| | Bad Religion All Ages CD Bad Religion Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
1995's ALL AGES is a 22-track compilation that collects nearly all of Bad Religion's best tracks while on the Epitaph label. The band's music has stood the test of time incredibly well, musically proving to be a major influence on such late-'90s punk-pop chart-toppers as Blink 182 and the Offspring, while lyrically they were never afraid to tackle challenging topics (destruction of the planet, racism, evil politicians, etc.). ALL AGES proves to be incredibly consistent from beginning to end, but specific standouts would include "21st Century Digital Boy," "Do What You Want," "Atomic Garden," and "Suffer."
Personnel: Greg Graffin (vocals); Greg Hetson, Brett Gurewitz, Brian Baker (guitar); Pete Finestone, Bobby Schayer (drums).
Bad Religion: Greg Graffin (vocals); Mr. Brett, Greg Hetson (guitar); Jay Bentley (bass); Pete Finestone (drums).
Additional personnel: Brian Baker (guitar); Bobby Schayer (drums).
Spin (3/96, p.107) - 9 - Near Perfect - "...Picking peaks out of a catalogue as level as the Isley Brothers', ALL AGES is definitely where to start upping their constituency....small store of wonderful as opposed to excellent songs....the 22-songs-in-50-minutes gather compelling force..." Q (1/96, p.146) - 3 Stars - Good - "...as energetic, angry and tuneful as many of their contemporaries....the tunes are frighteningly catchy..." NME (Magazine) (11/25/95, p.47) - 7 (out of 10) - "...this compilation...is as much a blueprint for today's mega-selling groups as a primer for wannabes, with equal parts anger, sanctimony, hatred for institutions, sarcasm, doubt and world-weariness....there is something endlessly compelling about the simplicity and ferocity of their work..." Bad Religion All Ages Songs Purchase All Ages CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bad Religion Recipe For Hate CD (1993)
All Ages
$6.25
| | Bad Religion Stranger Than Fiction CD (1994)
All Ages
$7.09 Bad Religion is punk-rock's Bonnie Raitt, a cult band that persisted and persisted until the world finally came around to them. Around the time Robert Johnson's old Delta blues records started selling in the hundreds of thousands, Raitt started collecting platinum records and Grammys; likewise, in the era of Nirvana's and Green Day's run up the charts, Bad Religion began ...
| | Bad Religion Gray Race CD (1996)
All Ages
$7.59 With their ninth album, this Los Angeles-based hardcore band continue their distinctive recipe of slashing, frenetic guitar, inviting vocal harmonies and socially-conscious lyrics. THE ...
| | Bad Religion No Substance CD (1998)
All Ages
$6.09 When Green Day and The Offspring re-introduced the American public to punk in the early '90s, it was only natural that a few old-timers would try to capitalize (witness the Sex Pistols). Bad Religion was one of those who made the jump to the majors with 1993's RECIPE FOR HATE, but it is unfair to accuse them of trying to ride the coattails of their more successful ...
| | Bad Religion New America CD (2000)
All Ages
$10.29
| | Less Than Jake Losing Streak CD (1996)
All Ages
$9.95
| | Noise Khanyile Art Of Noise CD (1994) (Import) United Kingdom
All Ages
$16.65
| | 20 Best Of '60S Rock 'N' Roll CD (2004) (Import) Digipak
All Ages
$6.35 Madacy's 20 Best series can only be commended for the fact that it never tries to trick the consumer. Instead of providing the disclaimer in minute print on the back like so many other likeminded sets, the label provides a full disclosure on the front: "New stereo recordings by the original artists." 20 Best of 60s Rock 'n' Roll features versions of the Grass Roots' "Midnight Confessions," Maurice ...
