector, one of the top collectors in the country. I would love to see which one Armstrong gave him. Ha ha...that's about it eh? Conan got a guitar from Billie Joe from Green Day last week and Satriani gave him a custom Chickenfoot guitar. At this rate he's going expand that collection rather quickly if the trend continues. I think Randy Bachman has a massive Gretsch collection as well. I remember seeing something on TV about that a few years ago. He gave Neil Young a beautiful black Gretsch when they did a duet on Bachmans solo album some years back. I found the article...Holy shit 375 guitars! www2.canada.com/components/print.aspx?id=b36697bc-968f-4f93-813c-2f6c6da20055&sponsor=
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Post by hazardous on Jun 20, 2009 18:15:32 GMT
The more I listen to this CD, the more I like it. Especially the Ska stuff and songs like Civilian Ways. Great disc.
Here's a really good review from the local entertainment rag. Sums it up nicely.
Rancid steps outside the box with Let the Dominoes Fall By Mike Usinger Publish Date: June 15, 2009
Rancid Let the Dominoes Fall (Epitaph)
Timothy Lockwood Armstrong might just be the most fascinating maverick in the spiky, dyed, and dirty history of punk rock. Rancid’s famously marble-mouthed singer-guitarist is definitely a man of contradictions, which, despite what the staff at Maximum RocknRoll will argue, is a hell of a lot more admirable than kowtowing to the dogmatists.
Most fascinating is that, even though Armstrong’s various musical endeavours have probably made him filthy stinking rich, he still looks like an unwashed, older version of the Mohawks who make Granville Mall their unofficial crash pad. At the age of 43, he’s keeping it every bit as real as the crusties at 924 Gilman Street. And better yet, he’s doing it on his own terms.
Need proof? Well, then, consider that, as much as he’s made a career out of bucking the system with Rancid, he’s had no problem swimming in the mainstream, collaborating with the chart-topping likes of Gwen Stefani and Pink. He has no compunction about cheating on his bandmates—most famously with the Transplants, a hip-hop–flavoured supergroup that includes Blink-182 skin-basher Travis Barker. And he doesn’t give a shit about obeying whatever rules punk rockers are supposed to follow. If he did, you wouldn’t be hearing the Transplants’ “Diamonds and Guns” in the background every time a Garnier Fructis shampoo commercial pops up on the idiot box.
Armstrong does whatever the fuck he likes. And it’s that fuck-the-world spirit that helps make Rancid’s new album, Let the Dominoes Fall, the most ambitious of the long-running Berkeley quartet’s career.
Anyone can play old-fashioned punk rock, and Christ knows that Armstrong, guitarist-singer Lars Frederiksen, and bassist Matt Freeman have more than earned their stripes on that front. But the great bands are the ones that have the balls to mix things up, even it means taking a few lumps from the faithful.
Let the Dominoes Fall is the sound of a group that, more than ever before, isn’t afraid to step outside the box. Fifteen years ago, back when Armstrong was slurring his words through street-punk anthems like “Side Kick”, who would have ever thought Rancid would end up throwing a string section into the mix, which it does here?
Fittingly, it’s Let the Dominoes Fall’s most radical departure that ends up hijacking the show. A hushed take on alt-country burnished with desert-sunset mandolin, “Civilian Ways” might be the most un-Rancid song that Armstrong and company have ever recorded. Basically, it’s a love letter from the singer to his brother, an Iraq war veteran who returned to America to find everything has changed. “Civilian Ways” is also an acknowledgment that, as much as we’re all against a war that no one but Dick Cheney and the oil companies wanted, the biggest casualties are sometimes the everyday Joes on the front lines. The result is devastating right from the top, when, over a clip-clop beat and acoustic guitars, a whiskey-throated Armstrong drawls “I hold the cold steel of my rifle as I dream of foreign lands/And I promise myself I will cherish every moment I can.” If Joe Strummer was still alive, “Civilian Ways” would be getting massive play around the campfire, and there wouldn’t be a dry eye in the circle.
The surprises don’t stop there, with Rancid breaking out the harmonica for the plaintive-folk comedown “The Highway”, tipping the hat to the ’70s Stones on “Skull City”, and totally nailing Kingston-brand dub on the reverb-drenched “I Ain’t Worried”.
Those who’ll argue that punk rock should never aim higher than four chords and a singer who sounds like he’s been sucking on Novocaine gum balls won’t go home disappointed. There’s a full metal jacket’s worth of mosh-pit detonators here, from the nitro-loaded hardcore of “L.A. River” to the Warped-speed thrasher “The Bravest Kids”. Kudos to Freeman for once again proving that he’s one of the most accomplished bassists in showbiz—punk rock or otherwise—and to new drummer Branden Steineckert for turning in a clinic that, more often than not, seems almost impossibly inhuman.
Rancid’s love for vintage Jamaican ska surfaces once again in “Up to No Good” and “Liberty and Freedom”; despite what we’ve been taught by Less Than Jake, Reel Big Fish, and Save Ferris, it’s okay for white people to tackle the classic rocksteady sound, especially when it’s done brilliantly enough to impress the founders of Studio One. That, of course, is high praise, but on Let the Dominoes Fall, Rancid earns it. Hell, most of the album even finds Armstrong singing, as opposed to slurring like a wino after three bottles of Thunderbird, a 40-ouncer of Colt 45, and a half-dozen roofies.
Either all those speech-therapy sessions finally paid off, or the American underground is proof that an old punker can learn new tricks. Let’s go with the latter, if only because you just know that Timothy Lockwood Armstrong, as punk rock’s reigning maverick, has no interest in giving people what they want.
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Hud
New Member
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Post by Hud on Jun 28, 2009 19:54:05 GMT
This(Let the Dominos Fall) is a fantastic album better with each listen. H
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carl
Junior Member
Posts: 97
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Post by carl on Jul 19, 2009 1:52:23 GMT
FINALLY picked this one up! Sheesh...money has been scarce and I had to grab this even though it pissed the wife off.
$14.99 for the album, an additional acoustic album, a DVD documentary on the making of the album, 3 double sided posters (one of which is the lyrics), and a card with guitar picks on it!?! Fuck, if more CD's were this kind of value, I would buy a TON of CD's! I actually felt like I was being treated to something special by the band before I even threw the CD on! On first listen, I like it. It doesn't have the immediate "HOLY FUCKING SHIT THIS IS UNFUCKING-REAL" that WOLVES had, but it is easily the strongest since then. I expect it will have quite a few listens in the coming weeks, so I will place my vote then for the order.
I am curious to find out why Brett Reed left the band though. Time for a tad bit of research.
Damn...I still need to get "LETS GO!" on CD though. Have the cassette...but need the CD.
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Hud
New Member
Posts: 41
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Post by Hud on Jul 19, 2009 12:47:04 GMT
How come you got all the extra stuff? I only got the cd. H
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carl
Junior Member
Posts: 97
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Post by carl on Jul 19, 2009 21:14:29 GMT
There are two versions of the CD, the affordable one (costs $9.99 here in the US) or the ultra-fancy version for $14.99. Not sure if the fancy version is available outside of the US.
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andii
Junior Member
Posts: 54
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Post by andii on Jul 19, 2009 23:18:25 GMT
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Post by Stace on Jul 20, 2009 9:08:54 GMT
Nice find Andii! Bargain!
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andii
Junior Member
Posts: 54
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Post by andii on Jul 20, 2009 20:39:44 GMT
Yeah. Play.com is a great place to order from. Been using them for years
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