| | Kite-Eating Tree Method Fail Repeat CD (2004)
All Ages
$9.09 Drawing immediate comparisons to the Foo Fighters, Los Angeles' The Kite-Eating Tree uses guitar power and offbeat prose to shape Method Fail Repeat. If Mike Hunter's vocal performances are credible, his angst steals the show on tunes like "Hollywood Hates You" and the nonsensical "Softer Seems the Pavement." If the latter, the disc's opener, resembles Chavez, it's hardly a bad thing, with aggressive chording giving it and "Through the Width of a Straw" the kind of six-string force that has been absent since the passing of grunge. It's not exactly distinct, but from the punky "Hope Is a Passenger" to the melodic "Like Butterscotch," Method Fail Repeat is a solid, (and at ten songs) succinct album that brings the reliability back to alt-rock. ~ John D. Luerssen
"The Kite-Eating Tree's cleverness doesn't end with the band's unique name. It also spans throughout this California outfit's 10-track post-hardcore offering, a collection that shimmers with beauty the way broken glass looks through sunlight. Sometimes jagged, sometimes rugged, but always engaging, tracks like the punchy "Through the Width of a Straw" mix the hard rock of Foo Fighters with the emotional wringing of Far, while the noisy melodics of "All Swedish, No Finish" and "Retrograde" have enough firepower to stir up a pit, yet enough heartfelt sentiment to evoke a group singalong. Blurring the edges between today's arena rock and small club indie rock, The Kite-Eating Tree expertly tugs at your senses with the wide range of styles and superb songwriting skills. If you think the current wave of rock bands today is getting stale, let this quartet's debut release try and change your perception." Mike SOS - In Music We Trust - May 2004 BIOGRAPHY:"Here's how my weird childhood shaped my ethos," waxes The Kite-Eating Tree's singer-guitarist Mike Hunter, "when I was kid, my uncle gave me a piece of advice. On day one of any new school, he said to go up to the biggest kid in class and punch him in the face." Hunter chuckles and then continues in the reflective tone usually reserved for the telling of first kisses, "He added that while I might get my ass kicked once in a while, no kid at that school would ever mess with me again. Well, I did get my ass kicked a few times, because I moved at least ten times when I was a kid. But people never fucked with me after those fights. Growing up with those kinds of experiences, and other facts--like the fifteen or so dogs of mine that died during childhood--worrying about whether or not industry people are going to help my band seems ridiculous." It's this self-determination that earns respect for The Kite-Eating Tree. Formed in October of 2002 in the Silverlake area of Los Angeles, the quartet has purposely sidestepped the LA musical scene that has become saturated with Musician Institute-trained, Urban Outfitters-dressed sycophants looking to genuflect before the major-label brass ring. Embracing the DIY ethos of their post-punk influences, they've played primarily all ages shows ...
| | Richie Furay I Am Sure CD (2005)
All Ages
$13.05 It's no surprise that this CD sounds a lot like a lost Poco album -- beyond being the work of Richie Furay, it also features Jim Messina, Paul Cotton and Rusty Young; add to that the presence of such renowned figures as Chris Hillman, Jimmy Ibbotson and Jeff Hanna, and you've got not only an intersection with the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band, but also a recording with roots deep in first-generation folk-rock-cum-country-rock. And pretty much that's where this album comes down, on the country-rock side of gospel music (or is it the gospel side of country music?). Furay's goal here was to create an album of American worship songs -- he became a Christian rocker some years ago, and has very effectively merged those two parts of who he is on I Am Sure, his lyrics drawn from the Bible, but the obvious sincerity and inspiration behind much of what's here is genuinely moving; as a singer as well as a musician, Furay knows how to wrap a melody around ...
| | Strength Approach Sick Hearts, Die Young CD (2005)
All Ages
$12.15
| | Bubble V.1: Mixed By Dean D And Master Kaos CDs (2005) (Import) Australia
All Ages
$34.15
| | Choros & Chorinhos Choros & Chorinhos CD (2007) (Import)
$11.79 | | Best Of James Kole CD (2008)
All Ages
$9.35
| | DJ Taro's Age DJ Taros Age-Age Mix CD (2008) (Import)
All Ages
$34.15
|
|
|